Lao Weaving Artisans - Micro Credit Project
Summary
This pilot will provide loans to women in the Vientiane Province. Using a microfinance program, SEDA will provide financial services to people whom otherwise would not have access to funds.
|
Actions
Printer Friendly
Add to Favorite Projects
Add to Registry
Add to Fundraiser
Subscribe to Email Updates
Subscribe to RSS Feed
Share & Save this Project
Spread the Word
Tell a Friend
Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
Tag on del.icio.us
More Information About this Project
Project Needs and Beneficiaries
The need addressed is creating business opportunities for women who are in poor and remote villages. The members will be able to weave 15 skirts which will generate income equal to $375 USD per month. After the loan interest of $75 USD is paid to SEDA, the individual profit will be $300 USD per month. This program provides the means for these women to escape poverty.
Activities
In addition to starting a micro credit finance program this project will provide technical support, training, inspection, and quality control and assist in the marketing of the products.
Funding Information
Total Funding Received to Date: $1,000
Remaining Goal to be Funded: $50,832
Total Funding Goal: $51,832
Additional Documentation
This project has provided additional documentation in a Microsoft Word file (projdoc.doc).
Resources
Why this Project is Important
Potential Long Term Impact
This project will test the feasibility of the artisan of silk textile production funded by a micro-credit system. If successful, SEDA will convert expand the variety of loans available and expand the project to a national level.
Project Message
With little or no education and a family to support, many women in Laos struggle to feed their children and keep a roof over their heads...[this project] willcreate a brighter future.
- Souly QuachAngkham, Director/Founder
Who is Running This Project
Contact
Souly QuachAngkham
Founder
P.O.Box T469
Vientiane, Lao
Lao People's Democratic Republic
856-21-314-338
Email:
Project Sponsor
Organization
Social and Economic Developers Association (SEDA)
P.O. BOX T469 Xaysetha
Vientiane,
Vientiane
NA
856-21-314-338
http://seda-laos.org
Social and Economic Developers Association (SEDA)'s Current Projects on GlobalGiving
Social and Economic Developers Association (SEDA)'s Funded Projects on GlobalGiving
![]() Access to traditional healthcare for the poor |
![]() Provide Microfinance to Disadvantaged Laos Farmers |
![]() Renovate Three Elementary Schools in Laos |
Where this Project is Located
Country
This project is located in
Lao People's Democratic Republic
and can also be found under
Microfinance.
For more information about Lao People's Democratic Republic, read the Human Development Report on Lao People's Democratic Republic or the Wikipedia entry for Lao People's Democratic Republic.
When this Project was Updated
Last Updated
This project was last updated on November 6, 2009.
Date Added to GlobalGiving
This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on December 7, 2008
Latest Update from the Field
A Postcard from Lao Weaving Artisans - Micro Credit Project
By Clare Rutz - Visitor, October 16, 2009 11:24 AM
As an In-The-Field traveler I was able to see a side of Laos that most backpackers wouldn’t. I was able to talk to the people, visit their homes, and catch a glimpse of their daily lives. SEDA, a small non-profit that reaches out to many different communities with a thoughtful approach to each, gave me the opportunity to ask what it was the people of Vientiane and the surrounding villages needed. Their response was often exactly what SEDA was determined to help them with.
Some projects help thousands of people, while others help just one, but when given the chance to see the smile that comes from that one person in thanks for what was given to them, you do not question the importance of such philanthropy. Andee is a twelve-year-old girl who was completely paralyzed until six months ago. With physical therapy and medicine that helps rejuvenate her nerve cells given to her by SEDA she is able to show some movement. When asked to move her arms she did with a proud smile immediately following her accomplishment. I was fortunate enough to come on a day where Souly, the founder of SEDA, was delivering a surprise to Andee. We had brought a full set of sheets and a bright pink blanket for her bare mattress. Her simple joy for such simple amenities could easily ground anyone. With the right funding another surprise will hopefully make its way to Andee. Souly is currently looking for a hospital bed that will help her with physiotherapy and exercise!
Jumping back into the car we head towards another project of SEDA’s. We are visiting a woman who is apart of the microfinance opportunity that SEDA provides. When we arrive the first thing I notice is the spinning wheel. It’s the main attraction of the tiny building the family resides in. “Without the spinning wheel there would be no building”, was what I was told after I asked how their lives changed since the microfinance program. It provides them with a job that pays for the necessities. The microfinance project gives three to four hundred women loans in order to start spinning. The women collect old collars and bits of cloth from the factories and spin it back to useable string. SEDA provides the loans and helps the women with marketing. They are required to set up a group of five to ten women with one accountant and one secretary, and as a team they are responsible for repaying their loans. The interest rates compared to the local banks are extremely low, which allow the women to take the risk and begin working. The program provides a sustainable income for these women, and sustainability is a large component to the path towards self-reliance, the greatest goal of SEDA.
Our last stop is a once abandoned house that was previously owned by a USAID worker. The swimming pool is empty and weeds burst from the cracks, but something remarkable is going on in the backyard. A greenhouse full of potted plants is the beginning of a huge step forward for the farmers of Laos. SEDA is researching the most effective farming techniques that can be taught to farmers to increase the quality and quantity of their agricultural goods. They are also researching “cash crops”, which are the crops that are in high demand. Agarwood is the leading product in this field, and SEDA is making long strides to grow this special wood used for medicine and cosmetics, distribute the seedlings, and train farmers on how to tend to the crop. The difficulties of the process include the transportation of the seedlings, which is very costly and the training. Agarwood needs to be grown in a very specific way in order for the quality to be adequate enough to use, therefore, the training process will need to be long and thorough. With each great idea come obstacles! Follow the progress of SEDA on their page on GlobalGiving at: www.globalgiving.com/2219 to check up on Andee and to support the women in the microfinance program go to www.globalgiving.com/2504. To read about the agricultural program that completed its funding goal go to www.globalgiving.com/2012.
When asked what she would tell her friends about this project, Clare said: "Great: They are making a difference."
Pictures:
Want to support this project's continued work? 
Read 4 more "Updates from the Field"
Subscribe to "Updates from the Field" by E-Mail
Subscribe to RSS Feed
How Else You Can Help
Share and Save
Tell a Friend
Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
Tag on del.icio.us
Digg It!
Add to Google Bookmarks
Add to Yahoo! Bookmarks
Reddit
Spread the Word on your Profile, Blog, or Website
Put a widget for this project on your profile, blog or website to turn your friends into givers. Using our widget, it's quick and easy to add this widget to your profile or blog!




























