I think someone has to make the point that this facebook of charity is not really tackling core issues of government,democracy and the rule of law in any consistent way.
Really? It isn't? Kiva is not directly contributing to forming democracy, no. But look at it this way--you have a family in Afghanistan who, thanks to microfinance and Kiva, can now expand their business and keep life a bit more stable. Now they can afford to send their children to school. Those children grow up educated, and are able to get better jobs, which moves them that closer towards being out of poverty...now those children have the opportunity to look around, see what's wrong, try to make their country that much greater...
I smile every time I see a journal where the borrower has been able to send his/her children to school because of their increased profits. You really don't think that Kiva has any impact on poverty when there are children getting enough to eat and access to an education thanks to microfinance?
This is why our money are better spent with established and experienced organisations like UNESCO and the Red Cross (make ur own list) - who have been in this minefield for decades.
Except that the reason so many people are loving Kiva is because of dissatisfaction with those large organizations. Don't get me wrong, I donate to the Red Cross, I think it (and organizations like it) are valuable beyond measure. But I've read so many stories of aid getting held up due to bureaucratic red tape, or donated money going to fund tv ads, or...I donated to Haiti relief, I'm sure 99% of the people on this forum donated to Haiti relief. But I admit, I wonder how much good that money is going to do. In ten years, will that country still be in the desperete condition it's in right now?
I can take a loan from Kiva and say, "this money is going to this person to help her buy a cow, which will help her raise her income, which will help her feed her family". I can know (as much as you can ever 'know' with this sort of thing) that my money is really helping someone, somewhere. Is that selfish, to want that knowledge? And if it's selfish, does it negate the good things the loan money is doing?
So let's all get over ourselves and admit that there is some self profiling involved in all this- and then maybe we can start discussing whether this Kiva style "have your picture taken in front of a goat and get some cash" facebook of charity is really the best way to spend money in developing countries.
What way would you dub the 'best' way? Not trying to be nasty, I'm legitimately curious. Kiva is NOT going to end poverty. It just isn't. But it is going to (it HAS) helped people fight their own way out of poverty, one person at a time. And then those people, who usually aren't the Poorest of the Poor, can go and help those who ARE the poorest of the poor.
For an example, see the mfi update on some Kenyan loans such as
this one . This woman can now afford, thanks to microfinance, to help street children (poorest of the poor, yes?) find a job and a new start.
It's wishful thinking - it's much more complex than this.
Sure. Kiva is just one piece of a huge, complex puzzle. I wish it was the end-all-be-all answer to ending poverty, but it isn't. But it helps.
And as an aside...
I, personally, feel that every active loan on the site could default, every mfi could close, every loan could end without a journal update, and Kiva still would have made a difference in the world--because there are loans like
this on the site. This one woman's children are in school because of microfinance, when they wouldn't otherwise be. That's just one family out of too many, granted...but it's something, isn't it?