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Caitlin Martin, John C.
Whitehead School of Diplomacy and International
Relations
Barbara Crossette,
a writer on international affairs, was chief correspondent for The
New York Times in Southeast Asia and South Asia and then The New York
Times United Nations Bureau Chief from 1994 to 2001. Max Stamper (r.)
Rush Micro Aid to Women Hurt by Tsunami
by
Barbara Crossette
UNITED NATIONS -- 14January 2005 / www.MaximsNews.com
/ Microcredit programs, especially for women, have been
justifiably criticized in the past for falling short of real development aid.
The programs -- in which lenders extend
small loans to individuals or very small enterprises -- are often too small
to make any long-term difference and impose interest rates around 20 percent
-- too high to allow for much real capital formation.
While micro credit has been a
phenomenal success by some terms -- the number of borrowers topped 55 million
by 2004 and the United Nations is making this the Year of Micro credit --
critics also pointed out that it is no panacea.
Low income, they say, is only part of
the poverty trap.
Poor health, lack of sanitation, bad schools or no schools
at all and a low status of women in society are burdens that limit the
ability of loans to actually improve life.
The U.N.'s Development Program measures
these drawbacks in an annual report.
Rounaq Jahan, a Bangladeshi feminist
and author, has argued that there is scant evidence that microcredit alone
empowers women.
But if ever the time and place were
right for the quick introduction of a huge infusion of microcredit loans, it
is now, in the stricken coastal regions of South and Southeast Asia.
While government leaders talk about
debt relief for nations that may or may not transfer those savings to local
people most affected, a strong chorus of economists has been saying,
"Hold on. The financial effects of
this tsunami disaster are not going to be felt mostly at the national
level."
Small Entrepreneurs Flattened
For example, in the hard-hit tourist
industry, economists are now calculating that more than three-quarters of
business losses will be borne by small and largely uninsured
entrepreneurs.
You know them: the seaside restaurant
owner, the guy who rents beach chairs, the woman sewing and selling sarongs.
Women. That's the other part of this
equation.
Among all the famous voices and faces
heard and seen on television screens in the last few weeks, only James
Wolfensohn, president of the World Bank, has articulated the importance of
women to rehabilitation and relief.
Wolfensohn was speaking at an impromptu
news conference while touring Sri Lanka, where many fishermen died and left
behind women who may never have had to work for pay and children whose needs
will have to be met.
Sri Lankan women are, on the whole,
well educated--the country has one of the region's highest female literacy
rates.
As a result, they--along with Thai
women--are in a good position to learn new skills to compensate for
losses.
So let's get going: This is the best
place to start.
Wolfensohn, who says that he is
planning to step down as World Bank president in June, has been one of the
strongest promoters of women in the larger United Nations system.
The World Bank has been focusing for
several years on the crucial role of women in development, while the United
Nations itself has weaseled out of its commitment to women on several fronts.
U.N. Leaders Buckle on Women's Rights
Most notably--and despite urging from
U.N. agencies as well as nongovernmental organizations--U.N. leaders, bowing
to a range of conservative governments, have allowed gender rights, sexual
choices and universal access to health services for women and girls to be
eliminated from the Millennium Development Goals, those international targets
for eliminating or sharply reducing poverty by 2015.
Without giving women these tools to
take charge of their lives, neither poverty nor HIV/AIDS can be mitigated.
That's because women are critically
important to families and families are the building blocks of
communities.
The devastated areas of Asia would
prove the point, if the world would stop looking only at the big
macroeconomic picture and begin focusing on a million individual economic and
financial needs.
Yes, the high cost of microcredit
interest rates can be crippling over the long term.
And yes, the claims of microcredit have
also been questioned by anecdotal evidence that a lot of the loan money was
collected by women and then given to men.
In the wake of this disaster, that
problem should be forgotten and the short-term needs of people should be the
top priority.
In the fishing communities of Asia,
many hardworking men who survived have no assets other than a ruined boat, or
no boat at all. In television interviews they say that they can live with
interest rates of 20 percent or higher, just to get back to sea.
They know that this is a one-time
expense that is essential to future economic independence, and they deserve
to be heard, too.
Reprinted
with permission of Women's
eNews, the source for independent journalism covering stories and events
that impact women's lives www.womensenews.org
So Close to Heaven : The Vanishing Buddhist Kingdoms of the Himalayas
So
Close to Heaven: The Vanishing Buddhist Kingdoms of the Himalayas
India
Facing the 21st Century
America's
Wonderful Little Hotels and Inns: Western Region
Barbara
Crossette, a writer on international affairs,
was chief correspondent for The New York
Times in Southeast Asia and South Asia and
later the paper's United Nations bureau chief
from 1994 to 2001.
She
was earlier a Times
correspondent and a diplomatic
reporter in Washington.
She
has also reported from Central
America, the Caribbean and Canada, and
been deputy foreign editor and senior
editor in charge of the Times’
weekend news operations.
Before
joining the newspaper in 1973, Ms.
Crossette worked for The
Evening and Sunday Bulletin in
Philadelphia and The
Birmingham Post in Birmingham,
England.
In
1991, Ms. Crossette won the George Polk Award for foreign reporting
for her coverage of the assassination in India of a former prime minister,
Rajiv Gandhi.
In
1998, she won the 25-year achievement award of The Silurians, a
society of New York journalists, and the award for international reporting
from InterAction, a coalition of more than 150 international nonprofit
aid and development organizations.
In
1999, she received the Business Council of the United Nations’ Korn
Ferry Award for outstanding reporting on the organization, and in 2003
the United Nations Correspondents’ Association’s lifetime
achievement award.
Ms.
Crossette is the author of India Facing the 21st Century,
published by Indiana University Press in 1993, and So Close to Heaven: The
Vanishing Buddhist Kingdoms of the Himalayas, published by Alfred A.
Knopf in 1995 and in paperback by Random House/Vintage Destinations in 1996.
The
Great Hill Stations of Asiawas
published by Westview Press in 1998 and in paperback by Basic Books in 1999.
In
2000, she wrote a survey of India and Indian-American relations, India:
Old Civilization in a New World, for the Foreign Policy Association
in New York.
Ms.
Crossette has been a member of the adjunct faculty of the Columbia
University Graduate School of Journalism, and in 1980-81 was a Fulbright
teaching fellow in journalism at Punjab University in Chandigarh,
India.
In
1994, she was the Ferris Visiting Professor on Politics and the Press
at Princeton University.
Since
2001, she has taught a seminar on writing on international affairs for Bard
College.
In
2003, she led an advancedworkshop
in journalism at the Royal University of Phnom Penh for writers and
editors from Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos and Burma.
She
was named a Knight International Press Fellow in 2004 to work with
newspapers and journalism organizations in Brazil.
Born
in Philadelphia, Ms. Crossette received a B.A. in history and political
science from Muhlenberg College in 1963. She is a member of the Council
on Foreign Relations and the Women’s Foreign Policy Group, and
serves on the board of the Carnegie Council
on Ethics and International Affairs.
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