The best Mother's Day present
Many years ago, I was invited to a very exclusive finance dinner.
As luck would have it, I found myself sitting next to a VIP ... the chief of a large international bank.
He leant in, shook my hand, and began telling me all about his sprawling bank, which employed tens of thousands of staff and had millions of customers.
And then he said something that totally shocked me:
“We lend money only to women.”
“What?”, I blurted out.
“My bank lends money to small businesses. And we’ve found that when we loan money to women they use it to improve their living situations and educate their children … whereas men often squander it.”
Bingo, bango!
The famous bank chief I was sitting next to was none other than Muhammad Yunus.
Back in the seventies, Yunus did something that no one in his native Bangladesh had ever done before: he provided small business start-up loans to women — poor, uneducated women who lived in the backblocks.
People thought he was crazy.
See, at the time, 99% of loans were to men. If a woman applied, she was often laughed at and dismissed: “Go get your husband to apply.”
Yet Yunus understood the power of the mothering instinct ... these women wanted a better life for their children.
Yunus bet this would drive these mothers to work hard, to look after their kids ... and to repay their loans in full.
And that’s exactly what they did.
The result was that millions of people were pulled out of grinding poverty, and Yunus was awarded a Nobel prize.
Of course it doesn’t matter if you’re in Bangladesh or Bendigo — women tend to be more focused on financial security.
And you don’t need a Nobel prize to work out why: they have to be.
That’s because women are, on average, poorer than men.
They are more likely to do more unpaid work. They are also more likely to take time off their career to raise children. And they still get paid less than men, according to the Human Rights Council of Australia.
The result?
They have less money compounding over their working lives, so they retire with around half of what men have in super.
And so, on this Mother’s Day I’ve got a special request for you:
If you know a mum who’s struggling (whether yours or not) give her the gift of financial knowledge.
Offer to take her out on some Barefoot Date Nights. Help her work through the steps.
Odds are she’ll remember that more than the supermarket flowers she gets every year!
Tread Your Own Path!