Sub-Saharan Africa.

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  • Farm-Africa to Launch 150 Branded Veterinary Stores Across Kenya

    More than 300,000 farmers in Kenya will have access to better animal healthcare with the nationwide launch ofa chain of veterinary stores offering standardised medical products for livestock. Farm-Africa has received funding to establish a network of 150 stores throughout the country over the next four years. The franchise is believed to be the first ...

    Source
    Guardian.co.uk (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Online Matchmaker Fights Poverty by Funding Businesses

    A Danish entrepreneur is trying to end poverty in Africa through microcredit -- funding African businesses by connecting them with investors from around the world. Tim Vang is the co-founder of MYC4, a web-based marketplace that lets investors bid to provide loans to small and medium-sized African businesses. Bidders compete in an online auction, with those offering money at the lowest interest rates financing the loan. Typically, around 50 investors will part fund a single loan. ...

    Source
    CNN (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Booting Up Tanzania With Help From Google

    When Joshua Stern, a graduate of Stanford with a degree in computer science, served in the Peace Corps in Tanzania from 2006 to 2007, one thing soon became clear. "The major takeaway there," he tells Fast Company , "was that the best development work being done was being done by these local groups, community-based organizations." The small groups were often the most effective--yet they had no web presence, no effective way to communicate with other small NGOs or to raise f...

    Source
    Fast Company (link opens in a new window)
    Categories
    Technology
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Why Africa Needs an Agricultural Revolution

    Africa’s peasants are migrating to the cities in huge numbers because it is becoming increasingly difficult to survive on their farms. Farmers are trapped into using inefficient technologies; average cereal yields have barely increased in 40 years and farm sizes are shrinking. Although Africans are leaving the farm, far too few are finding productive jobs in the cities. Most are getting poorer, the cost of safety-net programmes is escalating and Africa’s dependence on concession...

    Source
    Guardian.co.uk (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Web Inventor Seeks Voice-Enabled Internet in Africa

    Tim Berners-Lee is best known as the father of the World Wide Web, but his latest side-project in Senegal and Mali--the World Wide Web Foundation’s VOICES project --aims to give youth and families without typical computing abilities a way to access the Internet with voice-enabled apps. "VOICE...

    Source
    Fast Company (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
  • After Sudan’s Referendum: A Former “Lost Boy” Turns Entrepreneur

    On January 9th, Southern Sudanese voted on whether to become a separate, independent nation. While the results of that vote are still up in the air (though early indications reveal a majority voted for secession from the North ), one fearless entrepreneur, Nico Ajak Bior, already has his sights se...

    Source
    Fast Company (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
  • The Central Bank of Nigeria to Establish MFI Fund

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) says it will establish a microfinance development fund to promote accessibility to financial services for low income earners, just as it is planning a review of the 2005 Microfinance Policy. Kingsley Moghalu, the deputy governor, financial system stability, said this yesterday at the opening of the 5th Annual Microfinance Conference and Entrepreneurship Awards, adding that the policy review would be announced soon. Mr. Moghalu said the policy is c...

    Source
    Next (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Majority of Microfinance Beneficiaries are Women

    AMMAN - Vast majority of loans for micro projects in Jordan were extended to female entrepreneurs over the past few years, a recent study showed Sunday. According to the Arab Microfinance Regional Report, launched yesterday, women borrowers for micro projects represented over 70 per cent of total people who had access to micro credit facilities. Experts from lending institutions expected the trend of funding schemes run mainly by women to continue in the coming years. During...

    Source
    Zawya (link opens in a new window)
    Categories
    Uncategorized
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
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