Courtland Walker
December 9, 2005 — 03:09 pm
With international remittance flows to the developing world set to top $167bn this year, a newly released report by the United Nations shows that remittance
flows to the African continent, averaging US$17bn per annum
between 2000 and 2003, have
surpassed Foreign Direct Investment during the same period.
While
official aid remains atop the list of external finance flows to Africa, worldwide remittance flows are more than double official aid, and
governments, NGOs and the private sector alike are beginning to
capitalize on these transfers as a driving force for growth.
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John Paul
December 9, 2005 — 11:18 am
WRI's latest What Works case study, Thamel.com: Diaspora-enabled Development, is now available through the NextBillion.net Case Studies page. The report documents a Nepal-based marketing and development company that has tapped the resources of the diaspora to create new opportunities for Nepalese workers, generate cultural value, and help move local businesses in a new direction
The company has five mutually reinforcing business divisions. The most lucrative and well known is the Gift Shoppe, an online portal which sells gifts to the Nepalese diaspora that are then procured and delivered locally to family and friends still living in Nepal. The IT Chemist division helps local entrepreneurs start their own e-commerce sites, while the export division helps them sell items overseas. Thamel Remit provides remittance, insurance and other financial services, and Thamel International replicates the company's successes globally.
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Alexandra Bloom
December 8, 2005 — 05:55 pm
This is my second posting about Islamic banking. I hope to share some information about practices that few people hear about, but are pertinent to doing business in the Muslim world--especially regarding microcredit.
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John Paul
December 8, 2005 — 12:22 pm
Last week, Harvard Business School brought together committed scholars and corporate, non-profit and government leaders to discuss the role of business in poverty alleviation. The 3-day conference, Global Poverty: Business Solutions and Approaches, featured case studies on and empirical research of successful business models, the role of civil society and government, and the ethical and operational challenges faced by businesses who seek out poor customers.
Nextbillion.net has added information about the event to our Conference Resources section. The Harvard conference page details the topics and speakers for all seven panel sessions, and includes links to abstracts for more than 30 papers presented. Powerpoints will be added soon.
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Alexandra Bloom
December 6, 2005 — 12:50 pm
The Milken Institute has just published its 2005 Capital Access Index
entitled
"Best Markets for Entrepreneurial Finance." This index ranks 121
countries by how easily new and existing firms can access capital.
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John Paul
December 5, 2005 — 03:08 pm
The latest issue of Developments, the international development magazine published by DFID, features two good stories about how mobile technology is reducing poverty throughout the developing world.
The first points to a new study by the London Business School that researched the effects of mobile phone penetration in 92 countries over more than 20 years, and found that "a rise of 10 mobile phones per 100 people boosts the rate of growth of GDP by 0.6 percentage points a year." The poorer a country is, the bigger the positive impact becomes since - unlike more developed countries - the mobile phone isn't a replacement for a fixed line but rather is often the only connectivity option readily available.
Mobile phones are now being used to provide many of the same services computer-enabled telecenters have been set up for - namely, providing access to timely information. Small businesses, entrepreneurs and farmers use phones to get better market information, the unemployed are being connected with job opportunities, and long and costly journeys are being replaced by a quick call. Phones are also being used for money transfers, both local and international, and pilot schemes are under way to use mobile phones to deliver micro-credit loans to poor people with no other banking options.
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Alexandra Bloom
December 2, 2005 — 05:05 pm
Having worked for Nextbillion and scoured news sources every day for two months, I've been surprised at how seldom any Middle-Eastern, BOP-activity makes the news, compared to, say, Bangladesh or Uganda. (Perhaps I am looking in the wrong places? If you know good SME/BOP-related news sites for the Middle East, please let me know!)
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Allen Hammond
December 2, 2005 — 11:05 am
"The question is not whether business has a role to play in alleviating poverty. We know that. The question is how." With that statement, Harvard Business School Professor Kash Rangan opened a gathering of academics, business leaders from around the world, and development officials to discuss more than 30 research papers on the role of business in serving low-income communities. The companies presenting or whose efforts were being analyzed include Shell, Nestle, Ogilvy and Mather India, Cemex, Intel, Kodak, ITC, Hindustan Lever, Manila Water Company, and Shorebank. Social entrepreneurs and development agencies and their roles figure into the discussions too -- nobody thinks companies can do this alone.
The discussions have been rich and sometimes passionate. We will post executive summaries of the papers in coming days, along with other insights. The conference agenda is available here.
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Alexandra Bloom
December 1, 2005 — 04:10 pm
I just heard Jim Wales, the founder of Wikipedia, speak about "Wikipedia and Global Development" at the Institute for International Economics - co-sponsored by the Center for Global Development. For the uninitiated, Wikipedia is an online, free, open-source encyclopedia that can be edited by anyone anytime. Jimmy "Jimbo" Wales (who looks a lot like Jean Reno) has a level-headed manner as he discusses impressive projects. After a few fumbles (malfunctioning projector, his ringing cell phone) he launched into the philosophy of Wikipedia and ran down a list of the current and upcoming Wiki- projects. Following his 40-minute presentation was a 45-minute Q&A session.
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John Paul
December 1, 2005 — 01:58 pm
Among the never-ending stream of news stories hyping the One Laptop Per Child project, there finally seems to be a few that strike a healthy note of caution. Both Slate and CNN ran articles this week that ask some very legitimate questions:
- "If you're willing to assume that MIT can somehow keep the cost at or near the century mark, there's still the question of who will support the computers (and who will pay for that support)."
- "The fact that each laptop comes with a built-in WiFi card won't be of much use if there isn't a WiFi access point nearby."
- "Do they think these machines will last forever. What will happen when they break down?"
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