| there is a small,
but important, unmet demand for small business loans. These second-tier
loans are designed to boost the capacity of small businesses to
employ more people, produce more goods, and generally perform
more efficiently.
from all 13 districts, who were screened by Mercy doctors before
being chosen for surgery. In addition, medical teams from the
Mercy saw thousands of patients at the Bairo Pite Clinic and during
a two-day public clinic near Dili's port, providing more than
2,000 immunizations and 1,600 pairs of eye glasses.
The research team took its structured surveys to the six regional
towns to collect data that identified small business attitudes
and capacity to absorb second-tier credit. Research on credit
demand is important because it generates data about small businesses
that are often neglected in supply-side studies. Important constraints
identified in the study include low education levels (including
only rudimentary understanding of basic business finance) and
uncertainties about land tenure.
Research team leader Ross Ferguson said he hoped that the study
will form the basis for more extensive efforts in the sector.
"The numbers we provided were important, but it is vital
that the business and non-profit world continue to engage the
reservoir of goodwill and all the resources available," he
explained.
Providing the grant for this research is one of the ways in which
USAID supports small business and microfinance programs to help
rebuild the country's shattered economy. USAID provided seed money
to the Micro-Finance Working Group, a dynamic group whose work
resulted in a code of conduct for microfinance institutions operating
in the country. The group has since become the Association of
Micro-Finance Institutions of Timor-Leste (AMFITIL), with 11 member
organizations that manage a total loan portfolio of more than
$2 million.

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