Lending Power Lending Power

Lending Power

How Self-Help Credit Union Turned Small-Time Loans into Big-Time Change

    • 5.0 • 1 Rating
    • $39.99
    • $39.99

Publisher Description

Established by Martin Eakes and Bonnie Wright in North Carolina in 1980, the nonprofit Center for Community Self-Help has grown from an innovative financial institution dedicated to civil rights into the nation’s largest home lender to low- and moderate-income borrowers. Self-Help’s first capital campaign—a bake sale that raised a meager seventy-seven dollars for a credit union—may not have done much to fulfill the organization’s early goals of promoting worker-owned businesses, but it was a crucial first step toward wielding inclusive lending as a weapon for economic justice.
In Lending Power journalist and historian Howard E. Covington Jr. narrates the compelling story of Self-Help’s founders and coworkers as they built a progressive and community-oriented financial institution. First established to assist workers displaced by closed furniture and textile mills, Self-Help created a credit union that expanded into providing home loans for those on the margins of the financial market, especially people of color and single mothers.
Using its own lending record, Self-Help convinced commercial banks to follow suit, extending its influence well beyond North Carolina. In 1999 its efforts led to the first state law against predatory lending. A decade later, as the Great Recession ravaged the nation’s economy, its legislative victories helped influence the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act and the formation of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. Self-Help also created a federally chartered credit union to expand to California and later to Illinois and Florida, where it assisted ailing community-based credit unions and financial institutions. 
Throughout its history, Self-Help has never wavered from its mission to use Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s vision of justice to extend economic opportunity to the nation’s unbanked and underserved citizens. With nearly two billion dollars in assets, Self-Help also shows that such a model for nonprofits can be financially successful while serving the greater good. At a time when calls for economic justice are growing ever louder, Lending Power shows how hard-working and dedicated people can help improve their communities.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2017
October 19
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
232
Pages
PUBLISHER
Duke University Press
SELLER
Duke University Press
SIZE
14.5
MB

Customer Reviews

T. M. Seale ,

"Good Trouble"

Howard Covington’s account of the work of Self-Help’s founders and dedicated staff over a span of decades is truly inspiring. Founders Martin Eakes and Bonnie Wright developed and led a team of dedicated professionals in fulfillment of "The Mission," as they called it. This is a story about the people—often with personal sacrifice—who made home ownership, business development, and myriad other financial services available to the financially underserved, principally African American and Latino communities in America. This is a true story about modern-day David versus Goliath and Robin Hood doers of "Good Trouble," as Congressman John Lewis put it. I couldn’t put the book down as I read account after account of how these financial gladiators met and overcame the challenges they faced, mainly from entrenched financial interests and their political allies on the state and federal levels.

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