
Professor Karnani’s piece, Mirage at the Bottom of the Pyramid, deserves a rebuttal. I provided that in private before Professor Karnani posted his paper on the web. I decided to post my response to him as well, given the likelihood that readers may not get a balanced view of the core arguments about the BOP opportunity – to “do good and do well.”
Here is my original response to Prof. Karnani’s draft.
Read C.K. Prahalad's response to "Mirage at the Bottom of the Pyramid" (PDF download)
Related:
Read Al Hammond's response to "Mirage at the Bottom of the Pyramid" (Link)
| Attachment | Size |
|---|---|
| Prahalad - Response to Mirage at the BOP.pdf | 97.55 KB |


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First I believe that Prof. Karnani did uncover one particular important note that I believe even C.K. would agree with. That there is a risk that multi-nationals might not embrace the BOP but utilize it to further enrich themselves. This is a typical view and one which is basic to business. In truth, it is the very definition that I personally would love to destroy. But it does have some validity and business has exploited the poor in the past. This is a risk, but I believe in today's world, in this world of globalization, where the "World is Flat" (thanks T. Friedman), that this does not need to be a case and cannot be the case. And if you want proof; example cases of good business by doing good are in C.K.'s book and in the activity database here at nextbillion.
I further would like to share one quote that seems to always be the emphasis and pulls at me. "Business needs to look and treat the BOP as individuals and consumers." (Thanks C.K.)
Finally I think one part where Prof. Karnani is definitely off the mark is by focusing on only multi-nationals and only focusing on them within his critique. Please remember that the poor can empower themselves and have proven time and time again (examples available upon request) that they are innovative entrepeneurs.
The solution will not be from one source, and it will not take only one method. I personally found that the approach Jeffery Sachs outlines within "The End of Poverty" to be most realistic. The underlining concept was similar to how a doctor attends to the sick, Sachs called it clinical economics. Where you realize the problems are not simple, but sometimes complex. That each segment of poverty requires a seperate diagnosis. He further goes into describing treatment and monitoring to also be keys to eliminating poverty. It is a very interesting perspective he brings to the table. I would be interested on his perspective on this article.
And in closing, I would like to thank Prof. Karnani for posting his original critique on this site. It has helped create and facilitate further discussion and analysis on the topic we are all focused on, eliminating poverty. Let's not focus on who is right or who is wrong, rather on seeking a solution to the problem at hand.
Thanks to the following people I quoted in some form during my response: Aneel Karnani, C.K. Prahalad, Jeffery Sachs, Thomas Friedman. ere are some of my own shared as I borrow some words from Dr. Karnani, C.K. Prahalad, Jeffery Sachs, and Thomas Friedman. Sorry if you found my response long-winded.