A basic breakdown of how a Mukando works, stripped to the fundamentals
What a Mukando is
What a Mukando is
- A Mukando is a group-based savings and lending setup.
- Members contribute fixed amounts regularly into one shared pot.
- The pooled cash is then given out based on agreed-upon rules.
- Trust and clear rules are the backbone.
- Every member pays the same amount each month.
- Contributions happen for a fixed number of months.
- Nobody skips payments without consequences.
- Total contributions create the active pool.
- Members borrow from the pool, not outsiders.
- Loans usually rotate or follow demand rules.
- Interest is charged on borrowed amounts.
- Loan periods are short and clearly capped.
- Interest paid by borrowers grows the pool.
- All interest stays inside the group.
- No external fees or managers take a cut.
- Growth depends on discipline and repayment.
- After the agreed cycle, money gets shared.
- Each member receives their contribution share.
- Profits from interest are split evenly.
- Normally, nobody should exit before the sharing date.
- It forces savings without a bank.
- Access to quick loans stays internal.
- Interest benefits members, not lenders.
- Community pressure keeps people honest.