Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Savings groups for global transformation
Savings groups for global transformation
Jan 28, 2026 9:13 PM

“That is never going to amount to anything. Don’t waste your time.”

This was my initial reaction when our Tanzanian director told me about the first savings groups she had seen in action, almost 15 years ago.

“But Scott,” she said, “it is so wonderful to see the women each save 25 cents a week in a metal box.”

To me, 25 cents a week barely seemed worth saving. But I have been proven wrong many times since then. The work has transformed the wealth and self-image of munities all over the world.

Having worked in grassroots economic development for 27 years, I have seen few interventions work as well as promised. The use of savings groups is one of the very few that has exceeded my expectations every step of the way.

Plant With Purpose – an international ministry that works with subsistence farmers at the intersection of extreme poverty and environmental degradation – had been using microcredit systems to help our clients fund improvements to their farms since the mid-1980s. However, in the early 2000s, we ing to grips with their ings. Our systems were not particularly efficient; we were a long way from being financially sustainable; and we didn’t always achieve our desired results. Furthermore, our director in plained that when she showed up in munity to conduct an agricultural workshop, people would often hide because they felt they owed her money.

She told me about a system that was being used in a neighboring district, where the participants pooled their savings on a weekly basis. Each group consists of 20 to 30 members who go through an extensive training program, during which they begin to save money on a weekly basis. I have heard of groups starting with as little as 10 cents per person per week. They also contribute money to a social fund, which es a form of microinsurance that is used to help group members in emergencies.

I had all of the normal questions: Where do they get the money to save? When they only have a few cents, how do they accumulate enough money to be effective? How do they manage their savings?

But to my surprise, the groups flourished. We did some research and learned that the international humanitarian agency CARE had developed this model in Niger in the early 1990s, and we could learn about the system from even more practitioners. Soon, we launched a pilot model in each of our six country programs. Within a few years, we decided pletely phase out our microcredit program in favor of savings groups.

Group procedures are designed for transparency and to minimize the potential for fraud. To enforce these procedures, a system of small fines is implemented, and money from the fines goes back into the fund. This has had the side effect of so changing the group members’ culture that visiting politicians continually remark on their discipline and timeliness at public events.

By the time the training plete, the members will have accumulated a small but sufficient amount of capital. This can be loaned to group members for such needs as investing in their farm, launching a business, or paying school fees. It is up to group members to evaluate the repayment plan, which might e directly from the business receiving the financing; payment e from the proceeds of the harvest, or from produce sales, or any number of other sources.

The groups loan their money at interest, but instead of interest going to fund the operations of the microfinance institution (e.g., for our loan officer, etc.), it accrues to group members’ savings accounts. The members set the interest rate themselves, and it pletely market driven: If the rate is too low, their saving accounts make no money, and if it is too high, no one borrows.

The participants in these savings groups have dispelled my initial skepticism again and again.

The total amount of capital available has grown far faster than I ever imagined. For example, I was with a group in the Dominican Republic a few years ago that had started with an initial savings amount of less than a dollar. When the people realized how fast their money was growing, people looked for any way they could to find money to invest. I was told that people stopped drinking and gambling, so they could save more. Whenever members had a little extra money in their pockets, instead of immediately spending it, they invested it. After 18 months, they raised their minimum weekly savings contribution and had pooled $12,000, which they were managing and investing in their munities.

However, perhaps the most startling change was the way participants described their success. Over the years, I heard many testimonies from loan recipients in our microcredit program. They were thankful for their loans, but they rarely took full ownership of their success.

However, the savings group members I heard from in the Dominican Republic were excited about what they had plished as munity. They told me their whole self-concept had changed. As one woman said, “The only thing we feel bad about is we had these resources all along and never realized it.” I have heard many similar stories munity members, who discovered their own power through participating in savings groups.

An important part of our work revolves around driving home the idea that God gives gifts to every person to use on behalf of His kingdom. We all have the privilege of participating in God’s redemptive work. When group members realize that, not only can they change the future for themselves and their families, but that they were created for a higher purpose, the effect is transformational.

This process has taught us that the group members themselves are our most important allies in extending and sustaining the work. We changed our focus and began to see people as partners rather than projects.

We are by no means the only organization to utilize savings groups. Other organizations have launched hundreds of thousands of similar groups around the world. Nor has this approach replaced traditional microfinancing, which still plays an important role in global development. However, savings groups can provide an amazing tool for those too poor or too remote for a microfinance institution to serve.

Take it from a former skeptic.

Barbee. CC BY 2.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
China, Christianity, and the Rule of Law
Earlier this month Forum 18 published an article that examined whether the establishment of a law regarding religion at a national level would be a positive step toward ending the sometimes arbitrary and uneven treatment of religious freedom issues throughout the country. In “Would a religion law help promote religious freedom?” Magda Hornemann writes, “For many years, some religious believers and experts both inside and outside China have advocated the creation of prehensive religion law through the National People’s Congress,...
Annan on the UN: The Way, the Truth, and the Life
Allow me to summarize the message of outgoing UN General Secratary Kofi Annan’s speech to the General Assembly yesterday (HT: International Civic Engagement): “The United Nations is the way, the truth and the life. No es to utopia but through it.” You pare the text of Annan’s speech to see if I’ve gotten it right, and then contrast my summary with another source. ...
Conference on Christianity and the Environment
Courtesy of today’s Zondervan>To The es this announcement, replete with extensive related links: The MacLaurin Institute is sponsoring a conference at the University of Minnesota through tomorrow exploring what it means for people to demonstrate a Christian perspective as they live their lives at the interfaces of three “worlds” — natural, engineered, and human. It will also study how Christian virtues ought to influence public and private policies regarding the interaction of these worlds. Here are a couple of the...
A Case against Chimeras: Part I
This week will feature a five part series, with one installment per day, putting forth my presentation of a biblical-theological case against the creation of certain kinds of chimeras, or human-animal hybrids. Part I follows below. Advances in the sciences sometimes appear to occur overnight. Such appearances can often be deceiving, however. Rare is the technological or scientific advance that does not follow years upon years of research, trial and error, failure and experimentation. The latest ing from the field...
Proportionalism Critique
The debate has not been confined to Catholic circles, but it has been concentrated there. Many (most?) American Catholic moral theologians of the post-Vatican II era have been enamored with one form or another of “proportionalism,” a theory of morality that eschews the traditional Catholic focus on the “intrinsic” goodness or badness of human acts. (Bad acts must be avoided always.) Proportionalism’s critics have accused its adherents of being simply consequentialists by another name. Consequentialism, which permits using evil means...
Toxic Mortgages and Personal Responsibility
Mortgage foreclosure rates soared 53 percent in pared with a year earlier, and many people who were eager to buy a house with low “teaser” interest rates and creative financing are in trouble. Acton Senior Fellow in Economics Jennifer Roback Morse expects new calls for goverment oversight of the mortgage industry, which is already highly regulated. A better idea, she suggests, would be for buyers to examine their motives for acquiring real estate with gimmicky loans and take some responsibility...
Becker and Posner on DDT
This week, University of Chicago faculty members Richard A. Posner and Gary S. Becker discuss and debate the relationship between DDT and the fight against malaria on their blog. As a self-proclaimed “strong environmentalist” who supports “the ban on using DDT as a herbicide,” Posner writes first about the contemporary decline in genetic diversity due in large part to the rate of species extinction. (Posner has issued a correction: “Unforgivably, I referred to DDT as a ‘herbicide.’ It is, of...
The Catholicity of the Reformation: Musings on Reason, Will, and Natural Law, Part 1
This post will introduce what I intend to be an extended series concerned with recovering and reviving the catholicity of Protestant ethics. Protestant catholicity? Isn’t this an oxymoron? It e as a surprise in light of mon stereotype of Protestant theology, but the older Protestant understanding of reason, the divine will, and natural law actually provided a bulwark against the notion of a capricious God, unbounded by truth and goodness, as Pope Benedict recently pointed out in relation to Islam’s...
The Green Old Party
A਋it of green conservative politics for your Friday – You’ll see why in a minute. First, read this blog post by the Sierra Club on Linc Chafee (Republican, RI), and then this: Meet Wayne Gilchrest, Republican member of the House of Representatives, First Congressional District of Maryland, former house painter, teacher, Vietnam veteran — and past, present and future canoeist who has yet to find himself up that well-known proverbial creek without a paddle, though he must think at times...
Tithe and Tithe Again
In a way, the Center for Social Innovation at Stanford recognizes a fact that Ron Sider has written on and I have thought about for a long time. In “A New Take on Tithing,” Claude Rosenberg & Tim Stone write: Too often, individuals make decisions about how much money to donate to charitable causes on an ad hoc basis. As a result, many people give less money than they can actually afford. If the affluent contributed as much to nonprofits...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved