Panama Centro

  • Overview
  • Business

Overview

Panama City Center, while not a community in the traditional sense, represents a highly dynamic urban area where social and economic disparities are clearly present. As the capital of Panama and a major financial and commercial hub for Central America, Panama City attracts people from different regions seeking employment and better opportunities. However, behind its modern skyline and rapid development, many individuals face challenges related to access to financial education, entrepreneurship support, and sustainable income opportunities.

Through its presence in Panama City Center, Global Brigades identified significant needs among the people who live and work in this area, particularly small business owners, informal entrepreneurs, and families striving for economic stability. In response, GB has been carrying out business brigades since 2023 that have proven to be highly valuable for the residents of the zone. These brigades provide practical guidance, tools, and support that empower individuals to strengthen their businesses, improve financial decision-making, and create more sustainable livelihoods.

Despite not being a defined community, Panama City Center has become a strategic area of impact for Global Brigades, where targeted business initiatives are generating meaningful change and contributing to the well-being and economic growth of those who call this area home.

Homes : N/A
Population : N/A
Water System : No
Community Bank : Not Started
Electricity : N/A
Health Center : N/A
Community Health Workers : Not Started
% of Homes with Latrines : N/A
Education in the Community : N/A
Distance from Lodging Facility (km) : N/A

Business

Program Status

  • Planning
  • Active
  • Complete

PANAMA CENTRO’S ECONOMIC CHALLENGE

Community members typically lack access to financial resources locally. The majority of community members do not have bank accounts and there is only limited informal forms of credit available.  For example, a person could obtain ‘credit’ at a local store by buying something now and paying later, simply adding it to their ‘tab,’ but there would be no formalized credit transaction. Larger financial institutions do not approve loans to community members without a fixed income, making it difficult for local microenterprises to grow and thrive. Most community members cite the distance to the nearest bank as the main discouragement to having a personal savings account. Even if individuals wish to travel the distance, not all community members can become members of these financial institutions. As examples, cooperatives require monthly membership fees, savings accounts often require a fixed income, and the cost of travel and the lack of land titles as an indigenous community provide additional barriers.

 

253

Volunteers

8

Business consulted

PANAMA CENTRO’S MICROFINANCE SOLUTION

Members of a community bank in Panama

The Business Program works to stimulate the local economy by organizing community volunteers around a community bank, or caja rural, which is entirely owned and operated by its members. The Business Program provides training and support to help strengthen these community banks. In order to pool their limited funds together, increase the capital available to the community bank, and expand the impact of its financial services, each member contributes a capitalization fee for which they receive a proportional amount of the bank’s dividends at the end of its fiscal year. Upon the completion of six months of executive board training, the community bank begins giving out loans to bank members to spur economic growth and home improvement projects.

 

PANAMA CENTRO’S BUSINESS SOLUTION

A small business owner in a Panama Community

Building off of a strong relationship developed in partnership with Global Brigades as a Holistic Community, Panama Centro looks to receive financial training and business consulting to expand and improve its local microenterprises.

As members of the Community Bank, Panama Centro’s micro-enterprises, led almost entirely by women or families, contribute to savings accounts and budget for loans to expand their businesses in the future. Through the help of Business Brigades, clients get advice on their most concerning business challenges and can also receive assistance in developing sustainable agriculture practices since many local businesses are based in cultivating produce and raising animals.

BUSINESS VOLUNTEERS IN PANAMA CENTRO:

Chapter Date # Of Volunteers Chapter Date # Of Volunteers
Clarkson University Business Kambia January 2023 42 Culver Stockton Business Kambia January 2023 21
Marquette University Business Kambia March 2025 40 California State University Monterey Bay Business Kambia August 2025 47
Northern Michigan University Business Kambia September 2025 9 Marquette University Business Kambia September 2025 16
Northeastern University Business Kambia September 2025 43 Montclair State University Business September 2025 35

Local Reference Points

View the map to see the closest volunteer lodging facilities, hospitals, and other relevant points of reference.

  • Feature