Today Kiva brings in over 17 million a year in revenue and support. It is backed by celebrities, it is high profile, and it is best known for the way it appears to bring individual stories to potential lenders and make them feel good about being able to contribute directly to a project they want to support.
But does it actually work? Is poverty being reduced through the work of Kiva? No. Not according to any of the research.
Despite many years of trying, independent academics have been unable to find any convincing data confirming an overall positive impact on poverty reduction achieved by indebting the poor…. With interest rates often exceeding 100 percent, it is not hard to see how microcredit can progressively increase rather than decrease poverty, as demonstrated poignantly by crises in Andhra Pradesh and elsewhere
The bolded part of that excerpt may come as a shock to some Kiva supporters. 100% interest? That can’t be true. Kiva is non-profit and doesn't charge interest right? Well yes and no. Kiva itself doesn't charge interest, but they also are not the ones making any of the loans. What they do is send money to other micro lending institutions who in turn charge 100% or more in interest. How much exactly? We don’t know because Kiva can’t or won’t say.
Kiva cleverly chooses to reveal out-of date portfolio yields instead of actual interest rates on loans, conveniently and consistently under-estimating the real cost to the poor…. Interest rates approaching 100 percent would raise too many eyebrows – they’re best hidden.
Well OK, but at least those making the loans have the ability to choose the project they want to fund through Kiva right? Maybe it costs more, but only funded projects are moving ahead, so there is no waste, right? Wrong again. Kiva is not efficient. And the loans you make to them are not for what you think.
In 2012 Kiva spent $14 million to loan $111 million. Despite most staff being volunteers, Kiva managed to spend $0.13 for every $1 loaned. Typical specialized microfinance [are] 6 or 7 times more efficient than Kiva in getting money from investor to poor person.
Kiva’s initial attraction was that it was a peer-to-peer lender, but it is not in fact a peer-to-peer at all. The loans featured on the website were made months before, and Kiva users are essentially buying them from the banks.