Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by jkurnia 1795 days ago
The fee is paid by the entrepreneurs as a percentage of each project funded. It covers the cost of transferring funds (credit card and other payment transfer fees, Fx margin we pay when transferring funds internationally) and administering the platform (web hosting, phone and SMS communications with entrepreneurs, etc). At our current scale we are just breaking even with our operating costs covered by the 5% fee.

The 5% fee does not take away from the loan funds, which are kept separate from operating costs and fees.

For comparison, most traditional microlending programs charge over 20% in fees and interest, and comparable unsecured small business loans in the markets we serve are much more expensive, or not available at all. Since the entrepreneurs are acquiring assets and operating capital they could not otherwise afford and which continue to generate profits after the loan is repaid, the value to them is normally far higher than the 5% cost of the loan.

Here is an aggregator of project updates posted by the entrepreneurs, which gives an idea of the impact of the loans: https://www.zidisha.org/project-updates

2 comments

Can you share some numbers on zidisha? Is there a dashboard of sorts?

I would imagine:

- Amount of loans outstanding

- delinquency rate

- breakdown of country of origin of lenders. Are people really paying it forward?

We have some cumulative metrics on the How It Works page (https://www.zidisha.org/how-it-works):

Projects Funded: 274,507 Amount Lent: $18,723,792 Total Members: 411,728

The loans outstanding are about $1 million, and delinquency rate ranges between 15 and 25% depending on the cohort measured.

Lenders are about half in the US, 40% in Europe, and the rest elsewhere.

Are people really paying it forward? Early data suggest that repayment rates are higher than for loans, and this is expected given that borrowers are more directly involved in the allocation of repaid funds. For loans ended thus far the average optional extra amount paid has been around 20%, enough to offset expected defaults. We won't have statistically robust data on this for several months, as the larger loans take longer to repay.

Thank you for the clear and quick response. The aggregator is a nice overview.