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Book Description

Two and a half billion people worldwide, most of them desperately poor villagers, need a better way to save and to borrow. Even the most innovative banking institutions can’t reach them; savings groups can.
In savings groups, members save what they can in a communal pot and loan their growing fund to each other for their short-term needs. Jeffrey Ashe and Kyla Neilan illustrate how these savings groups form and function and how little “outside” support is actually required for their success. Drawing on decades of Ashe’s personal experience, this book describes how he developed Saving for Change, which leveraged the wisdom and strength of group members to train and establish new groups. This model has impacted the lives of 680,000 people across five countries.
Savings groups are a “catalytic innovation” that bypasses subsidies, dependency, and high costs while effectively reducing chronic hunger, building assets, and empowering the community. Today, saving groups have 9 million members around the globe—with minimal support, membership could grow to ten times this number.

Table of Contents

  1. Cover page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. Foreword: Frances Moore Lappé
  7. Preface: Ray Offenheiser
  8. Introduction Beginning a Savings Revolution—They Know How
  9. Chapter 1 Guiding Principles for Saving for Change
  10. Chapter 2 A Group Meeting
  11. Chapter 3 “Dependency Is Not Empowering”
  12. Chapter 4 Getting Started with Saving for Change
  13. Chapter 5 The Most Productive Asset of All: Empowering Friends and Neighbors
  14. Chapter 6 How Do We Know It Works?
  15. Chapter 7 Applying Savings Group Principles to Other Development Initiatives
  16. Conclusion Bringing Savings Groups to Fifty Million People
  17. Notes
  18. Bibliography
  19. Additional Resources
  20. Acknowledgments
  21. Index
  22. About the Authors
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