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  • World Development Report 2007: Development and the Next Generation

    The report will focus on?crucial capabilities and transitions in a young person’s life: learning for life and work, staying healthy, working, forming families, and exercising citizenship. For each, there are opportunities and risks; for all, policies and institutions matter.? More ab...

    Source
    The World Bank (link opens in a new window)
  • Linux v. Microsoft: Third World Showdown

    So, in the brewing battle of Windows vs. Ubuntu, Mark Shuttleworth’s stated belief that software should be available free of charge, that software tools should be usable by people in their local languages and despite any disabilities, and that people should have the freedom to customize and alter their software in whatever way they see fit. If you think that’s all standard Linux/Open Source talk, you’re right. The difference is that instead of trying to convert...

    Source
    Yahoo! Finance (link opens in a new window)
  • Study: Remittance recipients more willing to invest in LatAm – Regional

    A growing number of remittance recipients in Latin America and the Caribbean are willing to invest in the region, the Inter-American Development Bank’s (IDB) Multilateral Investment Fund (MIF) said in a study. The main goals of these migrants are to own a home or establish their own businesses in their countries of origin, but only a third of them have made such investments, mostly in real estate. Five years ago, 95% of the migrants polled said they had no investments in their hom...

    Source
    Business News Americas (link opens in a new window)
  • Super-rich in move to ease African poverty

    US economist Jeffrey Sachs has been pursuing the strategy since 2004 through his non-profit Millennium Promise group. It aims to tackle myriad problems of poverty all at once by providing villagers with relatively inexpensive technologies and approaches, including mosquito nets to prevent malaria and stoves with chimneys to reduce deadly indoor air pollution. FINANCIER and philanthropist George Soros has offered $US50 million ($A66 million) to support a vast social experiment that aims to help v...

    Source
    The Age (link opens in a new window)
  • EBRD signs first Mongolia project, microfinance loan

    The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) signed its first project in Mongolia on Wednesday, a $5 million loan to XacBank, which specialises in microfinance. The funds will be lent on to small and micro-businesses throughout the country. XacBank, licensed four and a half years ago, offers loans ranging in size from $27 to $150,000, according to its Web site (www.xacbank.org). Continue reading ...

    Source
    Yahoo! Asia News (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    Europe & Eurasia
  • Kenya aims for own internet cable

    The announcement comes weeks after Kenya refused to sign up to a 23-nation plan to build an undersea telecommunications cable, East African Submarine Cable System (Eassy), after disagreeing with South Africa about the cost and management of the project. The cable network that will connect East Africa to the rest of the world will also serve Tanzania, Uganda, Sudan, Rwanda, Burundi, Ethiopia and Somalia, said the statement, which gave no timetable for the project. Ke...

    Source
    BBC News (link opens in a new window)
  • ICICI Venture mulls 4 specialised funds

    ICICI Venture has also tied up with seven of its key investors in its private equity funds that will co-invest with them in acquisitions and buying of stakes in companies. The need for a small-cap fund was felt because ICICI?s current funds are for bigger deals, with an average size of $75 million. The small-cap fund will invest in smaller and emerging companies, which require a fund infusion of between $10 million and $50 million. ICICI Venture is planning to set up four new special...

    Source
    Business Standard (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    South Asia
  • SMEs in Bangladesh

    SMEs in Bangladesh produce a multitude of labour intensive goods including toys, consumer items, small tools and paper products for the domestic market. Further development of these industries offers various investment opportunities. Export-oriented production in SMEs has gained momentum in the past few years. Entrepreneurs from Hong Kong, Japan and Korea have taken advantage of Bangladesh’s cheap and easily trainable labour and its infrastructure facilities to ...

    Source
    Financial Express (link opens in a new window)
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