UNDERLYING ASSUMPTIONS
of the SHARE PROGRAM
In
order for communities to combat the loss of local lending sources and funding
for innovative small business, a community organization is needed which will
join with the banks to provide new funds and community backing. Criteria for
making such loans should be established by the community organization in
conjunction with the banks.
There are several
assumptions behind the SHARE concept:
- That
there exists a considerable number of potentially sound investment loans
which are presently not being serviced by conventional financial sources.
Many of these investments are potentially of great benefit to the
community because they would lead to increasing local self-reliance in
such basic needs as energy and food but they are not presently eligible
for conventional financing because:
- They do not meet conventional lending criteria
- Projects are new and therefore have not established a track
record
- Regulations of financial institutions do not permit some of
these loans
- Funds of financial institutions are limited and therefore go to
the conventional borrowers first
- Interest rates are too high to make a project feasible.
- That
increased savings funds can be attracted from local depositors even at
current low rates of interest if:
- Depositors know that their money is being used for local
development (which, after all, benefits the local depositor)
- Depositors feel that they have some voice in the decisions
about where the funds will be placed
á
Depositors feel assured that the funds are being used in socially
and ecologically sound ways.
- That
banks, as local institutions, are best suited for handling and
administering loans for the purpose of local or regional self-reliance.
- That
banks can afford to handle administration of local loans for a reasonable
feeÑwhen they are not taking all the risk.
- That
many loans which are presently considered too risky by banks would not be
risky if a voluntary association of people were available to provide
technical and market assistance.
- That
once a Òtrack recordÓ is established by such businesses, they would be
able to tap standard bank credit, releasing the more adventuresome funds
to encourage new starts.
- That
small loans can be very beneficial and productive in rural areas out of
proportion to the amount of the loan, but the Òrisk factorÓ is often so
high that banks either will not make the loans or charge too high interest
rates for feasibility.
- That
large investors can be attracted to make direct loans for community
development at their own risk (at relatively low rates of interest) if
they are fully aware of the risks and the possibilities for such loans.
- That
banks will welcome the SHARE program for several reasons:
- SHARE should bring in new depositors and increase the bank's
collateral base.
- The SHARE program is good public relations because it shows the
bank's interest in the community and willingness to use its resources for
increasing community self-reliance.
- It will make it possible to reduce loan refusals by the number
that meet SHARE criteria but seem Òto riskyÓ from the present bank
standpoint.
- That
a voluntary organization such as SHARE could act as a catalyst to
spearhead the development of such a local effort towards regional
self-reliance, and that therefore the primary role of such an organization
would be to promote, encourage and educate producers and consumers towards
greater local self-reliance and not to administer loans.