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TRANSFORMATIONAL BUSINESS NETWORK

TRANSFORMATIONAL BUSINESS NETWORK

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TRANSFORMATIONAL BUSINESS NETWORK. Obscene Inequality. “One-fifth of humanity live in countries where many people think nothing of spending $2 a day on a cappuccino. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

TRANSFORMATIONAL

BUSINESS

NETWORK

Page 2: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

Obscene Inequality

“One-fifth of humanity live in countries where many people think nothing of spending $2 a day on a cappuccino.

Another fifth of humanity survive on less than $1 a day and live in countries where children die for want of a simple anti-mosquito bed net”

Source: UN Human Development Report 2005

Page 3: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

Unjust Consumption

• $7 billion is needed to provide 2.6 billion people with access to clear water annually

– Less than we spend on perfume

– Less than Americans spend on elective corrective surgery

• 3 day’s global military spending ($4.5b) could send every child to school for a year

Source: UN Human Development Report 2005

Page 4: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

Unfair Trade & Subsidies

• $1billion a YEAR on aid for agriculture in poor countries

• $1 billion a DAY on subsidies of agricultural overproduction at home

• EU diary subsidy is $2.50/cow/day whilst 2.8b people live on <$2/day

Source: UN Human Development Report 2005

Page 5: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

Aid is not the solution

• Aid is ineffective– Distorts local economy– Encourages inefficiency and waste– Creates dependency culture

• Aid is inefficient– 60% of aid money stays in donor countries– US aid was $3/person in Africa (2002).

Deducting consultants, food & emergency aid, admin costs & debt relief, only $0.06 was left (Jeffrey Sachs,2005)

Page 6: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

Aid is not the solution

• Aid is not linked to economic growth:

‘In Africa, whilst aid increased from 5% to 17% of GDP in the 1990s, GDP growth actually decreased from 2% to zero or negative growth’ (World Bank Dev Indicators, 2003)

‘Foreign aid had positively harmed the

poor in developing countries and should

end’ (Peter Bauer, Fifty Years of Failure)

Page 7: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

What is our response

to this

Scandal of Global Poverty?

Page 8: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

Tackling Global Poverty

• Humanitarian Aid/Emergency relief

• Development projects• G2G aid• NGOs• Foundations• Venture philanthropy

Page 9: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

Micro Finance Institutions

• 1971 Opportunity International • 1973 Accion International• 1976 Grameen Bank • 2004 IFC and MFI partners had portfolio

of $2.5b and 1.3m loans • 2006Citigroup, ICICI and others enter the

market as intermediaries – new asset class

Page 10: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

Micro credit

• Fastest way to lift people out of abject poverty into ‘normal’ poverty

• Advantages• Supplement income• ‘Plug & Go’• Replacement of ‘expensive’ debt• Cash flow – critical needs

• Limitations• Loans too small for enterprise• Lack of skills training for enterprise• Preference to be employee than entreprenuer

Page 11: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

Enterprise solution to Poverty

• Economic growth is the fastest way to reduce poverty – China, Asian Tigers

• FDI is critical to economic growth but requires political and economic stability, good governance – factors missing in poor countries

• Social entrepreneurs needed to fill this gap

Page 12: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

Social Venture Capital

• Social Venture Capital or Social Enterprise– Alleviation of poverty through SME private enterprise – Job creation & Wealth creation– Triple Bottom line – financial, social, environmental– Sustainable profitable businesses

• Employment - dignity• Empowerment - independence• Entrepreneurship training

– Uses tools, disciplines and accountability of VC

Page 13: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

Why SMEs?

• Mechanism for job creation– SMEs employ 70% of the work force– SMEs represent 99% of all registered

companies

• Higher success rate

• Source of entrepreneurship and innovation

• Driver of competition

Page 14: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK
Page 15: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK
Page 16: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

16SpringHill

Environmental Conservation

Page 17: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

17

From this…..

To this….

Social Transformation

Page 18: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

Hospitality intakes from Umzi Wethu

Carla Reed (Uitenhage)

Freddie Van Rhyner (SE)

Danny Sauls (SE)

Heather Rossouw (SE)

Kosie Plaatjies (PE)

Food & Beverages

Junior Chef

Marius Maart (SE)

Johan Van Den (PE)

Page 19: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

Help the poor… Come on

safari!

Page 20: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

Challenges of Social VC

• Lack of local knowledge

• Lack of trusted management

• Distance & communication challenges

• No exits

• High risk

Page 21: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

The Social VC Universe

• Private investors • Individual or club

• Foundations • Odmiyar, Google

• Social VC Funds• Bridge Ventures (UK)• Fusion Capital (Kenya)• SpringHill (Africa)

• Unit/Investment trusts • CRU Investments

• Listed investment companies/funds

Page 22: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

INQO Investments IPO

• Listing on AltX, JSE 08

• Creating a new asset class: a listed social venture capital investment company

• Maximise financial and social returns

• Promote to private banking clients and SRI funds

• Prof Jakes Gerwel (Chairman)

Page 23: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

• “Social investment is going to be a new asset class. I am sure of it. Ten years from now, people will be saying that pension funds, insurance companies and corporations must allocate a certain percentage of their assets to organisations that provide a social as well as a financial return”

Sir Ronald Cohen

in The Second Bounce of the Ball

Page 24: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

TBN Loan Fund by

Clive Moody

Mike Tingling

Page 25: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

TBN Loan Fund

• Loan size [$5-10k] to TBN members for projects

• Match funding

• Investors offered [3-4%]p.a

Borrowers [5-6%]p.a

• Minimum Fund Size: $150k

No maximum

Page 26: TRANSFORMATIONAL  BUSINESS  NETWORK

The poor need jobs, not aid