Launching in November, the online portal myELEN.com will be the first institution to bring microfinance to the Czech Republic. While microfinance has become a relatively common phenomenon
in the United States, the myELEN project will be unique in Europe when it launches in several weeks’ time, says Linda Hanyková, executive director of Microfinance, the company behind the My Electronic Loan Exchange Network (myELEN) project.
Loans granted through myELEN would range between 5,000 Kč and 157,000 Kč ($267–8,396). The site will also allow investors to make donations or interest-free loans. Through myELEN.com, investors can lend money to selected Mexican entrepreneurs — farmers, food venders, weavers, grocers — or associations of entrepreneurs, which are listed on the Web site along with their photos and business plans. Though it does bear an ethical streak, most investments made through the site will return annual yields between 5 percent and 10 percent, depending on the amount of money invested.
Annual rates by microfinance institutions in Mexico run between 40 percent and 110 percent. However, local banks and other lenders charge even higher rates while providing little educational and counseling assistance to borrowers. Rates charged by myELEN would depend on the individual business and amount loaned, Hanyková said.
Today, myELEN cooperates with only one microfinance partner based in Mexico, an NGO named FIPS. But the project’s idea is to work with many other reliable microfinance institutions in Mexico and elsewhere, so that investments are diversified to reduce the risk of unrecoverable loans, said Tomáš Hes, an economist and one of myELEN’s founders.
