01173nam a22002537a 450000500170000000800410001702000150005804000070007304100080008008200260008810000210011424500650013526000360020030000280023636500300026452103930029465000220068765000170070965000150072670000230074194200120076499900190077695201240079520210930111952.0210930b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d a8173140359 cAL aeng 223a332.1095492bCOUG aAlex Counts9577 aGive Us CreditbHow small Loans Today Can Shape Our Tomorrow aNew DelhibResearch Pressc1996 axx,361 p.bHBc24x16 cm b₹295.00c₹d₹295.00 aWhen Muhammad Yunus returned to his native Bangladesh 25 years ago with an American doctorate in economics, he set out to try and combat the entrenched poverty there. By 1995, his Grameen Bank had made loans totaling $500 million to two million borrowers, mostly women. In spite of the fact that these borrowers were the poorest of the poor, Grameen has had a near-perfect repayment rate. aGrameen Bank9578 aBanking9579 aWomen9580 aCOUNTS (Alex)9581 2ddccGF c216442d216442 00102ddc40708ECOaALbALd2013-03-24g0.00l0o332.1095492 COUGpGF01744r2021-09-30 00:00:00v0.00w2021-09-30yGF