Grameen Bank’s audited accounts for 2003 show a six-fold increase in net profits over 2002 – from 60 to 358 million taka (US$6 million). 2003 was the first full year of ‘Grameen II’, so this surge in profit looks like a good return on the decision to launch Grameen II. So where did these profits come from? This Briefing Note attempts to answer that question and the implications for Grameen's future performance.
MicroSave Website Partners
Related Documents
- Designing Savings and Loan Products
- Grameen II 9 - A Critique of GB II’s Means Test for Membership
- Grameen II 8 - Lessons From The Grameen II Revolution
- Grameen II 7 - Uses and users of MFI loans in Bangladesh
- Grameen II 6 - Membership in Bangladeshi MFIs: growing, volatile, and multiple
- Grameen II 5 - Grameen II’s Membership
- Grameen II 3 - The New Loan Arrangements





