- Personal profiles of loans recipients
- Green color scheme
- Botanical logo
- One word name that means something meaningful in a foreign language
- All that other microfinancey stuff that I'm not going to go into right now
Wokai works exclusively in China, getting loans to rural entrepreneurs. It scores 4/5 on the Kivaesque Scale: the logo's green, the profiles are there, and the name means "I start" in Chinese, and the logo is almost perfectly generic.
Their actual process differs meaningfully from the Kiva model, however. You make a loan, and once that loan's paid back, you can "redirect" it to another project. You maintain this control over the money for three cycles, after which it disappears into the slavering maw of operational expenses. Once you send in the money, you're not getting it back. You do get to write it off on your taxes, though.
So . . . I don't know about this one. Unless you're really eager to help out in China specifically, I don't see how Wokai's a better choice than any of your other alternatives.
One other thing I'm wondering about (and I took only a cursory look at the site, so maybe I missed it): what is this organization's relationship with the Chinese government? They can't be doing this without official approval, and I gather that the central authorities are a bit touchy when it comes to the plight of their countryside. We've all seen the travails Google's gone through in their dealings with the regime, and even the Ultimate Fighting Championship is skittish about it. I'd be interested to hear how Wokai is dealing with that obstacle.
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