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Trapped by Debt

January 10, 2025

Microcredits for the world's poor have long been considered the ideal way to combat poverty. But this film documents a bleak scenario -- in which microcredits have destroyed entire families.

Trapped by Debt - The Vicious Cycle of Microfinance in Cambodia
Image: Ruom Collective

Over-indebtedness has driven some recipients to suicide.

Muhammad YunusImage: Indranil Mukherjee/AFP/Getty Images

Expectations were high. When Muhammad Yunus, the "banker to the poor” and founder of the Grameen Bank for microfinance in Bangladesh, received the Nobel Peace Prize for his work in 2006, it was clear to many that the principle of helping people to help themselves would lift many out of poverty. 

Image: Ruom Collective

From the 1980s to the early 2000s, microcredits were seen as one of the best tools for combating poverty.

Image: Ruom Collective

However, the loans, which were initially seen as a positive inflow of liquidity, quickly led to further financial obligations for many families.

Image: Ruom Collective

After all, interest had to be paid on these loans. Illegal lenders stepped in. The pressure on families became unbearable, leading to the sale of land, migration, the break-up of families and ultimately even suicide.

Image: Ruom Collective

The film tells the stories of three Cambodian families. Along the way, it debunks the myth of microfinance as a tool that truly helps the poor.

Image: Ruom Collective

Told through the eyes of the protagonists and through their personal experiences, this film highlights the hardships faced by so many Cambodians because of debt. 

Broadcasting Hours: 

DW English

WED 15.01.2025 – 01:15 UTC
WED 15.01.2025 – 04:15 UTC
THU 16.01.2025 – 09:15 UTC
THU 16.01.2025 – 16:15 UTC
THU 16.01.2025 – 21:15 UTC
FRI 17.01.2025 – 12:15 UTC
SAT 18.01.2025 – 02:15 UTC
SUN 19.01.2025 – 08:15 UTC

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