Maribel Guzman Sarco


Status: Paid Back

$975.00   Loan Request
$975.00   Paid Back

About the Entrepreneur

Name: Maribel Guzman Sarco
Location: Calca, Peru
Activity: Butcher Shop

About the Loan

Loan Amount: $975.00
Loan Use: Buy and sell beef, mutton, alpaca and sheep
Repayment Term: 7 months - View details below
Lenders Repaid: Monthly
Currency Exchange Loss: Covered
Date Listed: Apr 1, 2009
Date Disbursed: Mar 26, 2009
Date Funded:Apr 7, 2009
Loan Ended:Oct 15, 2009

About the Country

Country:Peru
Avg Annual Income:$6,715.00
Currency:Peru Nuevos Soles (PEN)
Exchange Rate:3.1336 PEN = 1 USD



Maribel is from the Calca district in the Urubamba province. She is 39 years old and lives with her partner and her two children, 18 and 3. In addition to housework, she owns a small business selling red meat. This loan will help her buy more meats (beef, mutton, alpaca, and sheep). She is very grateful for this loan and is dedicated to paying her debts back on time.

Translated from Spanish by Shanti Singh, Kiva Volunteer



La socia MARIBEL; Es natural del distrito de Calca de la provincia de Urubamba, ella tiene 39 años de edad y es conviviente, tiene 2 hijos de 18 y 3 años.

La socia Maribel solicita el préstamo en razón de que ella tiene su pequeño negocio de venta de carnes rojas, para lo cual el préstamo solicitado le servirá para comprar carnes rojas (vaca, ovinos, alpaca, cordero), esta actividad ella comprarte con sus labores de ama de casa.

Ella esta muy agradecida con el préstamo otorgado y así mismo esta comprometida con este medio para hacer efectiva su deuda en el tiempo programado.

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Journal entries for Maribel Guzman Sarco


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: Maribel Guzman Sarco
Location: Calca, Peru

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to MARIBEL GUZMAN SARCO by Asociación Arariwa in Peru. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the 4 months of this loan, Asociación Arariwa will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by from Calca, Peru
Apr 8, 2009
Comment on this entry

Maribel's Kiva loan
 
Entrepreneur: Maribel Guzman Sarco
Location: Calca, Peru

On Wednesday afternoon I went to the Valle Sagrado Village Bank’s first repayment meeting, where I met with Maribel to ask her about her Kiva loan. She used her loan of 3000 soles to buy lamb, beef and pork for her butcher shop. Maribel travels to Yaviri, a town several hours from Cusco, twice per week to stock up on fresh meat. She buys each kilo for 8 soles and sells it for 10 soles, though she says she also loses a bit of money on each kilo, since everyone wants a little extra on each cut of meat (i.e. no one will settle for a little less than one kilo when they order a kilo, but everyone would like a little more than one kilo). She earns about 400 soles in profits each week. Since she sells about 300 kilos of meat per week, so the loan money was enough to keep her store stocked for about 9 days.

Maribel says that meat sales are down slightly lately. She attributes this to the coffee harvest in Quillabamba, a town about four hours from Calca. Many laborers from Calca travel to Quillabamba to work in the coffee fields, so demand has been down for a few weeks. She expects sales to pick back up soon.

Maribel’s goal for the future is to have her own meat locker to sell animals in bulk. She has been a member of the Valle Sagrado Village Bank for four or five years now, and says that things have been going very well for her since she started taking out small loans. She has used the money from her Arariwa savings account to pay for her children’s education, and the extra money has also helped her cover basic costs like rent, food and clothing.

Note: Because of the delay between when loan repayments are made to Asociacion Arariwa and when they are reported and sent to Kiva, Maribel currently appears to have repaid 0% of her loan, when in reality she has successfully made one loan repayment. Repayments may take up to six weeks to be recorded and deposited into lenders’ accounts—please be patient!


Posted by Cynthia McMurry from Calca, Peru
May 4, 2009
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Kiva Field Update - Message from Kiva Fellow in Peru
 
Entrepreneur: Maribel Guzman Sarco
Location: Calca, Peru

Thank you for supporting entrepreneurs in Peru. As you may know, all Kiva loans are actually administered by local field partners. For the past couple of months, I have been working as a Kiva Fellow with Asociación Arariwa, Kiva’s newest field partner in Peru.

Arariwa (which means “protector of crops” in Quechua, Peru’s main indigenous language) became a Kiva partner in August 2008, but did not begin posting a significant volume of its clients to the Kiva Web site until early 2009. Arariwa’s executive director, loan officers, and Kiva coordinator are palpably excited about what they call “Project Kiva.” They are working hard to visit village banks in isolated, rural areas of the Cusco region so rural clients can tell their stories and fund their loans through Kiva.

Raquel Villafuerte, Arariwa’s Kiva coordinator, is passionate about traveling and visiting the communities of the countryside around Cusco. In this sense, she is perfect for her job. Others might resent the long, often uncomfortable hours of travel on dirt roads, and occasional overnight stays in distant communities far from family and friends that come with the job, but Raquel enjoys the work and always has a smile for her clients and her co-workers. Unfortunately, Raquel and an Arariwa loan officer were injured in a motorcycle accident last month while returning from a visit to a Kiva group. Her scrapes and bruises didn’t dampen her enthusiasm for her work, although she has avoided motorcycles since then.

Arariwa’s loan officers serve different communities in the Cusco area. Some loan officers work within the city of Cusco and hold their group meetings at the Arariwa office. Others work up to two hours outside the city and hold group meetings in clients’ houses or businesses. These loan officers still report to the central office in Cusco each day. Other loan officers work even further from the city (three to nine hours away), live in the communities they serve, and only report to the central office every few weeks. One of these loan officers is Marco, who lives and works in the community of Lares. To illustrate how small Lares is, here’s a conversation I had with Marco about a week before I went to visit one of his village banks, Tikarisun de Ccachin:

Me: I should get your cell phone number so that we can coordinate when and where to meet up.

Marco: There’s actually no cell service there, so I’ll give you the phone number for Lares instead.

Me: Oh, Arariwa has an office in Lares?

Marco: No, it’s the phone number for Lares. The town has one phone. Just leave a message with whoever answers, and they’ll come find me and give me the message.

The Tikarisun Village Bank is located in Ccachin, a rural community high up in the clouds in the hills outside Lares. Like Lares, Ccachin has just one phone, but it is a much smaller community and it has even less contact with the outside world. Ccachin is just thirty or forty minutes from Lares by car, but it is much more isolated due to its small size, its remote location in the hills, and the lack of public transportation connecting it with any other nearby towns.

For me, getting from Cusco to Ccachin meant a nearly four-hour ride in the company pickup truck down bumpy dirt roads. The trip was tiring, even though I had the luxury of traveling in a private vehicle. It was easy to see why villagers in Ccachin don’t travel to Cusco to get loans.

My visit to Ccachin really opened my eyes to the importance of extending microfinance to rural areas. When we talk about people living in developing countries, we don’t always distinguish between urbanites and rural farmers. In Peru, however, that distinction is very important. Peruvians in rural areas are much more likely to be indigenous Quechua-speakers, to be living below the national poverty line, and to have little or no formal education. They typically cook with wood fires instead of gas stoves, live in adobe houses instead of concrete or stucco homes, and have more children to support than do city dwellers. Loans are readily available to a shop owner in the city of Cusco, but not to a small farmer in the countryside.

The credit and education that Arariwa offers go a long way in rural areas like Ccachin, because micro-loans are usually the only source of external support available to small businesses like Señora Ernestina’s grocery store, Señora Victoria’s pig farm, or Señora Hipolita’s chicheria (Chicha is a traditional Andean corn beer). Marco, Tikarisun’s loan officer, is already the godfather of three of his clients’ children, an indication of the respect and gratitude the community has for him. Another Arariwa loan officer, Tula, who works in the remote jungle town of Pilcopata, says that her clients often encourage her to run for mayor of Pilcopata.

Arariwa’s staff is working hard to provide journal updates for all of its Kiva clients. Because so many of Arariwa’s clients live quite far from the central office in Cusco, reaching each and every Kiva client for a follow-up interview is simply not possible. Nonetheless, 27% of Arariwa’s loans have journal entries, compared with just 12% for all Kiva field partners.

I hope you have found this journal entry to be interesting and informative, and I’m happy to answer any comments or questions you may have. I have been lucky enough to see the effect that Kiva loans are having on the ground here in the Cusco region. Arariwa’s Kiva clients, the staff and I are extremely grateful for your support. I hope you continue to lend to Peruvian entrepreneurs through Asociación Arariwa!

Read the Tikarisun Village Bank’s Kiva profile and read about my visit with Evarista, one of the group members:

http://www.kiva.org/app.php?action=about&id=95881&page=businesses&_te=mj

View all Asociación Arariwa loans that are currently being funded:

http://www.kiva.org/app.php?page=businesses&partner_id=119&status=fundraising&sortBy=New+to+Old&_te=mj

Best regards,

Cynthia McMurry

Kiva Fellow


Posted by JD Bergeron, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
Jun 11, 2009
Comments (13)

Kiva Field Update - Message from Kiva Fellow in Peru
 
Entrepreneur: Maribel Guzman Sarco
Location: Calca, Peru

Apologies: photo accidentally left out from last email.


Posted by JD Bergeron, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
Jun 11, 2009
Comments (12)

Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for Maribel Guzman Sarco

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
June 2009 $180.01 $180.01 Repayment Received
July 2009 $187.21 $0.00 Repayment Received
August 2009 $194.70 $278.89 Repayment Received
September 2009 $202.49 $305.51 Repayment Received
October 2009 $210.59 $31.83 Repayment Received
November 2009 $0.00 $178.76