English Vocab

Savings, not credit
More than four decades ago, the idea of microcredit was born out of a radical concept ~ poor people, when lent small amounts of money, pay back in a timely manner.

In the meantime, that money can be put to use in ways that help boost income, such as rearing goats or weaving carpets. These occupations can help a family improve its standard of living.
As impoverished borrowers defaulted on debts at alarming rates and often with fatal consequences, many organisations questioned the power of credit.
This led to soul-searching by the industry and the rediscovery of a new radical idea, specifically the realisation that what the people really need ~ more urgently than business loans ~ is a safe place to save their money. This is what the development expert, Robert Vogel, once famously called the “forgotten half of rural finance”. It is now universally acknowledged that the most fundamental instrument of personal finance is the piggy-bank.
Access to the right financial tools at critical moments can determine whether a poor household is able to utilise an opportunity to move out of poverty or absorb a shock without being pushed deeper into debt. The poor don’t need simple banking tools; they need tools that can help them navigate their complex financial condition that is marked by needs and inconsistent income. Given the variability of their income, the poor are vulnerable to sickness or death in the family or weather-shocks which can be a drain on family finances and may even prevent families from hanging on to accumulated assets, including productive ones.
These shocks can quickly sink families into spells of extreme duress(pressure/coercion). As a result, the poor lead precarious (not securely held or in position; dangerously likely to fall or collapse.), anxiety-ridden lives with the risks looming much larger than opportunities. The benefits of microcredit are oftenextolled(praise enthusiastically), but debt remains debt; it always increases the risk and borrowers are sometimes overstretched. Savings can help people manage such risks and conveniently, with less monetary burden. And savings do matter, especially to women.
Even in traditional societies, no matter how oppressed women are or the degree of literacy, they are often thestewards(caretaker) of family savings. The key to effective financial inclusion is a safe and confidential savings account for every woman.
The older ones advise the young to keep a store of value that other family members don’t know about. In the event of an emergency, they will appreciate your initiative. Savings have been the mainstay(someone or something on which something else is based or relies.) of the impoverished and villagers cope with a veritably biblical(very great; on a very large scale.) range of hazards. Nature delivers snakes, scorpions, malaria, drought, floods, hurricanes, tuberculosis and pests that ravage (cause severe and extensive damage to.)crops and animals.
And then there are the environmental and vocational risks arising out of changes in market climates. Families are normally financially prepared for education and marriages, but health tragedies are usually wild surprises.
Credit can be both an opportunity and a risk for low-income families. It is necessary to open the doors, but this can also be a barrier. You can dig yourself into a fair amount of debt, and that prevents you from moving up financially. It may become a deepening hole Loans can be malignant(evil in nature or effect; malevolent.). Some people just cannot handle debts. Certain business enterprises are too risky. And there is always the temptation to take these costly loans and scrimp (be thrifty or parsimonious; economize.) on groceries.
When they miss loan payments because a lingering illness keeps them away from their business, they get into a regular default cycle.
This soon leads to acute indebtedness and makes life stressful for the entire family. Savings increase their capability to manage cash-flow, address the problems of uneven income, reduce the impact of the lean season, become more resilient in the face of shocks, build assets or invest in a family business and, most importantly, become empowered to improve one’s status within the households and communities.
A safe and smart savings account can transform the lives of villagers. Savings also serve as a form of self-insurance and enhance the sense of well-being. They are a gateway to self-employment and job creation. Lower-income families can convert savings into home purchases, education and microenterprise.
Despite conventional wisdom, poor people actually do save, even if the amount is meagre. They use a variety of informal mechanisms ~ hiding cash at home, lending money to relatives, participating in rotational savings groups with their neighbours, engaging deposit collectors, buying livestock or other commodities such as jewellery or construction materials. None of these measures can be reliable or safe.
One major problem that the poor often face in accumulating savings is lack of easy access to savings accounts where they can deposit money. The money is kept in a tin at home, and is easily spent when a neighbour, who is in difficulty, approaches the person next door for help. By taking a loan from a microfinancier to buy a needed asset, and then making regular mandatory weekly payments out of her income, the housewife borrows to save. She no longer has spare cash lying around for others to fritter away (to squander or disperse).
The institutions that promote credit, to the exclusion of savings, place poor clients in bondage. To finance a child’s primary school education, clients must take on debt because they are not in a position to save.
To deal with a health emergency or family food shortage, to finance weddings, funerals or social ceremonies, they must keep borrowing again and again.
To acquire essential gadgets, they will need to borrow at prohibitive rates of interest that keep them on the debt treadmill since there is no other option. Financial institutions ought ought to realise that they owe poor people a safe, flexible entity to save.
With cedit alone, they cannot free them from the tangled web of poverty. Savings is a vital prerequisite (required as a prior condition.) for the emancipation from poverty. We must think beyond the standard microcredit model.
Modern microfinance ~ savings and insurance, and more flexible credit products ~ has often had a more important impact than simple credit, according to microfinance researcher Dean Karlan, who is also the founder of Innovations for Poverty Action.
As the former RBI Governor, Raghuram Rajan, had emphasised, credit should follow and not lead. “Savings habit, once inculcated, not only allows the customer to handle the burden of repayment better, it may also lead to better credit allocation.”

1. Duress (noun): Threats, violence, constraints, or other action used to coerce someone into doing something against their will or better judgment. (अवरोध/दबाव/)
Synonyms: Pressure, Coercion, Compulsion, Intimidation, Threats, Constraint.
Antonyms: Independence, Liberation.
Example: The judge overturned the case because the defendant’s attorney proved that his client’s confession had been given under duress.
Origin:  from Latin durus ‘hard’.



2. Precarious (adjective): (not securely held or in position; dangerously likely to fall or collapse.)  (अनिश्चित/अस्थिर)
Synonyms: Uncertain, Insecure, Unsure, Unpredictable, Risky.
Antonyms: Certain, Secure, Stable.
Example: After losing the job, her financial situation became precarious.
Related words:
Precariously (adverb) – अस्थिरता से
Precariousness (noun) – अस्थिरता
Origin:  from Latin precarius ‘obtained by entreaty’ 


3. Scrimp (verb): (be thrifty or parsimonious; economize.)  (मितव्यय करना/किफ़ायत से रहना)
Synonyms: Economize, Skimp, Be (More) Economical, Save, Be Thrifty, Be Frugal.
Antonyms: Spend, Waste, Squander.
Example: Because I have a limited amount of money, I am trying to scrimp and spend less on food than I usually do.
Verb forms: Scrimp, Scrimped, Scrimped.
Origin: from Scots scrimp ‘meagre’


4. Extol (verb): (Praise enthusiastically)  (प्रशंसा करना)
Synonyms: Applaud, Commend, Eulogize, Idolize, Laud, Acclaim.
Antonyms: Blame, Criticize, Castigate, Censure, Condemn.
Example: I got angry when my mother would extol my brother’s accomplishments and ignore all the good things I did.
Verb forms: Extol, Extolled, Extolled.
Origin: from Latin extollere, from ex- ‘out, upward’ + tollere ‘raise’.


5. Steward (noun): One who actively directs affairs (प्रबन्धक)  
Synonyms: Caretaker, Official, Administrator, Representative.
Antonyms: Subordinate, Subservient.
Example: Very long ago, women used to be the stewards of homes.
Related words:
Stewardship (noun) - प्रबंधन


6. Mainstay (noun): (Someone or something on which something else is based or relies.)  (मुख्य आधार होना)
Synonyms: Centerpiece, Cornerstone, Backbone, Bulwark.
Antonyms: Weak Point.
Example: My mother has always been the mainstay of my inspiration


7. Ravage (noun): (Cause severe and extensive damage to.)  (बरबाद कर देना/तहस-नहस करना)
Synonyms: Devastate, Ruin, Destroy, Wreak Havoc On, Demolish.
Antonyms: Preserve, Protect, Save, Guard.
Example: If diabetes is not controlled, it can ravage many organs in the human body.
Verb forms: Ravage, Ravaged, Ravaged.
Origin: From French ravine ‘rush of water’.


8. Malignant (adjective): (Evil in nature or effect; malevolent.)  (नुक़सानदेह/हानिकारक) 
Synonyms: Spiteful, Malevolent, Malicious, Malign, Evil-Intentioned, Baleful, Vicious.
Antonyms: Harmless, Helpful, Invigorating, Benign.
Example: When the doctors discovered a malignant disease in Sam’s body, they told him he only had six months to live.
Origin: From Latin malignant-‘contriving maliciously’


9. Prerequisite (adjective): (Required as a prior condition.) (पहले से आवश्यक/पूर्वाकांक्षित)
Synonyms: Necessary, Needed, Required, Essential, Basic, Of the essence, Imperative, Obligatory, Mandatory, Compulsory.
Antonyms: Inessential, Optional, Secondary, Unnecessary.
Example: The government has repeatedly called for a comprehensive ceasefire as a prerequisite for talks with the rebels.


10. Fritter away (phrasal verb):  (To squander or disperse/ To waste something foolishly)  (गँवाना/ व्यर्थ व्यय करना)
Synonyms: Waste, Squander, Spend Foolishly
Antonyms: Utilize, Avail, Harness
Example: Do not fritter away your youth time in wasteful things.
Verb forms: Fritter away, Frittered away, Frittered away.
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