Business Standard

Fintech's 'buy now, pay later' credit for kiranas is changing livelihoods

Even small shops can now access large and organised wholesalers, as they buy credit responsibly.

Kirana store, shopkeeper, shops, retailers, offline, coronavirus, crawford market, masks, grocery
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A shopkeeper wears a mask and sanitizes his hands at Crawford market in Mumbai Photo: PTI

Andy Mukherjee | Bloomberg Opinion
The erstwhile Lever Brothers--now Unilever Plc--arrived in India in 1888 with crates of Sunlight soap. There was no smartphone, and no fintech. Had those two modern marvels existed back then, millions of corner shops that largely provide self-employment to the owners and their families would have been a capitalist success story by now. 

The neighborhood kirana store is the backbone of India’s $520 billion-a-year grocery market, accounting for 80% of sales. But the resources the industry needs to scale up and modernize have always been beyond its reach. Blame that on stunted access to working capital, a constraint on growth

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