The Washington Post - 05.11.2019

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A24 EZ RE THE WASHINGTON POST.TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5 , 2019


homeless.
Across Guatemala, loan de-
faults are driving a widening dis-
placement crisis. At least 354 peo-
ple were deported from the Unit-
ed States to Nebaj during the first
four months of 2019. Many re-
turned with spiraling debts.
One former loan officer at Fun-
dación Génesis Empresarial esti-
mated that 30 percent of the out-
fit’s loans go to migrants.
“It’s pretty obvious how the
money is being used,” said the
officer, who spoke on the condi-
tion of anonymity to talk freely.
“We just went along with it, and
most could usually pay back the
loans.”
A spokeswoman for Génesis de-
nied that the organization lent
money to migrants. Adela de Riz-
zo wrote in an email that the bank
works “to disincentivize migra-
tion, working with Guatemalans
who want to stay here.”
Guzmán, the local Banrural
manager, said that the bank does
what it can to vet loan applicants
but that the system isn’t foolproof.
“We know some people are ly-
ing to us about how they’ll use the
money,” he said.
Génesis, Banrural, Comparta-
mo and other financial institu-
tions with offices in Nebaj de-
clined to comment on individual
cases, citing privacy concerns.

S


ome activists in Guatemala
have become outspoken crit-
ics of the lending practices.
“These banks give the appear-
ance of trying to help the poor. But
in the end, they profit from the
desperation of migrants,” said
Juan José Hurtado Paz y Paz, di-
rector of Pop No’j, a national asso-
ciation of indigenous peoples.
“The more people who default on
their loans, the more people who
lose their homes and land.”
Some families who have lost
loved ones to migration have been
saddled with insurmountable
debts.
Sixteen-year-old Juan de León
Gutiérrez died in May of a sus-
pected brain tumor while in Bor-
der Patrol custody in Texas. Days
after his body was repatriated, his
father said, the family’s lender
called to remind him that the
money they had borrowed was
still due.
“I’m sorry about Juan,” the
lender said, according to Tanerjo
de León Gutiérrez, Juan’s father.
“But there’s no way out of the
deal.”
In Nebaj, the Raymundo family
now rents a small house with no
running water for $100 per
month. Even after losing their
home, they still have more to pay
back — they’re on the hook for
about a dozen loans from three
financial institutions.
Most of the time, they try to cut
costs by limiting themselves to
two meals a day.
“The easiest way out of this is to
migrate again,” said Raymundo.
“But I’ve already been deported,
so what we’re thinking now is that
maybe my wife would go with our
daughter.”
Sabina Ceto leafed through her
folder of loan paperwork. She ar-
rived at the pile of documents
from Compartamos. The bank
had a special program for women
in Nebaj, and it gave Ceto a pink
folder with little fishes on it to
keep track of her loans.
“To control your loans and sav-
ings,” it says in typed white letters
on the top of the folder.
And inside, in bold: “With con-
sistency and discipline, you can
achieve your goals!”
[email protected]

quetzales, or about $2,000, from
Banrural and 10,000 quetzales, or
$1,300, from Compartamos, a
Mexican bank.
Compartamos — Spanish for
“let’s share” — also received a
flurry of USAID grants. It later
stirred controversy for imposing
interest rates of roughly 100 per-
cent per year.
Yunus once criticized the bank
for “raking in money off poor
people desperate for cash.”
Just as Nebaj’s system of credit
and loans finances migration, it is
also used to temporarily cushion
the financial shock of being de-
ported. Those loans only wors-
ened Raymundo’s situation.
The family used well-known
loopholes to secure the loans. Sa-
bina Ceto lied to her loan officer;
she said she needed the money for
a family business. She enlisted six
female relatives to apply for their
own loans, each for about $150.
Many of Guatemala’s lenders pre-
fer to lend to women, in part
because they are considered more
likely to return the money. Inter-
national aid agencies have also
provided funding aimed at en-
couraging female entrepreneurs.
Wilson was finally sent back to
Nebaj from Michigan in early


  1. By the time he returned, the
    family had to sell their home to
    start paying back their mountain
    of debt. For a brief time, they were


portunity. The loan became an
impossible burden.
So Raymundo borrowed
48,000 quetzales, or about
$6,300, from a cousin, who set a
monthly interest rate of 10 per-
cent, and took the money to a
smuggler a few blocks away.
Guatemalans use the word
“prestamistas” to describe the in-
formal moneylenders who are
still less discerning than banks or
cooperatives. Some are friends or
relatives or religious leaders.
Their high interest rates have be-
come an accepted part of the
shadow financial industry, a pre-
mium accepted by the country’s
riskiest borrowers.
Raymundo arrived at the bor-
der in South Texas with his son,
Wilson, now 8, in September 2017.
They were separated by U.S. Bor-
der Patrol agents. Wilson was sent
to a foster home in Michigan;
Raymundo was deported alone.
When Raymundo returned to
Nebaj, not only were his relatives
scrambling to locate and retrieve
Wilson from the United States,
but they were also trying to figure
out how to pay back the $6,300
they had used to pay the smuggler
and the $10,000 they still owed
Génesis.
Raymundo’s wife, Sabina Ceto
— no relation to José — took out
more small loans and fell deeper
into debt. They borrowed 15,000

direct-lending microfinance pro-
grams in Guatemala for more
than 10 years.”
“USAID helped to establish
Fundación Génesis Empresarial
and Banrural more than 20 years
ago,” said the spokesman, who did
not provide his name per the orga-
nization’s rules. “These are now
significant, independent lending
institutions in Guatemala con-
tributing to private-sector growth
in the country.”
Marcela Escobari, who headed
USAID’s Bureau for Latin Ameri-
ca and the Caribbean under the
Obama administration, said some
microfinance organizations be-
came increasingly driven by prof-
it, relying less on USAID support
and more on capital markets.
“It exploded too much and
without the care to understand
the development implications,”
she said. “There’s a lot of money to
be made on poor people, but there
need to be checks and balances.”

R


aymundo’s Génesis loan
had an interest rate of 5
percent per month, consis-
tent with the rates advertised on
the foundation’s website. But his
construction work dwindled.
Many days, he earned only $5.
The family owed Génesis the
principal, plus rapidly accruing
interest, but they lived in a place
virtually devoid of economic op-

of land, where his family built a
home. The plan was to pay the
money back, bit by bit, through
his construction work.
Others in Nebaj have gone to
Génesis for similar loans, claim-
ing they would be spent on con-
struction projects or businesses,
but instead using the money to
pay a smuggler. Raymundo’s path
was more complicated.
Throughout the 1980s and
1990s, development organiza-
tions devoted growing resources
to what advocates called “access
to credit” or “financial inclusion.”
In 2006, the Bangladeshi econo-
mist Muhammad Yunus, one of
the forefathers of microfinance,
won the Nobel Peace Prize for his
“efforts to create economic and
social development from below.”
That idea seemed a perfect fit
in Guatemala, where rural, indig-
enous people such as Raymundo
have been systematically exclud-
ed from the economy and its na-
scent credit markets.
Some of the world’s largest fi-
nancial institutions recognized
the need and contacted Génesis to
help. The International Finance
Corporation, an arm of the World
Bank, lent the foundation $10
million last year to “broaden ac-
cess to finance for micro and
small businesses.”
“In the case of Génesis, the
[organization’s] credit policy ex-
plicitly prohibits staff from fi-
nancing illegal migration,” said an
IFC spokesman, who did not pro-
vide his name in accordance with
the institution’s policy.
“Access to finance is a funda-
mental building block in econom-
ic development,” the spokesman
told The Washington Post. “An
expanding body of evidence dem-
onstrates that the poor benefit
enormously from savings, insur-
ance and basic payment services.”
It isn’t only financial institu-
tions that are funding migration.
Migrants also borrow from family
and friends who serve as informal
lenders, a shadow microfinance
network that has ballooned in
recent years — and can be just as
unforgiving of delinquent loans.
In Nebaj, microfinance became
a crowded, fiercely competitive
market. Some cooperatives put
out slick television advertise-
ments with actors. More bill-
boards with catchy slogans ap-
peared: “We believe in you!” and
“Multiply your investment!” But
in most cases, they were for-profit
endeavors, which could seize the
property of debtors who default-
ed.
In parts of South Asia and Afri-
ca — and in Nebaj in 2008 — a
surge in delinquent microloans
provoked crises for some of the
world’s poorest people. But here
the sector has ballooned once
again, in part because of the surge
in migration.
Guatemalans can multiply
their purchasing power almost
seven times by working in the
United States and sending their
wages home, researchers from
Harvard University, the World
Bank and the Center for Global
Development reported this year.
“Nothing else that most of
these households could invest in
can compete with those astonish-
ing returns to investment,” said
Michael Clemens, a senior fellow
at the Center for Global Develop-
ment and one of the study’s au-
thors. “So it absolutely makes
sense that when some families are
able to access capital through mi-
crolending, they invest it in mi-
gration.”
A spokesman for USAID said
the agency has “not had any

migrants to the United States over
the past year. About 2 percent of
the population has been appre-
hended at the U.S. border since
2018.
It has also had devastating con-
sequences for those who fail in
their journeys — those who are
deported before they earn enough
to pay back their loans. They be-
come ensnared by debt, losing
savings, businesses and homes,
which makes them more likely to
try to migrate again.
“We do our best to keep our
loans from funding migration or
paying smugglers,” said Jorge
Guzmán, the manager of the Ban-
rural bank in Nebaj. “But there’s
only so much we can do to moni-
tor.”
U.S. officials say they stopped
supporting direct-lending micro-
finance programs in Guatemala
more than 10 years ago. The
World Bank funded Génesis Em-
presarial as recently as last year.
Increasing access to finance
among the world’s poorest people
has been a crucial tool for devel-
opment, U.S. and World Bank offi-
cials say. Vetting borrowers, they
say, has always been the responsi-
bility of the banks and micro -
finance outfits they have support-
ed.

A


fter years of failing to find a
job in Nebaj that paid more
than subsistence wages,
José Ceto decided this year that it
was his turn to migrate. He sent a
Facebook message to a friend ask-
ing for help contacting a local
smuggler. Within hours, that
smuggler quoted him a price:
50,000 quetzales, or $6,500.
Then Ceto did what aspiring
migrants here have done for
years. He went to the local branch
of Banrural.
He told a loan officer that he
needed the money to improve his
family farm. He presented his
family’s land deed as collateral.
Within a week, he was holding
a plastic bag full of cash. He drove
with it to the smuggler’s home.
“I have a university degree in
tourism,” Ceto said in an inter-
view. “But what use is that if I can’t
find a job?”
For years, Banrural received
backing and loan guarantees
from the U.S. Agency for Interna-
tional Development (USAID). It
partnered with the U.N. World
Food Program to offer credit to
farmers. It was prized by the Gua-
temalan government: Former
Guatemalan president Álvaro Co-
lom once called it “our adminis-
tration’s financial arm.”
But for Ceto, Banrural was sim-
ply the easiest way to finance his
journey. He left Nebaj in March.
A succession of smugglers,
claiming to provide protection
from criminal organizations, es-
corted him through Mexico to the
U.S. border. He swam across the
Rio Grande.
Then he was apprehended by
the U.S. Border Patrol south of
Houston and deported within
days.
Banrural had given Ceto six
months to repay his loan, at a
monthly interest rate of 1.5 per-
cent, before it would seize his
property. So he did what many in
Nebaj do: He took out another
loan. He borrowed 50,000 quetza-
les, or $6,500, from another major
Guatemalan bank, Bantrab, to
pay off the first loan.
But he grew increasingly aware
that the only way to repay his debt
would be to migrate once again to
the United States.
“I’m planning to try again,” he
said.
He keeps the smuggler’s num-
ber in his phone.
Analysts say the ability to bor-
row to fund migration has opened
a gateway to middle-class life for
some Guatemalans. For others, it
has led to spiraling debts and
repeated attempts to cross the
border.
“This is an investment model
that does work for some people,”
said David Stoll, an anthropolo-
gist at Middlebury College in Ver-
mont who has written a book on
the link between microfinance
and migration in Nebaj. “But
when it doesn’t work, there’s no
safety net.
“That often means they double
down.”

F


rancisco Raymundo’s first
loan came from Fundación
Génesis Empresarial, an or-
ganization created with support
from USAID. Over 30 years, it
grew to become Guatemala’s larg-
est nonprofit microfinance insti-
tution.
Raymundo’s 2015 loan was for
75,000 quetzales, he said, or
roughly $10,000. He bought a plot

GUATEMALA FROM A1

Paying to


get out of


Guatemala,


loan by loan


PHOTOS BY SARAH L. VOISIN/THE WASHINGTON POST
TOP: Tanerjo de León Gutiérrez’s home in Camotán, Guatemala, has been in his family for
generations. He is at risk of losing it after taking out a loan to buy his son’s passage to the United
States. ABOVE: Two of Gutiérrez’s children, Constantino, 11, left, and his twin brother, Andres.

Francisco Raymundo and his wife, Sabina Ceto, walk down a street in Nebaj, Guatemala, with
their children, Wilson and Elena. The family has fallen deeper into debt with multiple loans.
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