Source: IPS
 In an open space near her home in Makoko, a  crowded suburb of the sprawling city of Lagos, Latifat Agboola sits in  the midst of bags of charcoal, attending to her customers. Some of them  call her "the charcoal woman with the dirty job, but she sees herself as  a businesswoman on the rise.
 
Less than a year ago,  35-year-old Agboola was minding shop for someone else, but she set up a  business of her own last September, after she got a 20,000 naira ($130)  loan from the Gumi cooperative society in her neighbourhood. 
 "It was a bad start because very little money was left for the actual  business after I used the bulk of the money to register as a member of  the charcoal sellers' association," she told IPS. "I was only able to  buy one bag of charcoal at a time and I resold it in little packs." 
 Agboola made progress all the same and by January she had repaid the  loan, and she was qualified for another 200 dollar (30,000 naira)  loan.  "This second loan provided the additional funds needed to improve the  business as it enabled me to buy charcoal in much larger quantity, so my  profit went up," she says. 
 Her profit from charcoal sales in a good week can go as high as 60  dollars (9,000 naira), equivalent to her monthly salary as a shop  attendant. "With a better income, I no longer have to beg people for  money, now I can buy what I want to buy, I can eat what I want to eat at  anytime, but as a shop attendant, I had to wait until the end of the  month before I could spend money."
 
 Mutual assistance 
 Agoola got the money from a local savings and loan cooperative. The Gumi  cooperative pools money from its members to make loans on which it  charges as little as 15 percent interest. 
 "The group is made up of small women who are into small-scale business,  says Tosun Jimoh, head of the group. "We deal mainly in small loans of  between 20,000 naira and 40,000 naira ($270) and members can pay within  six months. Members don’t require require any collateral, so long as  they can get a guarantor we can trust." 
 Gender analyst Emem Okon, says Agboola's rapid progress is exactly the  kind of transformation microcredit can enable in the lives of poor women  like Agboola. 
 "Where microcredit is properly managed, it helps to improve the income  of poor women, whether they are involved in petty trading or farming it  provides the money to acquire the much needed inputs," says Okon, who is  the head of the Kebetkache Women Development and Resource Centre, a  non-governmental organisation based in southeastern city of Port  Harcourt. 
 Agboola says her choice of what to invest the loan in was crucial to her  success. "Charcoal business is a dirty job and that is why many people  are reluctant to do it, but the secret is that it is a very lucrative  business if you are determined." 
 It is the right business to get into in Makoko, with its high poverty  and dense population. "With the high price of kerosene, many of the  residents here are too poor to cook with [other kinds of] stoves, thus  charcoal is a very cheap alternative for them," says Agboola. "There is a  high demand for charcoal in this neighbourhood, but no one sells it. I  am the only one currently selling it here." 
 Agboola is looking forward to taking out another loan which she hopes to  use to rent a shop and buy charcoal in very large quantities, so she  can operate as a distributor rather than a retailer. She dreams of a  business that will eventually provide funds with which she will buy land  and build a house. 
 Vital to the informal economy 
 "Microcredit schemes are important in Nigeria because it takes care of  the needs of the vast majority of the poor populace who have no access  to formal banking," former banker, Kwekwu Brown told IPS. "The poor end  people who form the bulk of the population cannot meet strict bank  requirements like collaterals and a history of a consistent cash flow so  this informal system is the only option open for them when they need  loan." 
 Nigeria's Central Bank recognises the important role microcredit plays  in the country's informal economy, the practice having a history dating  back centuries in some places. 
 Only 35 percent of the economically active population has access to the  formal financial system, according to the Central Bank, while the  remaining 65 percent "are often served by the informal financial sector  like microfinance institutions, money lenders, and credit unions." 
 "Because of the limited opportunities they have, women form a large  segment of the populace that has no access to the formal financial  system," says Okon. She adds that from her experience there is the added  burden that these women face numerous problems in accessing loans from  the informal sector. 
 "We restricted Gumi's membership to women only so as to enhance their chances of getting small-scale loans," says Jimoh. 
 Agboola, a mother of two in a polygamous household, says she spends a  substantial part of her income on her family. But Okon says diversion of  funds to maintain the household can be a potential problem for many  women who take microcredit loans. 
 "Culture is one of the problems. Women are sometimes denied microcredit  loans out of the cultural belief that they are less likely to be  successful in whatever business they do, so they are seen as a high risk  group," Okon says. 
 The Central Bank says it has a policy to develop microfinance  institutions in order "to cover the majority of the poor but  economically active population by 2020 thereby creating millions of jobs  and reducing poverty."