Lending circles can break barriers to banking

Mission Asset Fund (MAF) staff and client meeting.

By Stephanie Presch, Content Specialist, UnidosUS

Alicia Villanueva came to the United States in search of a better life for herself and for her children. When she arrived in the United States, she wanted to start her own business selling tamales, but lacked the funds necessary to get it set up.

Villanueva had participated in lending circles back in Mexico, so when she saw a flyer for one being offered at UnidosUS Affiliate Mission Asset Fund (MAF) in San Francisco, she decided to sign up. The money from the tanda helped her pay bills, her car registration, and invest in starting a business that could support herself and her three children.

The concept of a lending circle did not originate with MAF. In Mexico, they are known as tandas or cundinas. In Brazil, they’re known as pandeiros. In West Africa and the Caribbean, they’re called susus. And in Asia, they’re known as hui. In all cases, the concept remains the same—a group of people coming together to lend money to each other.

Lending circles at MAF typically use payments that range from  $50 to $200 a month, and are formed between 6 to 12 people. Each month, the money that people in the lending circle contribute is given to one member of the group. The cycle repeats itself every month until each person in the group has received the money.

Continue reading

The financial system isn’t working for Latinos

A new report outlines the challenges and solutions to building a better financial life.

By John Marth, UnidosUS Content Manager

Banking in color | UnidosUS

Checking your debit balance, opening a credit card, or taking out a loan shouldn’t be a struggle. Ideally, financial services and tools should be equally accessible to everyone, making it possible for anyone to make the economy work for them. But for too many Americans, that’s just not the reality.

There are nearly 100 million Americans living in poverty, or nearly in poverty. And without fair access to financial services, they lack the opportunities for upward mobility and a healthy financial life that others take for granted. Communities of color, including Latinos, are hardest hit, and face additional barriers to accessing these services.

“Barriers to financial inclusion prevent people from fully participating in the American economy, and the data shows that minority communities struggle to access traditional banking products and services,” says Marisabel Torres, Senior Policy Analyst at UnidosUS.

Torres presents those barriers in a new UnidosUS report, The Future of Banking: Overcoming Barriers to Financial Inclusion for Communities of Color. She researched and wrote the report with PolicyLink Director Christopher Brown and Rebecca Loya, an independent research consultant. The report was released earlier this week at an event in Florida.

Continue reading