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RangDe

Overview

Rang De is an Indian social enterprise that facilitates low-cost credit for underserved communities through a peer-to-peer lending model. It connects individual social investors with low-income borrowers across India, with a particular focus on rural entrepreneurs, artisans, farmers, and women.

Name Rang De
Type Social enterprise / Peer-to-peer lending platform
Founders Ramakrishna N. K. and Smita Ramakrishna
Headquarters Bengaluru, Karnataka, India
Country India
Sector Microfinance, financial inclusion

Background

Rang De was established with the aim of making affordable credit accessible to people who are typically excluded from formal banking channels. The platform invites individuals, referred to as social investors, to lend small amounts that are then aggregated and disbursed as loans to borrowers identified through field partners and, later, directly through Rang De's own outreach.

The model is designed to keep interest rates substantially lower than those charged by many conventional microfinance institutions, with the objective of using credit as a tool for livelihood development rather than purely as a commercial product.

Operations

Loans facilitated by Rang De are typically used for purposes such as small business expansion, agricultural inputs, education, and household needs. Borrowers are spread across multiple Indian states, with the platform working in both rural and semi-urban areas.

Following changes in the regulatory environment for peer-to-peer lending in India, Rang De restructured its operations to comply with the framework laid out by the Reserve Bank of India for non-banking financial company peer-to-peer lending platforms (NBFC-P2P).

How the platform works

  • Social investors register on the Rang De platform and choose borrower profiles to lend to.
  • Loans are disbursed to borrowers, who repay in instalments over an agreed tenure.
  • Repayments are returned to investors, who may withdraw the funds or recycle them into new loans.

Significance

Rang De is often cited as one of the early Indian initiatives to apply the peer-to-peer model to development finance, predating much of the later commercial P2P lending sector in the country. By focusing on social impact alongside repayment, it has contributed to wider conversations on financial inclusion, ethical lending, and the role of individual citizens in funding grassroots livelihoods.

References