12- Đông Sơn Group

Status: Paid Back

$550
Loan Request
Pre-Disbursed : Jan 10, 2009
Listed: Jan 13, 2009
Funded: Jan 13, 2009
$550
Paid Back
Ended: Aug 15, 2009

About the Country

Country:Viet Nam
Avg Annual Income:$725
Currency:Vietnam Dong (VND)
Exchange Rate:17,861.0000 VND = 1 USD


In this Group:
Lân Bùi Thị, Sáu Phạm Thị, Châu Dương Thị, Dung Trần Thị, Phượng Nguyễn Thị, Hà Lê Thị

About the Loan

Location: Thanh Hoá, Viet Nam   Repayment Term: 8 months
(more info)
Activity: Food Production/Sales   Repayment Schedule: Monthly
Loan Use: To buy pork, shrimp, rice, etc and assorted hardware articles   Currency Exchange Loss: Covered
      Default Protection: Not Covered
Loan Group 12 consists of 6 poor women, all of whom live in the Dong Son ward of Thanh Hoa City. Thanh Hoa City is the provincial capital of Thanh Hoa province, one of the poorest provinces in Vietnam. It is located approximately 150 kilometers south of Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam.

Mrs. Lan is the lead borrower of the group. She is 47 years old, married, and has three children: a 25 year old son who drives vehicles for a private company, a daughter who is studying foreign languages at Hanoi University and a 17 year old daughter at high school.

This is Mrs. Lan's first loan from the Fund for Thanh Hoa Poor Women ("FPW") and she will use it to buy supplies for her restaurant business. The restaurant previously only catered to the breakfast crowd and she will use the funds to expand her lunch and dinner business. She currently serves about 100 breakfasts, 40 lunches and 10 dinners. With the profits from her loan, Mrs. Lan will pay for her children's education. Her goal is to see her children in stable employment.

The loan will be split equally between all 6 borrowers. The other borrowers in the group will use their share of the loan as follows:
* Mrs. Sau is borrowing 1,626,900 Vietnamese Dong to buy material that she will use to make and sell women's clothes.
* Chau will use her loan to buy pork and rice to make Bún Chả (a popular dish made of bacon and rice) for resale.
* Mrs. Ha will use her loan to buy pork, shrimp, chicken and rice to cook lunch and dinner and resell from her house.
* Phuong and Mrs. Dung are borrowing money to buy screws, aluminium pots, etc. to resell in Dong Thanh market.





About Group Loans
In a group loan, each member of the group receives an individual loan but is part of a group of individuals bound by a group guarantee. Under this arrangement, each member of the group supports one another and is responsible for paying back the loans of their fellow group members if someone is delinquent or defaults. Learn more

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Lenders to this group

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Aaron and Jan
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Angela
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Michael
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Francisco
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Anonymous

Doug
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Scott & Carol
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St. James
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Simbette
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David
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Journal entries for 12- Đông Sơn Group


Loan has been disbursed
 
Entrepreneur: 12- Đông Sơn Group
Location: Thanh Hoá, Viet Nam

Thank you for your loan. It has been disbursed to the Lân Bùi Thị group, consisting of Lân Bùi Thị, Sáu Phạm Thị, Châu Dương Thị, Dung Trần Thị, Phượng Nguyễn Thị, Hà Lê Thị by Fund for Thanh Hoa Poor Women (TCVM), a partner of Save the Children in Viet Nam. We are excited to watch this business grow. Over the 6 months of this loan, Fund for Thanh Hoa Poor Women (TCVM), a partner of Save the Children will be collecting repayments from this entrepreneur and posting progress updates on the Kiva website.


Posted by from Thanh Hoá, Viet Nam
Jan 14, 2009
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12- Đông Sơn Group Journal Update
 
Entrepreneur: 12- Đông Sơn Group
Location: Thanh Hoá, Viet Nam

Ms. Lân Bùi Thị is the leader for group 12- Đông Sơn. She runs a restaurant adjacent to the market near Hong Duc University and specializes in Chao lươn (eel rice porridge), Chao Ga (chicken rice porridge) and Com Binh Dan (translated as ‘rice for everyone’; plain rice served with vegetables & meat/fish). Ms. Lân used her loan to invest in new dishes, chairs, tables, pots and cups for her restaurant stall and these investments have helped her to cook more dishes and attract more customers. Previously, she served around 60 meals per day, and now she serves over 100 meals per day. As a result of this increased business, her income has grown by 30%! She hopes to continue to make money through her restaurant and support her children through university.

Ms. Lân also noted that all the group members have repaid their loans on time and that their businesses are doing well!

See a short video of Ms. Lân Bùi Thị

(in case the link is broken: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3CRv8N-oRNM)


Posted by Bernice Wong from Thanh Hoá, Viet Nam
Mar 17, 2009
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Kiva Message from the Field regarding Vietnam
 
Entrepreneur: 12- Đông Sơn Group
Location: Thanh Hoá, Viet Nam

Dear Lender,

Thank you for supporting the Fund for Thanh Hoa Poor Women!

The Fund for Thanh Hoa Poor Women (FPW) is a relatively new partner to the Kiva platform, having posted its first loan in November 2008. Since then, FPW staff have worked diligently to integrate Kiva into their operations and we are happy to announce that FPW has recently been approved for active field partner status on Kiva! Expect to see an increase in FPW activity on Kiva.org over the next few months.

Since February 2009, I have been serving in Thanh Hoa as a Kiva Fellow, assisting FPW through this process. Now that I’m at the end of my fellowship, I would like to share a simple revelation. What I have discovered through meeting and speaking with the borrowers here is that although the current financial crisis may suggest otherwise, finance, and in this case microfinance, in Thanh Hoa, is not always that dramatic. I am not leaving here as expected, with hallmark stories of adversities conquered, but I have met real women and seen how these simple, elegant loans return to them a small but significant power.

The need and impact of micro loans is known to differ from borrower to borrower. FPW’s clients represent women with differing circumstances and vary in the degree to which their loans have impacted their life. This microfinance mosaic of users, uses and value is well represented by the women from Group 41 Quang Hung, one of the first groups that I visited in Thanh Hoa.

Ms. Vũ Thị Kim Chung is the leader of Group 41 Quang Hung Commune and represents one end of the spectrum. Ms. Chung, like most Vietnamese women, engages in multiple income producing activities. She is primarily a worker in Le Mon Industrial Zone, working 18-20 days a month, transporting fertilizer on and off train cars and earning a relatively high income of ~1.800.000 VND ($103 USD) per month. The work is hard and she sounds like someone who understands the weight of world finances when she states plainly that “it’s a job” and she’s grateful for it. Although her family could survive without any additional income, Ms. Chung still chose to take out a loan and increase her workload voluntarily to, on a good day, earn an additional ~60.000 VND ($3.50 USD) by selling fruit and raising animals.

On the other end of the spectrum, you have Ms. Hương Nguyễn Thị. Ms. Hương lives in the same commune as Ms. Chung but her economic position is quite different. Ordinarily, she works in her family’s woodworking shop and raises animals for resale. Together, the family is able to generate sufficient income. This past year, however, her family has faced extraordinary circumstances, with her eldest son (aged 4) falling ill with an ocular condition in April 2008. The family traveled to Hanoi for treatment, only to find that their son was too young to have the surgery. Although her son’s base medical expenses were covered by the government, the costs of transportation, accommodation and food were left to the family. Her previous loans from FPW and this most recent loan from Kiva have helped her and her family manage these sudden expenses.

Reflecting on the two loans above, Ms. Hương’s story is more akin to those you read in Muhammad Yunus’s books, but Ms. Chung’s story is the norm here at FPW. The loan has not saved her from starvation, homelessness or illness, but has simply given her the option to earn a little more. Though a seemingly small return on her investment, it represents her hard work and most importantly, access to the resources and right to earn it.

Thank you again for providing the capital to lend to women in Thanh Hoa! Please consider lending to one of the currently fundraising loans from FPW.


Posted by JD Bergeron, Kiva Staff, from San Francisco, United States
May 1, 2009
Comments (4)

Kiva Help Repayment Schedule for 12- Đông Sơn Group

  Expected Repayments Actual Repayments Comments
April 2009 $91.67 $91.67 Repayment Received
May 2009 $91.67 $91.67 Repayment Received
June 2009 $91.67 $91.66 Repayment Received
July 2009 $91.67 $91.67 Repayment Received
August 2009 $91.67 $91.67 Repayment Received
September 2009 $91.65 $91.66 Repayment Received