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The Hmong StudyAn investigation into credit availability in the Minneapolis-St. Paul Hmong community
better understanding of immigrant/refugee small business financing, the Federal Reserve Banks of Chicago and Minneapolis surveyed Hmong and white small business owners in Minneapolis and St. Paul. The Hmong are immigrants from Laos and other Southeast Asian countries who settled in the United States as political refugees following the Vietnam War in the late 1970s. Despite their roots in an extremely underdeveloped part of Asia and relatively
recent migration to the United States, the Hmong small business owners
appear to have well-developed access to credit; that is, their utilization
of credit from formal financial institutions is largely comparable to
that of white-owned businesses. Moreover, Hmong and white business owners
have similar views on the barriers or obstacles posed by their access
to credit. Focus group discussions with local community leaders and commercial
banks indicate that unique lending strategies (for example, employing
Hmong loan officers and being active in Hmong community affairs) may be
partially responsible for the well-developed credit access of the Hmong
entrepreneurs. Resources Credit Availability in the Minneapolis-St. Paul
Hmong Community, Minneapolis Fed Community Affairs Hmong
and Control Household and Business Data, via
Chicago Fed |
Glossary
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