Ni Komang Sunistri -


Status: Paying Back - Delinquent

$500.00   Loan Amount
90% repaid

About the Entrepreneur

Name: Ni Komang Sunistri -
Location: Melaya, Bali, Indonesia
Activity: Poultry

About the Loan

Loan Amount: $500.00
Loan Use: To buy chicken and to fix the cage (Membeli anak ayam dan memperbaiki kandang)
Repayment Term: 12 months - View details below
Lenders Repaid: Monthly
Currency Exchange Loss: Covered
Date Listed: Nov 10, 2008
Date Disbursed: Nov 24, 2008
Date Funded:Nov 10, 2008

About the Country

Country:Indonesia
Avg Annual Income:$4,458.00
Currency:Indonesia Rupiahs (IDR)
Exchange Rate:10,019.0936 IDR = 1 USD



Ni Komang Sunistri is in the business of raising chicken (poultry farming). In the last loan period, she experienced a loss due to the avian flu that impacted her business.


In this 2nd loan period, she wants to use the loan money to rebuild her poultry business. She uses the money to buy more chickens so she can get more eggs. She also spends the money to buy poultry food.


She can earn IDR 500 thousand per day (around USD 52/ day) from selling eggs. From this she can earn a net profit of IDR 50 thousand (USD 5.2/ day). With this she can help to ease her husband's economic burden and also to raise their two children.

Translated from Indonesian by Antonius Gunadi, Kiva Volunteer


Ni Komang Sunistri masih tetap berharap dari usaha ternak ayam kampung yang sudah lama ditekuni. Periode terdahulu Ni Komang Sunistri mengalami kerugian karena pada saat itu terjadi musibah penyakit Flu Burung sehingga penghasilan maupun pemasaran ayam dan telornya kurang maksimal. Segala upaya sudah dicoba untuk menangkal terjangkitnya virus itu, baik penyemprotan maupun penyuntikan. Hasilnya pun masih belum maksimal.
Untuk periode ke II dana Pinjaman dari Yayasan DINARI dipakai untuk memperbaiki usaha beternak ayamnya yang sudah ditekuni. Karena kandang sudah ayam sudah ada dana dipakai untuk menambah jumlah ayam yang sudah mulai produktif menghasilkan telor dan untuk biaya pakan. Pakan ayam terdiri dedak padi, jagung dan konsetrat. Hasil penjulan telor dalam sehari dapat mencapai Rp. 500.000,- Harga telur per butir Rp. 1.000.- Keuntungan per butir Rp. 100.- Jadi penjualan Rp. 500.000.- Ni Komang Sunistri mendapat keuntungan Rp. 50.000,- Dari keuntungan inilah Ni Komang Sunistri dapat membantu penghasilan suaminya dan dapat membiayai kedua anaknya.

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Journal entries for Ni Komang Sunistri -


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: Ni Komang Sunistri -
Location: Melaya, Bali, Indonesia

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to Ni Komang Sunistri - by DINARI Foundation in Indonesia. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the next 10 months, DINARI Foundation will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by from Melaya, Bali, Indonesia
Nov 25, 2008
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Komang Sunistri Loan Update
 
Entrepreneur: Ni Komang Sunistri -
Location: Melaya, Bali, Indonesia

Ni Komang Sunistri, mother of 2 toddlers and 31 years old, is in the business of buying and raising chickens. She used her loan to purchase 50 chicks: 18 roosters for 100,000 Rp (USD $ 9 at time of writing) each and 32 hens at 35,000 Rp (USD $ 3) each. Sunistri used the rest of the loan to purchase feed for the chicks. The purpose of purchasing the chicks is to breed them so she and her husband can sell the eggs. Her husband is a construction worker but is currently between jobs so he helps with the rearing and maintenance of their chickens. The eggs were selling quite well, about 25 per day, for a daily profit of about 35,000 Rp (USD $3). Recently the price of eggs has plummeted, which have greatly hurt her daily profits, but she is optimistic it will rise again. Sunistri sells the eggs from a small kiosk at the front of her house but also sells them to buyers who purchase eggs in bulk. Before receiving the loan Sunistri could not afford to own and feed so many chicks. As a result of the loan she was able to increase her population of chickens, thus increasing the number of eggs she could sell per day. Sunistri uses her profit to pay for daily living expenses for her family, to repay the loan, and a little bit goes to savings. Since she and her husband live in a house on land they inherited from his parents they dream of one day building their own house on the same plot. This loan was made by the DINARI Foundation in Bali, Indonesia. DINARI stands for “Dian Bhuana Lestari”, which means “lights that shine throughout the world.” The Foundation works to reduce poverty, stimulate small business development, and raise awareness about environmental issues. To view other fundraising loans from DINARI, click here or paste http://www.kiva.org/app.php?page=businesses&partner_id=82&status=fundRaising&sortBy=New+to+Old&_tpg=fb into your browser.


Posted by Nicholas Roose from Melaya, Bali, Indonesia
Mar 1, 2009
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Kiva Message from the Field regarding Bali
 
Entrepreneur: Ni Komang Sunistri -
Location: Melaya, Bali, Indonesia

Dear DINARI lenders,

Thank you for your support and dedication to funding loans posted by the DINARI Foundation (Dian Bhuana Lestari) in Bali, Indonesia. I spent the last 10 weeks as the Kiva Fellow working with DINARI, assisting in both the headquarter office in Denpasar, the sprawling and densely populated capital city of Bali, and in the branch office in Melaya, a small town in sparsely populated west Bali.

The differences between the two offices are tremendous: for example, the Denpasar office is in an impressive three-story office building, whereas the Melaya office has one computer with Internet access. In addition to the obvious physical differences, the two DINARI branches differ in the type of entrepreneur they serve. Clients in Denpasar are primarily small business owners (there is a sea of food stalls, repair shops, and seamstresses) or rubbish collectors. In Denpasar the clients must deal with fierce competition as their business is often one of dozens offering identical services and products on the same street. In addition, as it is a densely populated area, clients in Denpasar face the challenges of high living costs and space shortages, getting access to clean water, and safety from crime and high speed traffic.

Of the entrepreneurs I had the pleasure of meeting, however, the vast majority lived in the rural communities of western Bali. The geography, working conditions, and local economies of these communities could not have been more disparate from the narrow and crowded streets of Denpasar. The clients served by the Melaya office are almost entirely animal breeders, small goods manufacturers, or suppliers, selling basic products from a kiosk outside their home. The animal breeders work to keep their livestock healthy, and, as a result of the global rise of commodities due to the financial crisis, they pay for increasingly high feed costs. In addition, their profits are dependent on the market price for their livestock, which is subject to immense fluctuations. Due to the remoteness of their businesses, the small shop owners struggle to grow their customer base whiling staying competitive and profitable. In Melaya, the region is so sparsely populated that the field officers and I would often have to travel between 50 and 90 kilometers per day to meet clients.

DINARI’s founding creed is “to reduce poverty, stimulate small business development, and raise awareness about environmental issues.” I saw this simple, yet powerful, mission statement being implemented with great success throughout Bali. DINARI does more than provide just microloans. They seek to initiate a long-term partnership with their clients to, in the words of the DINARI CEO, “help them [the clients] make a better life.” This is done in the immediate sense by providing a monetary loan, but the true sustainable impact DINARI has on their clients’ lives happens as they are tutored about financial literacy, business knowledge, proper animal raising skills, and information about sustainable agricultural development.

During its 19-month long partnership with Kiva, and through the constant support from Kiva lenders like you, DINARI now serves 1,199 Kiva clients and has lent a total of $342,950. The symbiotic partnership between DINARI and entrepreneur builds a trusting collaboration, which often leads to a palpable improvement in the clients’ life. Take Ni Made Riniasih, a first time borrower, as an example. Prior to receiving her loan, Made Riniasih made her living by selling banana, papaya, and durian at the local market in Negara, which was an unreliable business. Since receiving her loan, however, she has started her own business of raising and selling pigs and is working toward creating a sustainable and profitable enterprise. The profit she made from selling her first pigs was reinvested into her business, and she purchased a sow so that she can breed her own pigs, thus obviating the need to purchase piglets from a middleman and becoming more self-sufficient in the process. With two incomes now contributing to household expenses, her husband feels less pressure to serve as the sole provider for their four children. In addition, they are now able to pay for the children’s school fees for their children, and, like almost every client I met in Bali, Made Riniasih and her husband are determined to ensure that their children receive a better education than they did.

As you are probably aware, DINARI staff and other Kiva Fellows will continue to visit entrepreneurs. Updates on the borrowers’ lives and progress will be sent to those Kiva lenders that contributed to making their loans. Unfortunately, due to the immense logistical and administrative task of reaching every client, it is not possible to reach every entrepreneur, even with DINARI’s incredibly dedicated and passionate team. I ask that you please remain patient, and know that DINARI is doing everything within its means to spread the stories of Kiva borrowers to the Kiva community. In the event that an update on an entrepreneur to whom you loaned was not provided, I hope you enjoyed this update on the impact DINARI has had with Kiva funds.

From DINARI, Kiva, and the communities of borrowers I had the pleasure of meeting, we thank you for your continued support, dedication, and confidence in our work. To see all current fundraising loans from DINARI, please click http://www.kiva.org/app.php?page=businesses&partner_id=82&status=fundRaising&sortBy=New+to+Old&_te=mj.

Sincerely,

Nicholas Roose


Posted by JD Bergeron, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
May 1, 2009
Comments (15)

Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for Ni Komang Sunistri -

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
February 2009 $50.00 $50.00 Repayment Received
March 2009 $50.00 $50.00 Repayment Received
April 2009 $50.00 $50.00 Repayment Received
May 2009 $50.00 $50.00 Repayment Received
June 2009 $50.00 $50.00 Repayment Received
July 2009 $50.00 $50.00 Repayment Received
August 2009 $50.00 $50.00 Repayment Received
September 2009 $50.00 $50.00 Repayment Received
October 2009 $50.00 $50.00 Repayment Received
November 2009 $50.00 $0.00 Delinquent