Sub-Saharan Africa.

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  • Africa?s No.1in No.2

    Human excrement is serious business. Three African social entrepreneurs, David Kuria, Joseph Adelegan and Trevor Mulaudzi, spoke at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., in February to share this revolutionary approach to solving the global sanitation crisis. The entrepreneurs speak from experience; each has established lucrative and groundbreaking businesses related to people “doing their business” — and providing the proper sanitation facilities for it often in crow...

    Source
    Water & Wastewater International (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Kenya: SME Private Equity Undeterred by Global Crisis

    It is still difficult to assess the full impact of the global financial crisis on Kenya, but concerns that private equity investors would now pull back have not materialized, at least not in the SME sector where several new funds are entering the market. Rachel Keeler takes a look at the latest developments. Kenya’s private equity market has been on a happy growth curve since 2002. New funds here inspired by the success of private equity abroad are now welcoming international mone...

    Source
    Ratio Magazine (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
  • N7.3bn Microfinance Equity Fund for Nigeria, Ghana

    The gap between the demand for and supply of micro credit for micro-financing of Small and Medium Scale Enterprises (SMEs) in the Anglophone West Africa has drawn the attention of some business development companies to launch a fund that would pool funds together to fill up this gap basically in Nigeria and Ghana. Alitheia Capital ( Nigeria ), Goodwell Investments (The Netherlands) and JCS Investments Limited ( Ghana ) have come together to launch a fund focused on investing in and developing...

    Source
    Business Day (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Developing Health, Developing Profits

    Pfizer’s Dr Ponni Subbiah is at the forefront of a revolution in the way the pharma industry views its business, who it believes its customers are, and how it can be socially responsible. There is currently much talk of pharma’s emerging markets - China, India, Brazil, Russia - but this expanded world view still excludes most countries, and billions of the world’s population. The most potent symbol of global poverty - and dire health needs that go with it - is sub-Saha...

    Source
    Pharmafocus.com (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Rwanda Rising: A New Model of Economic Development

    Nobody likes to say "No, Mr. President." So three years ago, when Costco CEO Jim Sinegal got a call from shareholder Dan Cooper, a partner in Chicago’s Fox River Financial Resources, asking if he’d have lunch with Rwandan president Paul Kagame, he agreed. That meeting in New York led to a presidential stop at Costco HQ near Seattle. Which led to Sinegal’s promise to visit Rwanda. "I made it in a moment of weakness," he says, "before I realized how long it takes to get there." He e...

    Source
    Fast Company (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Avon Calling: Could Beauty Be a Path Out of Poverty?

    "No! No! No!" Oxford business professor Linda Scott does not use Avon products. In fact, she says with a smile, "One of the worst things that ever happened to me is that a friend of mine started selling Avon." But she believes her research in South Africa could prove a fascinating hypothesis: that becoming an Avon lady could help poor women in developing nations knock on prosperity’s door. Scott is a cultural historian-turned-marketing professor who first got interested in stud...

    Source
    Fast Company (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
  • A Company Prospers by Saving Poor People’s Lives

    It all started with mosquito nets. Or, no, with guinea worm filters. Or, before that, with a million yards of wool in the mountains of Sweden. Or, taken back another generation, to uniforms for hotel and supermarket workers. There are plenty of charitable foundations and public agencies devoted to helping the world’s poor, many with instantly recognizable names like Unicef or the Gates Foundation. But private companies with that as their sole focus...

    Source
    New York Times (link opens in a new window)
    Region
    Sub-Saharan Africa
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