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In Uganda, Violet Mutoto is able to manage
her business and better feed and educate
her three children with the help of the "Credit With
Education" program.
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"Participation in the programs leads to
empowerment of women through their acquisition of valued skills
and knowledge and through their ability to save."
A Freedom From Hunger-sponsored microcredit and education
program that aids women in Uganda is a proven success. A recent
study by the U.S. Agency for International Development of
three microfinance organizations in Uganda found that the
region's microcredit programs are effectively working to improve
the lives of their participants.
Included in the study was the Foundation for Credit and Community
Assistance (FOCCAS) Uganda, Freedom from Hunger's local partner
in implementing the Credit with Education program in rural
eastern Uganda.
Using information gathered from interviews with more than
1,300 program participants from the three organizations, researchers
found that nearly all respondents benefited from their involvement in
the microfinance programs.
Researchers concluded that the institutions are reaching
their goals of serving primarily poor participants and that access to
cash loans provides participants with a broader range of
choices for managing their small businesses. They also found that
participation in the programs leads to empowerment of women through
their acquisition of valued skills and knowledge and through their
ability to save.
The Credit with Education program in Uganda has been reaching
women and their families since 1996. The service combines
small cash loans and health and nutrition education for women
living in rural areas of the developing world. Through rigorous
research, Freedom from Hunger has found that Credit with Education
improves the income of poor families, the self confidence
of the women involved, the food security of the family and,
most importantly, the nutritional status of the children whose
mothers participate in the program.
As of Sept. 30, 2001, FOCCAS Uganda was supporting 416 credit
associations with a membership of 16,837. The program has
lent over $5 million, and the average loan size per borrower
is just $40.
For more information, contact April Watson, (530) 758-6200
ext. 47 or awatson@freefromhunger.org.
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