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Chama online management system

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dc.contributor.author Koskey, Amos
dc.date.accessioned 2017-04-10T18:13:47Z
dc.date.available 2017-04-10T18:13:47Z
dc.date.issued 2016
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/4651
dc.description Abstract en_US
dc.description.abstract Over the weekend while chatting way forward with friends, on how we could invest or venture into business, someone mentioned something about the table banking concept. Interestingly I realized from the conversation, most of us didn’t understand it at all. I mean, what is it anyway? How does It work? How is it different from the chama (informal saving and investments groups) concept we know so well here in Kenya? I remember for example some of my friends in Campus who had Chama’s for raving. They used to put money together and used part of it for the night. This helped them save and control their expenditure. They usually went out as a group and at the end of the semester they would divide the savings plus the interest earned from loaning. (Remember that these were the days when most of us were broke university and college students).According to Growth hub article Chama Pesa- The Social Savings System: Quick Fact Sheet, Kenya has approximately 1.2 million Chama’s, the registered ones are 300,000 and an estimated 900,000 unregistered Chama’s. Registered Chama’s are known to manage about $4 billion per year in member savings, an average of $11,000 per Chama. 12 million Kenyans (33%) are members of Chama’s and many are members of more than one Chama simultaneously. Milele alliance, Mapato Group and awesome group are examples of successful Chamas which have wealth and influence in Kenya. Joyful Women Organization, an NGO providing financial resources to women to engage in livelihood projects through table banking concept, started in 2009 with a handful of groups. The program has now grown to 431 groups and 10,000 women who have accumulated a total of over 100,000,000 Kenyan shillings or over $1 million which they put to work in a wide variety of income generating projects. Salonist and Mpesa shop owner, is a good example as one beneficiary of table banking .She started off with a small salon, from the loan she had taken from the group. She managed to pay back in four months then opted to take a much bigger amount so as to venture into boda boda business by buying one motorbike. Right now she owns three motorcycles and a taxi, which all of them gives her an average of 4,000 kshs per day. Her success and financial stability is as a result of the group she joined 4 years ago, which has helped her family build a house and educate children. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher MMU en_US
dc.subject Chama online management system en_US
dc.title Chama online management system en_US
dc.type Other en_US


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