Use BBC.com or the new BBC App to listen to BBC podcasts, Radio 4 and the World Service outside the UK.

Find out how to listen to other BBC stations

Episode details

World Service,21 Oct 2014,18 mins

Lending to Africa's Poor

Business Daily

Available for over a year

We look at a credit crisis in Africa. It is not the kind where there is too much money sloshing around - for most poor Africans there is none at all. Eighty per cent of Africans don't even have a bank account, let alone any formal way of getting a loan, and many say the banks are excluding them. We hear from one of Malawi's leading businessmen, Gospel Kazako, from a local businesswoman just starting up, and from the African Development Banks former chief economist, professor Mthuli Ncube, now a senior research fellow at the Blavatnik School of Government in Oxford. We ask him why the continent's banks are so reluctant to give poorer people a helping hand. We also look at the still-untapped possibilities of micro-credit from one of its pioneers - the Nobel peace prize winner, Mohammed Yunus, of Grameen Bank in Bangladesh.

Programme Website
More episodes