My 402nd Kiva loan

To Ugandan coffee merchant Max Musiime and her group, to replace business funds pulled out to help the 10 kids she cares for and to buy another bicycle for her employees.

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So far, not one loan has defaulted.

Easiest way to do good I know.

Share the planet! Go do some Kiva.

My 402nd Kiva loan

To Ugandan coffee merchant Max Musiime and her group, to replace business funds pulled out to help the 10 kids she cares for and to buy another bicycle for her employees.

Sample Image

So far, not one loan has defaulted.

Easiest way to do good I know.

Share the planet! Go do some Kiva.

My 402nd Kiva loan

To Ugandan coffee merchant Max Musiime and her group, to replace business funds pulled out to help the 10 kids she cares for and to buy another bicycle for her employees.

Sample Image

So far, not one loan has defaulted.

Easiest way to do good I know.

Share the planet! Go do some Kiva.

My Kiva Loan Scoreboard: 375 Loans, Zero Defaults

Yesterday morning, for the first time in my account, three loans — to a Nicaraguan tailor, a Peruvian student, and a Filipino grocer — were paid in full.

Sure, you can pocket the money when it comes back. (Which is almost always does — Kiva’s overall default rate is currently less than two percent. Given recent stock market downturns, you may well do better with Bolivian woodworkers than the S&P.) But where’s the fun in that?

So today, the $25 that came back from Nicaragua, I sent to a student in Costa Rica. The cash from Peru went to another shopkeeper in Uganda, and the money that came in from The Philippines went to a teacher in Mozambique.

When your loans get repaid and you shuffle the money off to somebody else, it feels like you’re running your own tiny foundation.  It’s really fun.

And remember: this costs me virtually nothing, other than the time value of the money while it’s out of my hands and the rare one or two percent of loans that default.  (That said, I haven’t had a single default so far.)  And for that fair price — a few farthings above free — you get to reach across the world like this:

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Neat, huh?

Now that repayments are starting to keep my account almost reloaded on its own, this is starting to look like a lifetime hobby.

It’s one you might enjoy yourself.