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Home » News & Opinion » Nicaraguan Microfinance in Crisis


 

Nicaraguan Microfinance in Crisis
Guzmán, S.

The microfinance industry in Nicaragua is under siege by a politically motivated group of borrowers known as the No Payment Movement (Movimiento No Pago). The Movimiento No Pago includes from 3,000 to 5,000 producers, merchants and microentrepreneurs who are led by the former mayor of Jalapa Omar Vílchez. The movement commenced in Jalapa in the summer of 2008, with the takeover of an MFI and a riot incited by a protest speech.

Recently, the leaders of the movement have demanded that the Congress approve a Moratorium Law to give debtors a 10 year amortization period with interest rates that do not exceed 8 percent APR as a condition to stop harassment of the microfinance industry. The leaders of the Movimiento No Pago from the North and Caribbean regions of Nicaragua have threatened to burn the buildings of MFIs, take hostage MFI personnel and escalate their violence if their demands for a moratorium law are not met.

There has been important opposition to this moratorium law from many sectors. Several newspaper editorials and articles speak against the moratorium bill, which has not yet moved toward legislative action. The law was sent back to the economic committee of the National Assembly and awaits review.

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Posted: 10 Nov 2009
Source: Center for Financial Inclusion at ACCION International
Originally Published: 05 Nov 2009
 
 

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