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  • Clinton, Yunus inspire Hult Global Case Challenge competitors

    NEW YORK—“This is such an exhilarating experience. We’re very excited to meet President Clinton and Dr. Yunus. Win or lose, we are already winners,” Abhinav Chanakya, an MBA student representing the Asian Institute of Management in Manila told the Asian Journal while on the sidelines of the Hult Global Case Challenge’s final round of competition.

    Source
    Asian Journal (link opens in a new window)
    Categories
    Uncategorized
  • This Man Can’t Stop Innovating

    Nothing beats the economics and ingenuity of a great dual-use product. On a scorching February day, Moses Kizza Musaazi stands behind the latrines at Mpigi UMEA Primary School, describing the features of his portable incinerator. The mud at his feet is red. So are the uniforms of the children who surge and subside in waves as he delivers his tutorial.

    Source
    Inc. (link opens in a new window)
    Categories
    Uncategorized
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Malaysia introduces minimum wage for the first time

    Malaysia has introduced a minimum wage for the first time in a move to support low income households and amid speculation that the government may call elections soon.

    Source
    BBC News (link opens in a new window)
  • What Impact Investing Could Do For Health Care

    In his TedMed talk last week, where he called for a renewed focus on improving root causes of health problems rather than waiting until they cause full blown illnesses, Sandeep Kishore noted this somewhat startling statistic: Of the 30 years of average life-expectancy gains the United States made in the last century, a surprisingly small amount of that average increase--just five years--stems from improvements in the sort of medical care we get in hospitals. The rest of those gains came from other sources, like improvements in water quality and sanitation, vaccinations, and other improvements in public health.

    Source
    Fast Company (link opens in a new window)
    Categories
    Health Care
    Tags
    impact investing
  • Looking to Frontier Markets for Next Big Thing in Investing

    The difficulty with investing in the next big thing is that it is often not recognized as that until after it has become a current or former big thing. Before its arrival, it tends to be seen only as a crazy, risky thing or nothing at all. Emerging-market portfolio managers specialize in finding the next big thing. But after the transformation of many economies in Asia and Latin America in the past two decades and the strong returns and mainstream popularity of their markets, what’s left to be found?

    Source
    New York Times (link opens in a new window)
    Categories
    Uncategorized
    Tags
    impact investing
  • CHMI Study IDs How IT is being Used to Solve Global Health Challenges

    In response to the considerable challenges in providing high-quality, affordable and universally accessible care in low- and middle-income countries, policy makers, donors and program implementers are increasingly looking at the potential of e-health and m-health (the use of information communication technology for health) as a solution. Today, Results for Development Institute published findings in the May 1 issue of the Bulletin of the World Health Organization, demonstrating that information technology is being increasingly employed to solve some of the world’s biggest health systems challenges. The study, “E-health in low- and middle-income countries: findings from the Center for Health Market Innovations,” is the most comprehensive survey to date in peer reviewed literature of programs using e-health to improve the quality, accessibility, and affordability of privately delivered health care for the poor in developing countries.

    Source
    Press Release (link opens in a new window)
  • Singapore’s Social Enterprise Stock Exchange to Launch Soon

    For impact investors and social enterprises looking for ways to link up, the ultimate dream is to have a stock exchange aimed solely at mission-driven companies. That’s a difficult feat to pull off, to put it mildly. You need a critical mass of investors and stock-exchange ready companies, not to mention the wherewithal to meet all manner of red tape and regulatory hurdles, as well as establish the technology capable of supporting the venture.But such an exchange is well underway in Singapore.

    Source
    Forbes (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    South Asia
  • Scaling Social Enterprises

    At the Center for Science, Technology, and Society, we focus on helping social entrepreneurs build ventures that scale. My colleague and mentor Jim Koch, founder of the Center and one of the founders of both our signature Global Social Benefit Incubator (GSBI) and The Tech Awards, returned from the Unite for Sight's Global Health and Innovation Conference effusive about his airplane reading. Jim's praise was for the Monitor Group's recently released report, From Blueprint to Scale: The Case for Philanthropy in Impact Investing.

    Source
    The Huffington Post (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
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