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Description

Description

In this episode, we explore how Grameen America successfully adapted the global microfinance model to the United States—proving that poverty, financial exclusion, and entrepreneurial potential exist even in advanced economies. Founded during the 2008 financial crisis, Grameen America set out to empower low-income women with something many had never been offered before: trust-based access to capital.

We unpack Grameen America’s distinctive group-lending model, where social trust replaces collateral, and weekly peer meetings build accountability, confidence, and community. The episode traces how tiny loans—often just a few thousand dollars—help women launch and grow microbusinesses, build credit histories, increase savings, and stabilize household income. Along the way, we examine the organization’s disciplined scaling strategy, its embrace of digital systems to improve efficiency, and its ability to maintain near-perfect repayment rates while expanding nationwide.

This is a story of social innovation at scale—showing how finance, when redesigned around dignity, discipline, and community, can become a powerful engine for economic inclusion and long-term impact in the United States.

Key words

Microfinance, Women’s Economic Empowerment, Financial Inclusion, Social Collateral, Scaling Social Impact