Muhammad
Yunus
(Bangladesh)
Founder, Grameen Bank of Bangladesh
Professor Muhammad Yunus, founder of the
Grameen Movement and winner of the 2006
Nobel Peace Prize, is responsible for many
innovative programs benefiting the rural
poor. He attended Vanderbilt University
on a Fulbright Scholarship and received
his Ph.D. in Economics in 1969. He taught
briefly in the US before returning to Bangladesh,
where he joined the Economics Department
at Chittagong University.
In 1974, Dr. Yunus pioneered the idea of
Gram Sarker (village government) as a form
of local government based on the participation
of rural people. This concept proved successful
and was adopted by the Bangladeshi government
in 1980. In 1978, Yunus received the President's
award for Tebhaga Khamar (a system of cooperative
three-share farming, which the Bangladeshi
government adopted as the Packaged Input
Program in 1977). Dr. Yunus is also noted
for the creation of "micro-credit,"
which provides "micro" loans to
the poor and serves as a catalyst for improving
their socio-economic conditions.
Professor Yunus has received widespread
recognition for his work, including the
Nobel Peace Prize, the Ramon Magsaysay Award
from Manila, the Aga Khan Award for Architecture
from Geneva, the Mohamed Shabdeen Award
for Science from Sri Lanka, and the World
Food Prize from the United States. Within
Bangladesh, he has received the President's
Award, the Central Bank Award, and the Independence
Day Award, the nation's highest honor.
Dr. Yunus lives in Dhaka, Bangladesh. He
is married with two daughters.