Berta Castro Rodriguez


Status: Paying Back

$750.00   Loan Amount
37% repaid

About the Entrepreneur

Name: Berta Castro Rodriguez
Location: Ahuachapan, El Salvador
Activity: Personal Housing Expenses

About the Loan

Loan Amount: $750.00
Loan Use: Installing a roof and a ceramic tile floor on the outside of the house
Repayment Term: 26 months - View details below
Lenders Repaid: Monthly
Currency Exchange Loss: N/A
Date Listed: Jan 22, 2009
Date Disbursed: Jan 8, 2009
Date Funded:Jan 22, 2009

About the Country

Country:El Salvador
Avg Annual Income:$4,900.00
Currency:United States Dollars (USD)



Berta has worked as a seamstress for 10 years, hand-making pants and shirts for children. Especially at this time in El Salvador, when students are returning to classes, Berta is busy filling school uniform orders for her customers. This relatively profitable period for Berta, combined with her record of punctual payment of previous loans, has given her confidence to apply for a home loan. This loan would allow Berta to install a new, more protective metal roof on her home as well as a floor in the patio area outside of her house.



Partnership with the Salvadoran Foundation for Integral Support (FUSAI)



In order to best serve its clients receiving housing loans in construction and remodeling, INTEGRAL has partnered with Salvadoran Foundation for Integral Support (FUSAI) which specializes in offering FREE technical advice for home owners in areas such as circulation, ventilation, lighting, and construction budgeting. For Integral’s housing loan clients, this means their money is used more effectively in the construction of a safer, more durable, and practical homes.




About Housing Loans
Many poor families are financially unable to purchase a house that meets their needs. Housing loans funded on Kiva give families access to capital to improve their homes and an opportunity to pay loans back at a pace that they can handle. The housing and small business loans featured on Kiva share a common purpose: they alleviate conditions of poverty and enable families to lead more stable lives. Learn more


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Lenders to this entrepreneur

Rosalie
Tamarac, FL
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Pepi & Harvey
Framingham, Mass.
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Marian
New Windsor, NY
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Jaclyn and Kevin Wedding
New York, NY
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Karen and Gery
KivaFriends.org, Monarch Beach, CA USA
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Michael
Honolulu, HI
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reece
Guernsey, Channel Islands
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Vítor
Almada,
Portugal

Donna
Lombard, IL
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Jane
Scotia, NY
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Jan
Amsterdam, Noord Holland
Netherlands

Pam
Seattle, WA
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Cynthia
Los Angeles, CA
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Joan
Victoria, BC
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Michel
LaSalle, Quebec
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Don
Tucson, AZ
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Laerke
Swindon, Wiltshire
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Danielle
Huy,
Belgium

Maria&Terje WeddingFund
Asker,
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Michael and Judy
Anchorage, AK
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Lolita
Waynesville, NC
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The Kolb Family Fund
Belmont, MA, www.kivafriends.org
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Robin
Carrboro, NC
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Mark
Redmond, OR
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Journal entries for Berta Castro Rodriguez


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: Berta Castro Rodriguez
Location: Ahuachapan, El Salvador

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to Berta Castro Rodriguez by Apoyo Integral in El Salvador. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the 24 months of this loan, Apoyo Integral will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by from Ahuachapan, El Salvador
Jan 23, 2009
Comment on this entry

Kiva Message from the Field regarding El Salvador
 
Entrepreneur: Berta Castro Rodriguez
Location: Ahuachapan, El Salvador

Dear Kiva Lender,

Thank you for supporting an entrepreneur in El Salvador! For the past several months, I have been working as a Kiva Fellow (see http://www.kiva.org/about/fellows-program) with Kiva’s Salvadoran field partner, Apoyo Integral. As you may know, all entrepreneur profiles on Kiva’s website are posted by local Field Partners (microfinance institutions), which are organizations that lend to the working poor to help them lift themselves out of poverty. The role of the Field Partner is to screen each entrepreneur, upload his or her loan request onto the Kiva website, disburse the loan, and collect repayments.

I would like to believe that the recent introduction to micro-lending through organizations such as Apoyo Integral and Kiva has finally opened doors for poor Salvadorans seeking to finance their businesses, homes, and families’ future. However, one thing I have slowly learned is that, in El Salvador at least, micro-finance’s most important contribution to date may ultimately not be the offering of cash to El Salvador’s poor but rather the gift of allowing them the dignity to be held accountable. After a decade of civil war in the 1980s, which attracted billions of dollars in foreign aid and has left over one million Salvadoran immigrants (20 percent of El Salvador’s population) working in the U.S. and sending five billion dollars a year back to families, many Salvadorans have become accustomed to receiving financial support. Not until recent years, however, have they been invited into a formal contract to which they are asked to sign their own names, to give their own word of honor.

My visits to struggling lenders such as Mercedes (http://www.kiva.org/app.php?page=businesses&action=about&id=40971&_tpos=1&_tpg=1) remind me that even remittances and credit do not ensure a thriving business and rarely cover the risks of not having access to health insurance. sufficient education, or a secure roof. Despite this, I was often inspired by stories of success, most memorably when I visited Lucy’s bakery (http://www.kiva.org/app.php?page=businesses&action=about&id=63109&_tpos=7&_tpg=1). As a young single mother, Lucy has expanded her small bakery business with the support of four small business loans from Apoyo Integral. Now, with three full-time employees (mom, dad, and her younger sister), a brand new industrial oven, and thousands invested in professional baking tools, Lucy and her family are thinking about building a larger bakery across the street to meet the overwhelming demand for their tasty treats. Though Lucy’s success tends to be the exception rather than the rule in El Salvador, her leadership and confidence in her role as an entrepreneur (especially as a woman in Latin America) gives me hope that micro-credit can be a source of economic - and cultural - independence among El Salvador’s poor.

Through my experience working with Apoyo Integral and their partner organization, the Salvadoran Foundation for Integral Development (FUSAI), I quickly realized how the organizations focused beyond just providing credit and charging interest. Both Apoyo Integral and FUSAI use the savings on credit (graciously provided without interest from Kiva lenders such as yourself) to pay for technical assistance services for clients building their own homes, training micro-entrepreneurs and youth in enterprise strategies, and even teaching a much-needed accounting class here and there. You, a Kiva lender, are giving them the financial resources; Apoyo Integral and FUSAI give them confidence; and the entrepreneurs are individually responsible for making something happen for their families and for El Salvador.

For a complete list of Apoyo Integral loans currently fundraising, click here: http://www.kiva.org/app.php?page=businesses&partner_id=81&status=fundRaising&sortBy=New+to+Old&_te=mj. Thank you again for supporting Kiva and micro-entrepreneurs in El Salvador.

Saludos,

Sam Baker

Kiva Fellow 2009


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

Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for Berta Castro Rodriguez

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
April 2009 $31.25 $31.25 Repayment Received
May 2009 $31.25 $31.25 Repayment Received
June 2009 $31.25 $31.25 Repayment Received
July 2009 $31.25 $31.25 Repayment Received
August 2009 $31.25 $31.25 Repayment Received
September 2009 $31.25 $31.25 Repayment Received
October 2009 $31.25 $31.25 Repayment Received
November 2009 $31.25 $31.25 Repayment Received
December 2009 $31.25 $31.25 Repayment Received
January 2010 $31.25 Available Jan 1  
February 2010 $31.25 Available Feb 1  
March 2010 $31.25 Available Mar 1  
April 2010 $31.25 Available Apr 1  
May 2010 $31.25 Available May 1  
June 2010 $31.25 Available Jun 1  
July 2010 $31.25 Available Jul 1  
August 2010 $31.25 Available Aug 1  
September 2010 $31.25 Available Sep 1  
October 2010 $31.25 Available Oct 1  
November 2010 $31.25 Available Nov 1  
December 2010 $31.25 Available Dec 1  
January 2011 $31.25 Available Jan 1  
February 2011 $31.25 Available Feb 1  
March 2011 $31.25 Available Mar 1