Sudiartinik -

Status: Paid Back

$125
Loan Request
Disbursed : Apr 26, 2008
Listed: Apr 12, 2008
Funded: Apr 12, 2008
$125
Paid Back
Ended: May 15, 2009

About the Country

Country:Indonesia
Avg Annual Income:$4,458
Currency:Indonesia Rupiahs (IDR)
Exchange Rate:9,189.2124 IDR = 1 USD


About the Loan

Location: Badung, Indonesia   Repayment Term: 14 months
(more info)
Activity: Food Production/Sales   Repayment Schedule: Monthly
Loan Use: To add business capital (Menambah Modal Usaha)   Currency Exchange Loss: Covered
      Default Protection: Covered
Sudiartinik (53 tyears) lives in Resimuka Barat street with her husband Badur an independent electrician. Both children Sandy and Yulianto are independent. The family is healthy, and the house clean. Sudiartinik daily activities as rujak (indonesian type salad), and chicken satay (chicken on sticks barbecued) includes normally buying the ingredients at Saera market. Specially for chicken satay, Sudiartinik bought 6-8 lbs of chicken intestine, while for rujak usually not fixed, depending on how many buyers. Daily income could reach Rp 50,000 (about US$ 6), and that is enough for daily needs. Sudiartinik very much hope for additional capital so that her business could grow.

Translated from Bahasa Indonesia by Gwan Liong Ang, Kiva volunteer.



Sudiartinik (53 tahun) tinggal di Jl. Resimuka Barat bersama suaminya Badur yang berprofesi sebagai Tukang Listrik keliling. Kedua anaknya Sandy dan Yulianto sudah mandiri, dan keadaan keluarganya sehat, begitu juga dengan keadaan rumahnya bersih. Kegiatan Sudiartinik sehari-hari adalah sebagai penjual rujak dan sate ayam dan biasanya dia belanja bahan-bahan jualannya di Pasar Saera. Khusus untuk sate ayam, biasanya Sudiartinik menghabiskan 3-4 kg usus ayam sedangkan untuk rujaknya biasanya tidak tentu, tergantung banyaknya pembeli. Pendapatan dalam sehari bisa mencapai Rp. 50.000 dan itu cukup untuk kebutuhan sehari-hari. Sudiartinik sangant mengharapkan bantuan modal sehingga usahanya semakin berkembang.


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Lenders to this entrepreneur

Georges
Sierre,
Switzerland



Journal entries for Sudiartinik -


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: Sudiartinik -
Location: Badung, Indonesia

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to Sudiartinik - by DINARI Foundation in Indonesia. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the next 12 months, DINARI Foundation will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by from Badung, Indonesia
Apr 27, 2008
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Sudiartinik Loan Update
 
Entrepreneur: Sudiartinik -
Location: Badung, Indonesia

Sudiartinik used half her loan funds to help buy food for her business selling sate (skewered meat) and rujak (fruit salad). With the other half, she paid for part of her children’s education. She believes she now earns higher profits than she did before the loan. This is her first individual loan, although she received three loans as part of a group previously.

She uses the profits from her business to pay for her family’s meals and her children’s education. She recently bought a refrigerator, which allows her to keep the sate she does not sell on a given day. She is disappointed, however, if she does not sell all of her food.

After repaying her present loan, she would like to take out another loan to grow her business. She presently rents her land and hopes to own her own land some day, although she does not have the money to do so now.

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.


Posted by Lander Burr from Badung, Indonesia
Oct 27, 2008
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Kiva Message from the Field regarding Bali
 
Entrepreneur: Sudiartinik -
Location: Badung, 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 (16)

Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for Sudiartinik -

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
July 2008 $10.42 $11.00 Repayment Received
August 2008 $10.42 $11.00 Repayment Received
September 2008 $10.42 $11.00 Repayment Received
October 2008 $10.42 $11.00 Repayment Received
November 2008 $10.42 $11.00 Repayment Received
December 2008 $10.42 $0.00 Repayment Received
January 2009 $10.42 $17.92 Repayment Received
February 2009 $10.42 $10.42 Repayment Received
March 2009 $10.42 $10.42 Repayment Received
April 2009 $10.42 $10.42 Repayment Received
May 2009 $10.42 $10.42 Repayment Received
June 2009 $10.38 $10.40 Repayment Received