Title: ARC International
1ARC International
- ARC International Two Case Studies
- Country Background-Conflict and Context
- Guinea IGP Programs in Refugee Camps
- Income Generation Program (IGP) Goals
- Descriptions of IGP Products- The Three Step
Program - IGP Program Results Statistics and Anecdotes
- Challenges for an IGP/MED Program within the
camps - Sierra Leone The Development of Post Conflict
MED and BDS - MED/MFI Program Goals and Descriptions
- Linking MFI with IGP and Business Development
Services Programs - IGP and sustainable BDS in Post-Conflict
Situations - DevTrain
- Lessons Learned-IGP and BDS in Refugee and
Post-Conflict Situations - New Directions
2Background Conflict and Context
Mano River Basin
- POPULATIONS
- Large Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugee
populations have been in Guinea since 1997. - The Liberian conflict began in 1989 and has
continued with only minor interruption until
today - Conflict in Sierra Leone began two years later,
and officially ended in 2001 - Over 100,000 are currently estimated in camps and
urban areas. - In the past, numbers have reached an estimated
200,000 - There are fluid borders and close language,
family, tribal and economic ties between Sierra
Leone, Guinea and Liberia - RECENT MOVEMENTS
- Attacks on the camps and towns along Sierra
Leonean and Liberian borders in early fall 2000
caused large scale camp and refugee relocation - Created a hugely vulnerable host and refugee
population. - Refugees were subjected to violence and loss in
the country of refuge - Towns and camps on both sides of the border were
looted and destroyed - The population remains unable to recover quickly
- SECURITY
- The security in Sierra Leone is improving and
organized repatriation for the willing from
Guinea began in the winter of 2003. Over 24,0000
have already returned. - Liberian refugees are watching with hope as the
situation in Monrovia stabilizes. - Areas outside of the capital remain highly
unstable - Humanitarian Assistance is not at full capacity
- Assisted Repatriation is not open for Liberians,
nor are the refugees self-repatriating
3MED in Conflict, Refugee, and Post Conflict
Environments
- Goal rebuild productive lives of
conflict-affected populations - General Program Areas
- Micro-finance and Micro-credit in refugee camps
and post-conflict environments - Start-up grants and business training to refugees
and returnees - Sustainable business training
- Savings and literacy programs
- Facilitating markets (building infrastructure,
connecting buyers and sellers)
4American Refugee CommitteeGUINEA
ARC (American Refugee Committee) has been working
in Guinea with the refugee population since 1997
with programs in 7 major sectors Curative Heath,
Community Heath, Reproductive Heath, Gender Based
Violence Prevention Programs, HIV Prevention and
Income Generation Programs
5ARC IGP Program Goals
Improve the economic self-sufficiency of the
refugee population, with a focus on women. We
work to provide choices, dignity and
self-empowerment.
Main Market Area, Laine Refugee Camp, Guinea
Main Market, Laine Camp
- Offer camp-based and peri-urban refugee
populations in the forest and languet regions - Start-Up contingent and Artesianal Training
grants - Micro-credit products
- Small Business Development Services and
micro-enterprise training - Market development, advocacy and support.
- Individual follow-up with ARC IGP camp based
field staff - Enable clients are able to carry their credit
history with them after repatriation - Directly refer clients and transfer their credit
history details to the ARC IGP/MED program in
their home country - Assure Loan Completion Certificates are
recognized by other NGOs both in the home and
host country - Providing micro-enterprise support both in the
country of refuge and at home, ARC IGP enables
clients to build for their future by improving
their present, thereby reducing their
vulnerability and combating dependency.
6The Three Step- Program
7Start-Up Grant
- The Start-Up Grant newly arrived vulnerable
refugee women in self-formed groups of 2-3 - Begin a small business and generate a small daily
income - Have a consistent activity with peers
- No risk to loan capital and no pressure of
repayment. - All clients attend a full day Business Training
Workshop on Planning, Record Keeping and
Management designed for non-literates before
disbursement of initial Grant amount - Duration of 4 months with two disbursement phases
of approximately 25.00 USD - Close (twice-weekly) field staff monitoring
re-enforces workshop principals and address
clients problems - Successful clients may enlarge with additional
members and apply for a Basic Loan
Voyee Scott, Table Market, Laine Camp, Start-Up
Grant Client, BEA Emmanuel Obanya
8Basic Loan
- The Basic Loan registered refugees in self-
formed groups of 5-7 - Begin or grow a small, sustainable business and
generate a daily income to augment the food
ration - Prepare clients to run their business for the
longer-term - All clients attend the full-day workshop
- The loan term is 6 months, amounts generally do
not exceed 65.00 USD per client - No interest or fees are charged
- All clients attend monthly training workshop on
Good Business Practices, Problem Solving, Record
Keeping for non-literates, Business Planning and
other business development topics - After successful repayment, clients are eligible
to apply for an Advanced Loan
Mary Segrian, Table Market, Laine Camp, Start-Up
Grant client, BEA Joseph Kehzie Sr.
9The Advanced Loan
- The Advanced Loan Successful Basic Loan clients
in self-formed groups of 3-4 - Expand businesses begun with a Basic Loan start
another business when pervious Basic Loan group
members have resettled or repatriated. - All clients attend an Advanced Business Planning
Workshop - The amount does not generally exceed 100.00 USD
per client, but is flexible and the loan term can
be 4 or 6 months, depending on the business needs - All clients attend monthly training workshops to
reinforce record keeping and planning skills - A 5 interest change is factored on the principal
to prepare clients to enter a MFI or more
sustainable system upon return (such as the ARC
Sierra Leone MFI Finance Salone)
Mattina Swaray, Lappa (cloth) Seller, Loan
Client, Laine Camp,
10Program Results
Krubo Yamah, Table Market, Laine Camp, Loan Client
- 100 of clients who participated in the final
Start-Up Grant disbursement became eligible for
the second phase of the grant - 70 of Start-Up Grant clients were able to move
out of communal tents and into individual
shelters sooner than their peers - 98 of Sierra Leonean clients completed full
loan repayment successfully, despite UNHCR
assisted repatriation and IGP program close out - 95 of former clients express a desire to seek
micro-credit services in their home county upon
repatriation - 97 of Sierra Leonean clients who competed their
loan repayment will continue their businesses
either in the camps or home country
- Clients assisted from September 2001- July 2003
- Grants (Start-Up and Activity) 3,370
- Loans (Basic and Advanced) 5,386
- Female Clients 83
- Repayment rates
- Kissidougou Sept. 20012002 98
- N'zerekore Oct. 2002July 2003 94
- Arrears Rates
- Kissidougou Sept. 2001 2002 3
- N'zerekore Oct. 2002 July 2003 .4
- Clients moving up the steps
- 58 of Start-Up Grant clients receive a Basic
Loan - 70 of Basic Loan clients receive an Advanced
Loan - 100 of Advanced Loan clients complete repayment
11During the Exit Interview, we ask our clients if
and why they felt they were successful
- GOOGEILA GROUP.
- we use each month profit to expand or
establish another sub-businessesfor example, the
first two months the 400,000 we realized we
established a used clothes business and a loan
club susu controlled by group secretary
another member. Then the third month we realized
200,000 and established table market-controlled
by group head treasurer. These sub-businesses
in turn pay interest to our group business, as
in, every 5,000 they will get in these
businesses, we get 600. - CONFIDANT KEROSENE GROUP
- Your loan has not only help us make money to
sustain us and our families, but most important
showed taught us some real business techniques
says Hawa Johnson - BENGOMA LAPPA GROUP
- we dont just depend on selling clothes-lappa.
For us we also do country-hair-plaiting in
villages on market dayswe got this idea from
your training in which you taught us not to
depend one way to make money, say Massa Ma Fata
12Challenges for camp-based IGP
- Rapid changes in the security of the region
resulting in unforeseen population movements - Clients mobility UNHCR Repatriation,
Resettlement, self-repatriation - Severe levels of vulnerability
- Dependency syndrome
- Lack of rooted community, permanent and secure
shelter, or a sense of stability - Conflict and economic competition with the host
community - Short funding cycles and the tendency for donor
fatigue
Mamayan Jabateh, Cooked food, Laine Camp, Loan
client
13American Refugee CommitteeSierra Leone
ARC (American Refugee Committee) has been working
in Sierra Leone with the returnee population
since 2000 with programs in 3 major sectors
Gender Based Violence Prevention Programs, HIV
Prevention and Micro-Enterprise Development and
Micro-Finance programs
14ARC Sierra LeoneThe Development of Post Conflict
MED
- In 2001 the conflict in Sierra Leone ended,
UNAMSIL Peace Keeping troops remained in place
and the rebuilding of a country ravaged by 11
years of war began. - ARC Sierra Leone began a micro-finance program
linked with Guinea that served returning
refugees, IDPs and host population entrepreneurs
with credit and business training. This program
began five years after Guineas and was able to
benefit from Guinea's staff and knowledge base to
create a sustainable MFI in the country of
return.
15ARC Sierra LeoneLinking MFI with IGP and
Business Development Services Programs
- In addition to managing the MFI Finance Salone
in the returnee population, ARC Sierra Leone will
begin working with the camp and settlement based
refugee population - Sierra Leone has a refugee population of
Liberians, who have been in settlements and camps
along the border area since the conflict ended in
2001. - ARC Sierra Leone is launching a IGP/BDS program
based on the Guinea program three-step model to
address the need of this population - We will begin using the Making Cents curriculum
in the settlements in conjunction with IGP
programs - The use of best practice BDS to re-enforce IGP
activities will test sustainability strategies - We hope to determine whether training can be
offered for a fee in the camps by refugee
trainers (unlikely), or can be offered in Liberia
by refugee trainers when they return
16DevTrain Program
Recently has ARC Sierra Leone has started to look
at BDS as a program area in its own right Working
with the returnee population the DevTrain program
works to adapt BDS best practices to the
post-conflict environment
- In partnership with Making Cents, ARC developed a
program to create a sustainable business training
market in Sierra Leone - 100 trainers of at least 25 different
organizations (private and public) will be
trained on the Making Cents curriculum and will
offer the training on a fee-for-service basis in
the capital, a regional center and a relief area. - ARC and Making Cents will accompany the TOT with
marketing training and general awareness raising
activities to spur demand - The program aims to reach 15,000 entrepreneurs
with cost recovery services - A proposal has been submitted to AID (BDS IGP),
if unsuccessful, alternative funding will be
sought from UNDP
17Lessons LearnedIGP and BDS in Refugee and
Post-Conflict Situations
- Camp-Based IGP/MED
- Self-motivated, self-formed groups and smaller
loan sizes - Various products to serve different levels of
vulnerability - Large gender-balanced field staff to provide
close client follow-up and support - Sufficient Monitoring and Evaluation procedures
and staff to protect a vulnerable population - Decentralized, non-field based decision making to
reduce the possibility of client exploitation - Transparent, clear and well monitored application
procedures - Close collaboration with the many other
implementing partners to avoid duplication - Policies must be in place to deal with the camp
context - Frequent client replacement within the groups
- Sudden population movements transfers forced
relocation, spontaneous repatriation, new
arrivals - Frequent change of businesses
- Death / Serious illness
- Sustainable BDS/MFI
- Although a lending component may work well, it is
crucial to have a training component of quality
in a severely economically stressed environment - Cost recovery of training services is difficult
in a camp setting, but should be possible in a
post-conflict setting with sufficient attention
to program design, service quality and value and
staffing - When implementing a sustainable or fee-based
program within a returnee/refugee context, the
breaking of the cycle of dependence must be
designed into the program. - For refugees, sustainability can be thought of in
terms of their return skills, credit history,
relationships can be transferred to return
context.
18New Directions
- USAID RESTOR Project, Guinea
- In partnership with Plan Guinea. Post-Conflict
Reconstruction - Languet border area, devastated by the 2001
attacks. - Small agricultural and economic grants to
entrepreneurs and farmers with Business Training
and support. Community identified recipients - Grants are used to re-start lost businesses and
increase families ability to exploit their
destroyed fields. - Working with local artisans to place
ex-combatants seeded, but sustainable, apprentice
programs based on existing local customs - Refugee to Return, West Africa Region