cover image The Price of a Dream: The Story of the Grameen Bank and the Idea That is Helping the Poor to Change Their Lives

The Price of a Dream: The Story of the Grameen Bank and the Idea That is Helping the Poor to Change Their Lives

David Bornstein. Simon & Schuster, $24.5 (370pp) ISBN 978-0-684-81191-8

Described by its founder, Muhammad Yunus, as a ""socially conscious capitalist enterprise,"" the much-lauded Grameen Bank in Bangladesh seems to be one of the Third World's brightest success stories. By viewing poor people as potential entrepreneurs, the bank has helped village people, especially women, to better their lives in small but significant ways. Bornstein, a Canadian journalist based in New York City, provides an episodic, sometimes choppy portrait of Grameen, Yunus and some of the people whose lives have been affected by the bank. Bornstein's portrait isn't all rosy, however. He hedgingly describes conflicting opinions on whether the bank, which receives significant amounts of grants and low-cost loans, could survive on its own. And, since many American organizations have been studying Grameen, he awkwardly assays the burgeoning ""microcredit"" movement that aims to provide loans to the poor here. The lesson of Grameen, he concludes, is not extrapolation from abroad but the importance of seeking new solutions to and institutions for complex social problems. (May)