Jaime Vera


Status: Paid Back

$500.00   Loan Request
$500.00   Paid Back

About the Entrepreneur

Name: Jaime Vera
Location: Caaguazú, Paraguay
Activity: Clothing Sales

About the Loan

Loan Amount: $500.00
Loan Use: Purchase T-shirts
Repayment Term: 13 months - View details below
Lenders Repaid: Monthly
Currency Exchange Loss: Covered
Date Listed: Nov 18, 2008
Date Disbursed: Oct 14, 2008
Date Funded:Dec 6, 2008
Loan Ended:Oct 15, 2009

About the Country

Country:Paraguay
Avg Annual Income:$4,555.00
Currency:Paraguay Guarani (PYG)
Exchange Rate:4,608.7000 PYG = 1 USD



Jaime Vera is 22 years old and is married to Maria Morinigo, 21, and they are happily awaiting their first child. Jaime had to travel to the outer reaches of the country in search of work to raise a small amount of capital, which he used to start his small business selling clothes. He also received a little help from his sister, who provided the merchandise. He currently has been in the trade two years and already has a clientele. The loan will be used to purchase T-shirts since the hot season has started and the shirts are in high demand. Jaime hopes that everyone has more consideration for the importance of working together toward the same objective and achieve their goals.

Translated from Spanish by Marty Greenstein, Kiva Volunteer


El señor Jaime Vera tiene 22 años de edad y esta casado con la señora Maria Morinigo de 21 años y estan en la dulce espera de su primer hijo.n El cliente tuvo que viajar al exterior en busca de trabajo para juntar un pequeño capital que lo utilizó para iniciar su propia microempresa que se dedica a la venta de ropas, ademas recibe una pequeña ayuda de su hermana que le provee de mercaderias. Actualmente cuenta con 2 años de antiguedad en el rubro y ya tiene clientela formada.n El dinero del prestamo será invertido para la compra de remeras en oferta ya que se inicia la temporada de calor y hay buena venta de dicho producto.n Para nuestro pais; espera que la gente tome mas conciencia de la importancia de trabajar unidos por un mismo objetivo para lograr todas las metas. nn

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Lenders to this entrepreneur

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Arbita
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Andy
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Don
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Anonymous
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Dewey & Avis
Gladstone, MI
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Jacqueline
Landenberg, PA
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Karen
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Tara
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spencer
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Journal entries for Jaime Vera


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: Jaime Vera
Location: Caaguazú, Paraguay

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to Jaime Vera by Fundación Paraguaya in Paraguay. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the next 10 months, Fundación Paraguaya will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by from Caaguazú, Paraguay
Dec 7, 2008
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An Update on Your Loan to Jaime Vera
 
Entrepreneur: Jaime Vera
Location: Caaguazú, Paraguay

The client Jaime Vera is very pleased because, with the help of the loan he was granted by Fundación Paraguaya, he purchased t-shirts on sale in order to re-sell them.

Jaime thanks Fundación Paraguaya and the Kiva lenders for assisting him to reach his goals and, by doing so, to be able to move his business forward.

- Translated by Nick Cain, Kiva Fellow

El cliente Jaime Vera está muy contento por que compró remeras en oferta para volver a comercializarlas, ayudado por el prestamo que le otorgó Fundación Paraguaya.-

El cliente agradece a Fundación Paraguaya y a los prestamistas de Kiva por ayudarlo a lograr sus metas y asi poder progresar en su negocio.

- Loan Officer David Lovera

About Fundación Paraguaya

Fundación Paraguaya (FP) is a leading edge social enterprise that seeks to develop innovative solutions to poverty and unemployment and proactively disseminate them throughout the world. Using a social enterprise model, including an extensive microfinance program, FP aspires to create self-sufficient programs that provide people of limited means with the tools necessary to achieve economic success.

To learn more about the work of Fundación Paraguya and receive more updates from Paraguay, please join the rapidly growing Team Fundación Paraguaya!


Posted by Nicholas Cain from Caaguazú, Paraguay
May 8, 2009
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Kiva Field Update Part 1 - Message from Kiva Fellow in Paraguay
 
Entrepreneur: Jaime Vera
Location: Caaguazú, Paraguay

Dear Kiva Lender,

My name is Nick Cain and I am writing to you from Asunción, Paraguay, where I have been volunteering as a Kiva Fellow for the past four months. At some point since becoming a Kiva lender, you made a loan to a Paraguayan entrepreneur. By doing so, you joined a group of people who have collectively invested over $2.3 million in this country (a figure that astounds me each and every time I write it), and for that, I would like to start by saying thank you. Because of you, bricks are made, dresses are sewn, cell phones are sold, and mounds and mounds of Paraguay’s most popular snack, chipa, are cooked and eaten. Your money moves this economy.

The Field Partner: Fundación Paraguaya

As you may know, all Kiva loans are disbursed and administered by Field Partners—local institutions who vet clients and collect payments. In Paraguay, your capital flows through Fundación Paraguaya, a 24-year-old organization with a remarkable history and a bold social mission. Led by its founder, Martín Burt, Fundación Paraguaya brought microfinance to Paraguay in 1985, at a time when the country was still controlled by Alfredo Stroessner, an iron-fisted, secret police-wielding dictator whose maniacal 35-year rule left his country poor, uneducated, and disastrously bereft of infrastructure. But, with a touch of irony that is familiar to many microfinance practitioners, the same set of circumstances that left so many Paraguayans entrenched in poverty also created an informal economy that was teeming with micro-entrepreneurs and, Martín believed, hungry for credit. A chance meeting with a representative from microfinance pioneer ACCION International inspired Martín to act on his hunch that, for Paraguayans trying to lift themselves out of poverty, access to capital would be the key.

The Leader

After 24 years, three major international awards, and one term as mayor of Asunción, Martín Burt is still at the helm of Fundación Paraguaya, preaching the doctrine of sustainability and innovation to his team (now over 150 people strong) of managers, teachers, and loan officers. Since 1985, Fundación Paraguaya has disbursed over $37.5 million in loans to entrepreneurs across the country. Because it is a non-profit organization, when Fundación Paraguaya earns money on its loan portfolio, the money is re-invested into the operating budgets of its other innovative social ventures: a business education program for young people, two self-sufficient agricultural high schools, and a recently-announced Poverty Eradication Project that is every bit as ambitious as it sounds.

Recently, I sat down with Martín to hear a little more about how Fundación Paraguaya got started, where he sees it going, and how the interest-free capital provided by lenders like you helps more than just a single borrower. Check out the interview in the video below.


Posted by JD Bergeron, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
Jun 23, 2009
Comments (32)

Kiva Field Update Part 2 - Message from Kiva Fellow in Paraguay
 
Entrepreneur: Jaime Vera
Location: Caaguazú, Paraguay

On the Ground

I have met over one hundred beneficiaries of your investments since my arrival in Paraguay. After days spent visiting Kiva borrowers, with my bus idling in Asuncion’s rush hour traffic and my lungs swimming in diesel exhaust, I spent a lot of time reflecting on Paraguay’s micro-entrepreneurs. My thoughts tended to bounce from borrower to borrower, from business to business: the garrulous restaurateur, the sun-soaked brick-maker, the struggling seamstress—different lives facing unique challenges. But their differences weren’t what stood out. Instead, I found myself focusing on a uniting theme: “asi, no más” a ubiquitous Paraguayan phrase that roughly translates to “That’s just how it is.”

The phrase, an attitude for some, practically a modus operandi for others, evokes a number of currents running through Paraguayan life. Most dominant is an incredible, nearly universal tranquility in the way Paraguayans confront life and its challenges. For many of the Kiva borrowers I met (such as Miguel Arce, Alejandra Alvarez , and Facunda Perez), behind that tranquility were razor sharp ambition and entrepreneurial acumen that helped their businesses grow and flourish. For others, “asi, no más” translated into a more passive willingness to accept the status quo.

The attitude itself wasn’t what struck me—with a history of political tyranny and an absolutely oppressive spring/summer climate, it is not surprising to find a culture that likes to keep an even keel and is disinclined to rock the boat. What was striking was how often my amateur analyses of Paraguay’s fight against poverty could be boiled down to this simple phrase. For families who were truly struggling, it felt like it was the driving force behind their ability to make do, to exist with dignity. For those who were staying afloat and growing when possible, “asi, no más” was an ability to withstand setbacks, to remain confident that, since that’s just how it is, eventually things would get better and hard work would be rewarded.

For all of these families, whether they were at the very bottom of the income ladder or perched somewhere closer to the middle, the capital provided by Fundación Paraguaya was seen as a much needed tool for economic stability and growth. To read more about how microfinance fits into the development puzzle in Paraguay, check out The Feel-Good Line, an entry I wrote for the Kiva Fellows blog.

Stay Connected!

Click hereto see more fundraising loans from Fundación Paraguaya.

To stay connected to Paraguay and to all the great work being done at Fundación Paraguaya, join our lending team Team Fundación Paraguaya. (New to Kiva Lending Teams? Learn more here)

Thank you again for investing in Paraguay and being a part of Kiva!

Sincerely,

Nick Cain

Kiva Fellow

Questions? Comments? Feel free to write me at nick.cain@fellows.kiva.org

P.S. I would like to say a special thank you to the 19 Kiva Lenders who are currently members of Team Fundacion Paraguaya. Your support has been so impressive! Together we have almost 200 loans to our name!


Posted by JD Bergeron, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
Jun 23, 2009
Comments (13)

Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for Jaime Vera

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
January 2009 $0.00 $45.45  
February 2009 $90.90 $45.45 Repayment Received
March 2009 $45.45 $45.45 Repayment Received
April 2009 $45.45 $45.45 Repayment Received
May 2009 $45.45 $45.45 Repayment Received
June 2009 $45.45 $45.45 Repayment Received
July 2009 $45.45 $45.45 Repayment Received
August 2009 $45.45 $45.45 Repayment Received
September 2009 $45.45 $45.45 Repayment Received
October 2009 $45.45 $45.45 Repayment Received
November 2009 $45.50 $45.50 Repayment Received