A Village Fund is a fairly new concept in Cambodia and has been implemented in other villages in the country with success.
Trailblazer Foundation believes this type of management gives the recipients pride and ownership of their project and allows them to build a future beyond subsistence farming without losing their culture.
A central Village Fund gives residents of a village an opportunity to save money as individuals and start a loan program which will provide capital development funds that build equity and sustain projects.
Repayment of private loans is made to the Village Fund and used to establish finances whereby money can be loaned to villagers at the discretion of the Bank Committee at a low interest rate.
After two years, the Sras Village Fund had received enough monies that 12 families were able to borrow $50 at 2% interest to purchase a pig for their family. This is a wonderful example of economic growth.
Those families are now raised above the World Bank poverty line definition of "very poor" because they own livestock. These monies came solely from village-based contributions: repayments of small business set-up, and the $2 per water filter fee and $5 per well fee charged to the villager for agreeing to acquire a filter or well.
Trailblazer Foundation provides the initial grant for projects and receives no repayment. The management of funds is divided into two classifications:
Culverts, roads, schools, public latrines, irrigation systems.
These projects are a non-repayable donation, a one time donor contribution.
Food stall, school supply stall, sewing shop, pump well repair shop, livestock, fish farms, or funds for their children"s continued education. These projects are managed as a 50% donor contribution and a 50% repayment by the recipient at a village determined interest rate.