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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2007
March
Program
helping poor in India become better informed buyers, sellers
Mark Reutter,
Business & Law Editor
217-333-0568; mreutter@uiuc.edu
Released
3/19/07
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photo to enlarge |
Photo
by Diana Yates |
| Providing opportunities Educational programs developed by Madhu Viswanathan, a marketing professor in the College of Business, could improve the economic opportunities of Indian women who cannot read or write, such as these beggars outside a train station at Agra in the state of Uttar Pradesh. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
A University of Illinois professor has started a grassroots program
to help poor people in India improve their consumer and business skills.
Madhu Viswanathan, a professor in the College
of Business, directs the Marketplace Literary Project and has developed
educational programs for adults who cannot read or write. “Our
approach uses teaching methods such as picture sortings, group discussion
and role playing,” he said.
Teaching the poor how to become better-informed buyers and sellers will
complement other efforts to combat poverty, such as microfinance, or
supplying small loans for low-income households, according to Viswanathan.
“We enable deeper understanding of marketplaces by leveraging
the social skills that participants bring to the program and relating
educational content back to their lived experiences,” he said.
The training program is the outgrowth of Viswanathan’s research
on subsistence economies in Tamil Nadu, a state on the southeast tip
of India. Working with non-governmental organizations over the last
six years, the Illinois professor interviewed low-literate, low-income
people about their buying and selling habits.
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Click
photo to enlarge |
Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| Madhu
Viswanathan, a professor in the College
of Business, directs the Marketplace Literary
Project and has developed educational programs
for adults who cannot read or write. |
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His sample included a range of rural and urban poor whose incomes were
spent on such necessities as food (mostly rice, lentils, vegetables,
and spices) and clothing. Interviews were conducted in Tamil, the language
spoken locally, which also was the native language of Viswanathan and
his two associates in India, S. Gajendiran and R. Venkatesan.
One of the findings of his research was the level of “functional
literacy,” or ability to conduct everyday functions through social
interactions, among the poor. He gave an example of a woman with no
formal education who, forced to be her family’s breadwinner, bought
utensils from stores and then resold them to residents of her community.
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Click
photo to enlarge |
Photo
by Diana Yates |
| Scorned Hindu widows, such as this woman in Vrindivan, are sometimes turned out of their homes and have few economic options other than begging for an ashram. |
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Managing interactions among her customers was one of the most difficult
tasks she had to master because her conversations were rarely private.
This meant that she constantly had to deal with the tension between
following general procedures and demands by buyers for special treatment.
Despite having almost no experience as a seller and minimal experience
as a customer, she was able to run a successful enterprise and take
care of her family.
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Click
photo to enlarge |
Photo
by Madhu Viswanathan |
| Learning to buy and sell Women in Chennai, on India’s southeast coast, take a class on marketplace literacy. Madhu Viswanathan’s assistants, R. Venkatesan, left, and S. Gajendiran, teach the class in the native language. |
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Another interesting aspect of economic life among India’s poor
was the prevalence of very small roadside vendors. The most successful
retailers maintained personal relationships with their customers and
sometimes acted as their bankers, keeping customers’ money from
thieves or an irresponsible husband.
Looking at how subsistence markets work is a neglected area of mainstream
academic research, according to Viswanathan. “There has been a
lot of work in the social sciences on literate, relatively resource-rich
individuals and societies. But what happens when we cross the literary
barrier and when we cross the resource barrier?”
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Click
photo to enlarge |
Photo
by DIana Yates |
| Personal shopping The prevalence of very small vendors is a characteristic of subsistence markets in India. The most successful retailers maintain personal relationships with their customers and sometimes act as their bankers. This indoor market is in Pune, a city in southwest India. |
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To educate himself in subsistence markets, Viswanathan concentrated
on in-depth interviews and close observation. Almost immediately after
his research began, “I started thinking of grassroots educational
programs to help people as buyers and sellers. Rather than a one-size-fits-all
approach, the aim here was to combine relevant business principles with
localized research.”
In 2003, he formed the Marketplace Literary Project, a non-profit organization
to advance social initiatives stemming from his research. The educational
program in India is being expanded by an organization that reaches hundreds
of villages. Other potential avenues of growth include the use of computer
kiosks in rural areas as hubs for learning.
“A lot of what we’re conveying is about choice,” he
said. “We emphasize the importance of checking on a product and
making inquiries at several shops before purchasing. We set up shops
in the classroom and cheat people. We try to enable skills, self-confidence
and awareness of rights.”
Another aspect of Viswanathan’s program is to help people who
cannot read or write to start their own business. Lessons include how
to choose a business, how to evaluate consumer needs, how to promote
a product and how to use customer feedback to make appropriate stocking
decisions.
Viswanathan, Gajendiran and Venkatesan have completed a book, “Enabling
Consumer and Entrepreneurial Literary in Subsistence Marketplaces: Research-Based
Education Across Literary and Resource Barriers,” forthcoming
from Springer Publishing Co.
Viswanathan’s research has been funded by the National Science
Foundation and the Center for International
Business and Education Research (CIBER) at Illinois.
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