article / စက်တင်ဘာလ 17, 2018
Mercy: Rising Out of Poverty
Mercy started working with VisionFund Ghana in 2000, when she was 41 and her first loan was for GHS 150.00 (US $33.33). Mercy said, “I added the loan from VisionFund Ghana to my small savings to buy flour and other ingredients for baking.
article / နိုဝင်ဘာလ 19, 2021
A leader, mother, employee and microentrepreneur
“Life in my adolescence was a bit sad,” says Nancy, having not had the support of her father to continue with her studies. “I only had the support of my mother.
article / အောက်တိုဘာလ 4, 2019
Cocooned from Poverty
Miko is an eleven-year-old Filipino boy who loves basketball. He already knows what he wants to be when he grows up – a policeman.
article / ဇူလိုင်လ 20, 2021
Why Lending to Refugees is Risky, but Worth It
Martina Crailsheim, Director for Saving Group Linkage at VisionFund International&n
article / ဇွန်လ 21, 2021
Financial Inclusion for Ugandan Refugees
Mercy Ainomugisha, CEO of VisionFund Uganda shares perspective on expanding financial inclusion efforts among refugees and host communities
article / အောက်တိုဘာလ 24, 2019
Taking His Grandmother's Advice
Growing up in Eastern Kenya, Malumani village, 34 year old Kamuti was raised by his grandmother who told him that it's only agriculture that can sustain a man and his family.
article / အောက်တိုဘာလ 3, 2019
Milking Her Way to a Better Future
Bulgaa is a mother of six and now lives with her daughter, two grandchildren and her mother in Darkhan city, Mongolia. Initially, she had two cows for her mother to have milk tea