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Impacts of Price Hikes on the<br />

Lives and Livelihoods<br />

of Poor People in Viet Nam<br />

is 1.5 percent. Payment is made on a weekly basis which is appropriate for the members. At the end<br />

of the fifth year of operation, the repayment rate reached 95 percent. Overdue and bad loans account<br />

for five percent.<br />

Many poor migrant women, thanks to the loans provided by the programme, have been able to have<br />

a more stable life. A good example is Mrs Phm Th H, 32/1, Lê Đc Th road, Unit 2, ward 16, who<br />

has a family member living with HIV/AIDS. Her husband has died. Two of her children used drugs (one<br />

has also died) and two others are in school. She is struggling to feed the family by washing clothes for<br />

households in the community. After joining the credit group, she was able to get a loan of two million<br />

VND which she used to buy a washing machine to collect more clothes to wash. After having repaid<br />

the first loan, she decided to borrow a second loan of three million VND to buy a sewing machine and<br />

fabric to make clothes to sell to local stores. She has since taken a fifth loan from the programme of<br />

the maximum five million VND to invest in materials and tools. The life of her family has improved<br />

considerably. She has managed to buy a fridge, a TV, a gas cooker and pay for her children’s education.<br />

The Programme Management Board has had the following observations on the programme:<br />

• The provision of credit to poor migrant women and women in difficult circumstances has assisted<br />

the local government in improving the life of the local population in general and of poor women<br />

in particular. Women have also benefited from the opportunity to develop themselves and<br />

strengthen their status in the family and in the society.<br />

• The programme, with its simple lending procedures and appropriate interest rates and loan<br />

duration, has contributed to the reduction of informal loans at high interest rates (10-20 percent)<br />

and thus contributed to the control of complicated social problems associated with informal loans.<br />

• Apart from the delivery of loans, the district Women’s Union has also introduced acitivities such as<br />

communication and exchange of experiences in buidling happy families, health care, business skills<br />

and how to use loans effectively, all of which have benefitted participating women.<br />

• The programme has provided an alternative option for those who have difficulty accessing formal<br />

(Government) credit sources such as migrant workers, people in difficult circumstances, people<br />

involved in social evils, family members of people living with HIV/AIDS. Many women have<br />

managed to escape from poverty with loans from the programme and some have voluntarily<br />

resigned from the programme in order for poorer women to benefit from the programme.<br />

Despite these successes some ward authorities are reluctant to adopt and expand the programme on<br />

the grounds that the risks associated with the target beneficiaries may be high. Therefore in the<br />

programme’s operational regulations, there needs to be clear provision of the repayment failure rate.<br />

The policy on consessional loans (as per Decision 157/2007/QD-TTg dated September 27, 2007 of the<br />

Prime Minister) for poor/near-poor pupils and students and households in difficult circumstances has been<br />

welcomed. However, in such urban areas as Go Vap district, there remains a long waiting list of applications<br />

as the funds have not yet been made available for disbursement. The policy may need to be expanded to<br />

reach upper secondary school students in mountainous and EM comumes.<br />

5.2.6 Vocational training<br />

The Government has introduced a policy of free vocational training for poor households and concessional<br />

loans for vocational trainees coming from poor households. However the number of poor/near-poor<br />

households benefiting from such a policy is very small. One of the main reasons is that the poor are more<br />

interested in short-term needs (“poor people are not able to plan ahead“).<br />

Free vocational training for the poor – a difficult puzzle to solve<br />

The Government has introduced a policy of free vocational training for the poor. Children of poor<br />

households can borrow concessional loans from the Social Policy Bank to obtain vocational training.<br />

Vocational training centres at the district level receives an annual budget from the Government to<br />

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