Dorothea's Uvumilivu Group


Status: Paying Back - Delinquent

$1,025.00   Loan Amount
90% repaid

About the Group

Group Name: Dorothea's Uvumilivu Group
Group Members: Frida Charles
Rosemery Eliapenda
Dorothea Mtambo
Location: Arusha, Tanzania
Activity: Food Production/Sales

About the Loan

Loan Amount: $1,025.00
Loan Use: To buy more food items for her business.
Repayment Term: 12 months - View details below
Lenders Repaid: Monthly
Currency Exchange Loss: Covered
Date Listed: Jun 11, 2008
Date Disbursed: Jul 5, 2008
Date Funded:Jun 21, 2008

About the Country

Country:Tanzania
Avg Annual Income:$723.00
Currency:Tanzania Shillings (TZS)
Exchange Rate:1,196.0000 TZS = 1 USD



Dorothea is a divorced woman with 3 children, ages 28,18, and 14 years old. Dorothea sells food, and she started in 1998. Every day, she works from 8 am to 9 pm at her business and can earn a monthly profit of about $225 from her sales.


She now hopes for a loan to buy more food items for her business. She will share this loan with her subgroup members Rosemery and Frida, one who sells clothes and the other is a shop owner.



About Group Loans
In a group loan, each member of the group receives an individual loan but is part of a group of individuals bound by a group guarantee. Under this arrangement, each member of the group supports one another and is responsible for paying back the loans of their fellow group members if someone is delinquent or defaults. Learn more


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Journal entries for Dorothea's Uvumilivu Group


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: Dorothea's Uvumilivu Group
Location: Arusha, Tanzania

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to the Dorothea's Uvumilivu group, consisting of Dorothea Mtambo, Rosemery Eliapenda, Frida Charles by BRAC Tanzania in Tanzania. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the next 10 months, BRAC Tanzania will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by from Arusha, Tanzania
Jul 6, 2008
Comment on this entry

Kiva Field Update - Message from Kiva Fellow in Tanzania
 
Entrepreneur: Dorothea's Uvumilivu Group
Location: Arusha, Tanzania

Dear Lender,

Today I have the unique pleasure of sending you the very first Field Update on borrowers from BRAC Tanzania. You have all contributed to at least one of these Tanzanian women’s loans, and I am sure that you are wondering how they are doing!

My name is Sarah Forbes and I am a Kiva Fellow currently working with BRAC Tanzania, one of Kiva’s Field Partners. All of Kiva’s field partners are stand-alone organizations that partner with Kiva in order to receive loans for the borrowers that you as lenders choose to support. BRAC is one of the largest of these field partners, being one of the largest southern non-governmental organizations in the world. Kiva and BRAC work together in three different African countries – Uganda, South Sudan, and Tanzania. In Tanzania, we have been working together for about 18 months, providing loans to women who have been denied access to the formal financial sector. With more than 100 branches across the country, BRAC Tanzania is reaching tens of thousands of women working their way out of poverty. Your loans, which we provide to BRAC Tanzania at 0% interest, are enabling their programs to expand even further.

Over the past four months, I have had the great opportunity to meet with many of BRAC’s borrowers – women who meet the challenges before them with a strength and sense of humor of which I am in awe. Each one of these meetings has given me new perspective on life and work in Tanzania and what having access to credit can mean for these women.

Martha Kamagi, for instance, received her loan in April 2009 and has already used most of it to give her small business a significant boost. Or businesses, I should say, since like many women in Tanzania, Martha has three separate small businesses.

Unlike most women however, Martha’s primary business is house painting, a trade usually performed by men. She has been making a living by painting houses since 1983 and now has a large network through which she finds job opportunities. Her business is marketed by word of mouth and Martha’s mobile phone is probably one of her greatest assets. In a trade dominated by men, Martha claims to rarely have problems with the sex issue – in fact, many of her jobs come through male contacts in her field. She is doing her part to even the sex disparity, however, and has trained six other women to become house painters. The painting is seasonal work, though, so Martha also works as a seamstress and hair stylist. Creativity and manual labor mix to provide Martha with a steady income that, combined with her husband’s income, supports her four children and her mother in the small home that they own. With the loan from BRAC Tanzania, Martha no longer needs to borrow painting supplies from her local hardware shop, which charges exorbitant interest rates, and she has been able to invest in better sewing equipment and fabrics.

Like most of the borrowers I have spoken with, Martha expresses her desire that her children lead a better life than she has. For them she desires greater education and financial security. The groundwork that is set for the future is one of the greatest effects of microcredit. While it may not immediately lift a family out of poverty, it provides small means with which entrepreneurs can improve their businesses, increase their profits, and send their children to school, enabling the next generation the chance to lead the lives their parents wish for them.

BRAC Tanzania strives to give the female borrowers in their microfinance program these chances to improve their businesses, their lives, and those of their children. Each day, and with each loan, the talented and dedicated staff reach out to those who are in vulnerable positions and often marginalized by the formal business sector. While logistical constraints prohibit BRAC Tanzania’s staff from collecting journal updates for each of their Kiva borrowers, it is our hope that, with a new system in place, in the future you will be hearing more stories about the progress of these incredible women.

Thank you for your loan. I hope that you will continue to invest in the borrowers of BRAC Tanzania by lending to the currently fundraising loans.

Sincerely,

Sarah Forbes

Kiva Fellow

BRAC Tanzania

As an additional note, I would like to take this opportunity to mention the current situation regarding the Kiva website showing BRAC Tanzania’s delinquency rate to be near 30%. This does NOT reflect the true delinquency rate of the individual borrowers, but rather is the product of registration requirements here in Tanzania that are delaying the wiring of funds from BRAC Tanzania to Kiva. The Central Bank of Tanzania is requiring certain registration from BRAC Tanzania before it will send the repayment funds out of the country to Kiva. The paperwork is taking longer than expected, however, as soon as the required registration goes through the Central Bank of Tanzania, the funds will be sent and all repayments will be made to Kiva and to the lenders. We are now waiting on the clearance from the Central Bank of Tanzania and thank you for your patience and understanding as to why the repayments are delayed.


Posted by JD Bergeron, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
Jul 8, 2009
Comments (93)

Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for Dorothea's Uvumilivu Group

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
October 2008 $102.50 $103.00 Repayment Received
November 2008 $102.50 $103.00 Repayment Received
December 2008 $102.50 $103.00 Repayment Received
January 2009 $102.50 $101.00 Repayment Received
February 2009 $102.50 $102.50 Repayment Received
March 2009 $102.50 $102.50 Repayment Received
April 2009 $102.50 $102.50 Repayment Received
May 2009 $102.50 $102.50 Repayment Received
June 2009 $102.50 $102.50 Repayment Received
July 2009 $102.50 $0.00 Delinquent