Zary Vargas Rengifo


Status: Paid Back

$475.00   Loan Request
$475.00   Paid Back

About the Entrepreneur

Name: Zary Vargas Rengifo
Location: San Martín, Peru
Activity: Retail

About the Loan

Loan Amount: $475.00
Loan Use: To buy rice, sugar, and school supplies, including notebooks, pens, and erasers for her business.
Repayment Term: 8 months - View details below
Lenders Repaid: Monthly
Currency Exchange Loss: Covered
Date Listed: Mar 20, 2009
Date Disbursed: Feb 23, 2009
Date Funded:Mar 20, 2009
Loan Ended:Sep 15, 2009

About the Country

Country:Peru
Avg Annual Income:$6,715.00
Currency:Peru Nuevos Soles (PEN)
Exchange Rate:3.1950 PEN = 1 USD



Zary Vargas Rengifo is a member of the Amistad y Paz (Friendship and Peace) Village Bank. She lives in the Juanjui District in the Department of San Martín. She is 26, has a common law husband, and is the mother of two children, one of whom is still dependent.

With her first loan, for 300 soles, she began selling marcianos (popsicles), soft drinks and ice. She has been working with the Village Bank for three years. Currently she earns her living selling groceries from her own house.

She would like to invest her loan of 1,500 soles, which she will pay back in 6 months, in building and expanding her business. She will buy rice and sacks of sugar, as well as school supplies, including notebooks in bulk, pens, erasers, and office paper to meet her customers' demands.

Zary makes her own decisions regarding her business income. She feels at peace and is eager to move ahead with her projects. She is grateful to Manuela Ramos for letting her grow as both a businessperson and a woman.



Translated from Spanish by Jill Heske, Kiva Volunteer


La señora Zary Vargas Rengifo, pertenece al Banco Comunal “Amistad y Paz”, vive en el Jr. La Merced Nº 268, Distrito de Juanjui, Departamento de San Martín. Es conviviente, tiene 26 años y es madre de 2 hijos, uno que todavía depende de ella.

Con el primer préstamo de S/. 300.00, empezó vendiendo sus marcianos, gaseosas y hielos. Tiene 03 años trabajando con el Banco. En la actualidad se dedica a la Venta de Abarrotes, en su negocio que se encuentra ubicado en su misma casa.

Con el préstamo de S/1,500.00 que cancelará a plazo de 06 meses, desea invertirlo, ampliando e implementando su negocio, y comprar arroz y azúcar en sacos, como también útiles escolares, cuadernos en cientos, lapiceros, borradores, papel de escritorio, para atender la actual demanda de sus clientes.

Ella, toma las decisiones en las ganancias de su negocio, se siente tranquila y deseosa de seguir con sus proyectos.

Zary, manifiesta su agradecimiento a Manuela Ramos por permitirle crecer como empresaria y Mujer.

Subscribe

Lenders to this entrepreneur

Alec
Atlanta, GA
United States

richard
brooklyn, NY
United States

Susan
Brookline, MA
United States

Peter
Luleå,
Sweden

Anonymous
Seattle, WA
United States

Joyce
St. Louis, MO
United States

Arjan en Froukje
Deventer,
Netherlands

Jim
Belton, TX
United States

Jon
Otis Orchards, WA
United States

Season
Lewiston, ME
United States

Laura Rosie
Berkeley, CA
United States

Bob
Glendale, CA
United States

Ralph
Daly City, CA
United States

Christy
San Francisco, CA
United States

Bjoern
Frankfurt,
Germany

Nxpire
Westford, MA
United States

Chris, Sonia & Nicholas
Bilbao,
Spain



Top Lending Teams for this entrepreneur


Ernst & Young
Businesses
44 Members

Sweden
Local Area
461 Members

Team Japan
Local Area
395 Members

{ Kiva Fellows & Alumni }
Common Interest
146 Members

Washington State
Local Area
297 Members

Journal entries for Zary Vargas Rengifo


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: Zary Vargas Rengifo
Location: San Martín, Peru

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to Zary Vargas Rengifo by Manuela Ramos / CrediMUJER in Peru. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the 6 months of this loan, Manuela Ramos / CrediMUJER will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by from San Martín, Peru
Mar 21, 2009
Comment on this entry

Kiva Field Update - Message from Kiva Fellows in Peru
 
Entrepreneur: Zary Vargas Rengifo
Location: San Martín, Peru

As Kiva Fellows, we are happy to give you an update on the effect of your loan on a Manuela Ramos/CrediMujer client. The entrepreneur profiles on Kiva’s Website are posted by local field partners, which are microfinance institutions that lend to the working poor to help them lift themselves out of poverty. For the past three months, we have been working with Kiva’s field partner, Manuela Ramos. The role of the field partner is to screen each entrepreneur, post his/her loan request on the Kiva Website, disburse the loan, and collect repayments.

Manuela Ramos is an organization dedicated to the advancement of Peruvian women. Founded in 1978, its programs include educating women, primarily in the rural areas of Peru, about gender equality, domestic violence, women’s rights and environmental awareness. It now has programs in fifteen locations throughout Peru, with seven regions operating microfinance programs. The microfinance program on which we worked, CrediMujer, assists groups of 15-30 women to come together, form a community bank, and take out a loan to use in their individual businesses. This is where Kiva comes in, by providing interest-free capital for Manuela Ramos to lend.

By supporting an entrepreneur who works with Manuela Ramos/CrediMujer, you are also supporting the progress of women living in the poorest regions of Peru. Although the loan amounts offered by Manuela Ramos are small (between $100 and $1,000), they make an impact on these women’s lives by providing them with the necessary capital to start and, sometimes, to expand their businesses.

Entrepreneurs partake in different businesses depending on the regions in which they live. Our experiences as Kiva Fellows in the field have also been influenced by the diverse geography in Peru. In the San Martin region, which is located in the Amazon basin of Peru, Diana encountered not only some very hot days, but also the warmth and generosity of its women, who would often give her treats like coconut water, fresh oranges, and cold soft drinks to help her cool off after a long day walking under the sun. Because San Martin's primary economic activity is agriculture, Diana visited many entrepreneurs with businesses related to agriculture or food production and sales. Growing cocoa, selling plantains, preparing local dishes like juanes (a mixture of rice, chicken, eggs, olives, and spices, wrapped in "bijao" plant leaf) and anticuchos (grilled meat on a skewer), and selling basic foods, were the most common business activities in this area.

In the city of Puno, nestled in the Peruvian Andes, Emily experienced the bitter cold and intense sun that the region is known for and saw the economic benefits that the tourism industry has brought to the area. Puno is located on the shores of Lake Titicaca, the highest navigable lake in the world, and attracts many tourists who buy Peruvian tapestries, embroideries and alpaca sweaters, scarves and hats to keep warm. In addition to creating these artesian goods to sell to tourists, many Manuela Ramos entrepreneurs work in businesses that fatten livestock and operate small kiosks or general food stores.

Although we have been working separately in two different Manuela Ramos offices, we have focused on the same type of work, primarily writing journals for Manuela Ramos’s Kiva entrepreneurs. While the borrower profiles on Kiva’s site present information about how the entrepreneur plans to use the loan, journals provide follow-up information about how that loan was used and the effect it has had on the entrepreneur’s life. Although Manuela Ramos has employees and Kiva Fellows like us working hard to increase the number of journals written, financial and logistical constraints make it very difficult to produce a journal for each entrepreneur. Whether or not you have received a journal about the Manuela Ramos entrepreneur to whom you gave a loan, we hope that you will enjoy the story of Gloria, one of these entrepreneurs.

Gloria lives in the city of Tarapoto, the main commercial hub of the San Martin region. She makes “salchipapas,” a dish consisting of French fries and hot dog links, often accompanied by coleslaw or other variations, depending on the cook's particular style. Gloria's love for her business shows not only in the quality of her service and the food she serves, but also in her loyal customer base. Gloria has been a member of her community bank for quite a few years and her most recent loan of 1,000 soles (approximately $300 USD), was financed through Kiva by lenders like you. With this loan, Gloria bought tables, chairs and other supplies. This investment allowed her to better serve her customers and provide them with a more comfortable environment. However, Gloria's plans for her business don't end there. As an enterprising woman, she is thinking about the future of her business. To hear more about these plans from Gloria, see this short video interview (scroll all the way down):

http://www.kiva.org/app.php?page=businesses&action=about&id=64373&_tpos=1&_tpg=1&_te=mj

Thank you for supporting entrepreneurs like Gloria and helping Manuela Ramos work on behalf of Peruvian women!

Best Regards,

Emily Sweeney and Diana Rodriguez

Kiva Fellows 7th Class


Posted by JD Bergeron, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
Jun 11, 2009
Comments (26)

Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for Zary Vargas Rengifo

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
May 2009 $79.17 $79.17 Repayment Received
June 2009 $79.17 $79.16 Repayment Received
July 2009 $79.17 $79.17 Repayment Received
August 2009 $79.17 $79.17 Repayment Received
September 2009 $79.17 $79.18 Repayment Received
October 2009 $79.15 $79.15 Repayment Received