Last night, I learned what a “junta” is (pronounced in Spanish “HOON-ta” -- NOT the military dictatorship kind). It is a microfinance lending and savings plan that is a very common practice among extended friends/families in economically poor or “developing” countries, but virtually unheard of (I think) in the US outside of immigrant communities. Or maybe it is well-known and I’m just ignorant. But I think (in theory at least) it sounds pretty cool and exciting, just because it’s so simple (so incredibly simple, in fact, that I had a hard time grasping how it worked and why I hadn’t heard of other instances where its been used: I can’t find any description of it whatsoever on Wikipedia – in Spanish OR English. ). So now I’m going to share how it works in hopes that some of you hadn’t heard of it, either.
Here’s a situation where a junta could be useful (note: this is a REAL idea proposed during an informal church session meeting, not something I just made up):
- Find nine other people that have at least $100 of disposable income each month. Preferably, some of them (but not all) should also have aspirations for purchases in the next couple months that they don’t have enough money to realize. In the specific example given above, where the church is the primary beneficiary, the church’s treasury counts as an additional “person” – bringing the total number of participants in the junta to ten.
- All ten people (i.e. nine people + the church) agree to pool together $100 each month for ten months.
- The first month, the $1000 of pooled money (10 people x $100) ALL goes to the church. The church then buys the multimedia projector.
- For each of the remaining nine months, a different person in the junta/pool gets a turn receiving the entire $1000 that is pooled together.
And that’s it. In the end, nobody makes any money and nobody loses any money. It’s just a type of accelerated savings plan. All in all, the church has basically budgeted $100 a month for ten months to pay for a projector. So over the course of ten months, it will have indeed pad for its own projector, but unlike what would happen if the church simply put $100 in a personal piggy bank each month for ten months, the church gets the projector at the BEGINNING of the ten months (after only having saved $100) instead of at the end of the ten months.
I should probably mention that I only put the word “communism” in the title of the entry to get people to read it. This isn’t communism. However, sociologically speaking, whether or not such a junta plan is successful depends on much of the same factors that determine whether or not communism can be successful. A junta will probably not work in a very large population of people. A junta probably will not work among a completely random or arbitrary group of people. A junta will probably not work among a very heterogeneous group of people. Ten people sharing in a junta have to be ten close friends with a high degree of personal contact and accountability. They have to trust each other very much. They have to all understand the goals and purpose of the junta, and they should probably have a common worldview and cultural/moral framework. There are just too many possibilities/risks involved for the person whose turn comes last to get screwed by the others dropping out and not making all ten monthly contributions. (I keep using the number ten, but obviously a junta can theoretically have any number of participants; though I personally probably wouldn’t want to go much higher than ten).
Many poor people in the world don’t have access to banks or credit. Even if they do, many have trouble meeting the requirements to qualify for loans/credit. But regardless, by participating in a junta, they don’t have to pay back any interest anyway. That being said, there are some types of juntas that DO involve payments with interest, because otherwise the person with the last turn receives no benefit whatsoever, and could potentially come out much worse off depending on the conditions of the larger economy. I don’t know if this is common, but my solution would be just to have two juntas back to back – with the order reversed for the second one.
Also, you’ve probably figured this out on your own by this point, but juntas are usually used by people who are starting their own small businesses. Without a bunch of money to pay for the start-up capital, the business won’t get off the ground. Participating in a junta solves this problem. Especially if the business is successful, the first beneficiary in the cycle of the junta could also potentially be someone who wouldn’t otherwise have the required amount of money available to pay every month. But after taking their turn at the beginning of the junta to create their business, they’ve secured a source of income that will allow them to continue participating in the junta and paying back the amount they received when they took the first turn.
Earlier, I talked about the importance of trust in the success of a junta. It can only be successful in a tightly-knit community. What I think is REALLY cool about a junta is the trust involved and created. While a junta isn’t really an investment of money (because although there is definitely high risk involved, in the end you don’t receive any more than you put in), a junta IS an investment of trust. As far as trust is concerned, it is a feedback system. The community has to have trust to begin with, but at the end of the junta, there will be a lot MORE trust among the community’s members than there ever was to start with. Upon successful completion of the junta, the community will be even closer, because the junta showed that their trust in each other did not fail. These social/communal benefits of trust and mutual dependence gained by a junta can NEVER be replicated with a standard bank loan.
This is an article that probably explains what a junta is (or as the author calls it a “rotating savings and credit association) better than I just did, if you want more information.