Give a Little Light Magical, Practical, Global

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Give a Little Light Magical, Practical, Global Give a Little Light magical, practical, global Working with our Kenyan distributors users get their Little Suns first and JANUARY solaTaa, MyC4 and KEEF brought Little pay in flexible installments – with the Suns to rural Kenyan villages with their money they are saving by no longer Little Sun 2014:micro-financing A Year in payment Pictures plans, where purchasing unsafe and toxic kerosene. Philanthropist and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg visiting the Little Sun head office in June 2014 was an extraordinary third year for a ground-breaking $5 million impact investment, JANUARYthe Little Sun project. WeWorking received with anour Kenyan distributorswhich hasusers allowed get their us to Little scale Suns our first operations and important vote of confidencesolaTaa, MyC4from and KEEF brought andLittle distribution pay in flexible across installments the African – continent.with the Suns to rural Kenyan villages with their money they are saving by no longer Bloomberg Philanthropies in the form of micro-financing payment plans, where purchasing unsafe and toxic kerosene. < Little Sun solar lamps are now available in New Zealand, Japan, and Colombia. The message 11 African countries: Zimbabwe,Working with Ethiopia, our Kenyan Kenya, distributors of Littleusers Sun get– along their withLittle its Suns light first – is and spreading Nigeria, Ghana, Senegal,solaTaa, Uganda, MyC4 Burundi, and KEEF Zambia, brought Littlequickly, pay as inmore flexible and installments more people – joinwith the the Little Suns to rural Kenyan villages with their money they are saving by no longer Burkina Faso, and South Africa – as well as in Sun project and begin to Give a Little Light. micro-financing payment plans, where purchasing unsafe and toxic kerosene. Europe, the United States, Canada, Australia, Working with our Kenyan distributor users get their Little Suns first and JANUARY solaTaa, MyC4 and KEEF brought Little pay in flexible installments – with the Suns to rural Kenyan villages with their money they are saving by no longer micro-financing payment plans, where purchasing unsafe and toxic kerosene. Little Sun officially launched FEBRUARY our distribution in Nigeria … Ghana Zambia Burkina Faso … which would become only the first of Little Sun light this year – later joined four new African countries to distribute by Ghana, Burkina Faso, and Zambia! Artist and Little Sun Founder Olafur Eliasson Frederik Ottesen, and the Little Sun Team MARCH brought Little Sun to the MIT for his 2014 collaborated with students on the lamp McDermott Award residency. Throughout and project, generating innovative ways the academic year, Eliasson, Co-Founder to spread sustainable energy. At the famous Coachella music festival solar energy access for everyone – APRIL in sunny California, Little Sun surprised the #AbsolutLittleSun Bar and festivalgoers with a unique interactive Sunlight Graffiti! experience to raise awareness about MAY Little Sun also brought Sunlight Graffiti and social engagement together: to Viva con Agua’s social art and music a tangible experience of sustainable festival Millerntor Gallery in Hamburg, energy and solar light to all participants. which brought street art, music, In response to feedback from our A fluorescent ‘on/off’ button that JUNE users, Little Sun debuted a popular makes your lamp easy to find and new feature: activate in the dark! Little Sun travels Summer is the perfect time to embark on travels and adventures, and Little Sun visited many places this year… Times Square, NYC The Great Wall of China The 25th Fall of the Wall anniversary, Berlin The Eiffel Tower, Paris A popular Little Sun Pop-Up Shop Iceland – and sold out of lamps due to AUGUST brought solar light to Reykjavík, high demand! Little Sun on the road At Little Sun, we constantly travel to new places, meeting with people to set up Little Sun distribution. We chronicled our travels in our ‘Little Sun On the Road’ blog series of first-hand accounts from members of the Little Sun Team. Ghana Zimbabwe Burkina Faso Senegal The first Little Sun lamps arrived in launch of Little Sun Colombia SEPTEMBER South America in preparation for the at Art Bogota in October! In Copenhagen Little Sun visited Ice focusing our attention on the urgent OCTOBER Watch by Olafur Eliasson, 100 tonnes issue of climate change facing us all. of inland ice from Greenland which Let’s turn climate change into climate melted slowly in City Hall Square, action. #climate2014 #IceWatch In partnership with the Velux group, imagine future solutions to provide people NOVEMBER Little Sun launched Natural Light, an worldwide with sustainable energy by international design competition. The designing a special edition solar lamp, competition challenges students to which will be produced in 29,000 units. Little Sun collaborated with Fondation by Olafur Eliasson. Proceeds from DECEMBER Louis Vuitton to produce a special sales support delivery of Little Suns limited edition of 1000 Little Sun to 11 African countries. solar lamps, numbered and signed Great people we met this year The best part of the Little Sun project is delivering clean solar light and meeting wonderful people along the way, and this year was no exception.… Philanthropist and Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg Wellington Mayor Celia Wade-Brown From politicians and scientists ... Mars Desert Research Station Crew Bill Nye the Science Guy Commander Nick Orenstein To shopkeepers and retailers ... Children and their families ... Working with our Kenyan distributors users get their Little Suns first and JANUARY solaTaa, MyC4 and KEEF brought Little pay in flexible installments – with the Suns to rural Kenyan villages with their money they are saving by no longer micro-financing payment plans, where purchasing unsafe and toxic kerosene. Artists and musicians… Ivy Quainoo Marteria Ai Wei Wei On tour with Dillon And many more! Working with our Kenyan distributors users get their Little Suns first and JANUARY solaTaa, MyC4 and KEEF brought Little pay in flexible installments – with the Suns to rural Kenyan villages with their money they are saving by no longer micro-financing payment plans, where purchasing unsafe and toxic kerosene. Little Sun, Thank you for being a part Big Impact of the global Little Sun community! Here’s what we accomplished to date: 400+ African entrepreneurs 124,000+ joined Little Sun lamps sold in off-grid areas 500,000+ lives changed 8,300+ tonnes CO2 emissions $3,200,000 reduced from the atmosphere Working with our Kenyan distributors users get their Little Suns first and saved on energy expenses JANUARY solaTaa, MyC4 and KEEF brought Little pay in flexible installments – with the in off-grid households Suns to rural Kenyan villages with their money they are saving by no longer micro-financing payment plans, whereAnd therepurchasing is unsafe much and moretoxic kerosene. to come... Thank you for helping us to spread sustainable solar light around the world. Every lamp sold in an area with electricity delivers one lamp to an off-grid area at a locally affordable price. Working with our Kenyan distributors users get their Little Suns first and JANUARY solaTaa, MyC4 and KEEF brought Little pay in flexible installments – with the Let’s LittleSuns to rural Kenyan Sun! villages with their money they are saving by no longer micro-financing payment plans, where purchasing unsafe and toxic kerosene. Working with our Kenyan distributors users get their Little Suns first and solaTaa, MyC4 and KEEF brought Little pay in flexible installments – with the Suns to rural Kenyan villages with their money they are saving by no longer www.littlesun.commicro-financing/ilovelittlesun payment plans, where @LittleSunpurchasing unsafe and toxic kerosene.littlesunenergy.
Recommended publications
  • Rapportudkast
    Bilag 8 - Produktanalyser I det følgende præsenteres de 20 produktanalyser for oplysningsaktiviteter, der har modtaget mid- ler fra Udenrigsministeriet indenfor tre finansieringsvinduer: 1. Danidas Oplysningsbevilling 2. NGO’ernes projektrelaterede oplysning 3. Udenrigsministeriets eget oplysningsarbejde Produktanalyserne er grupperet under de forskellige finansieringsvinduer. For hvert oplysnings- produkt foreligger en beskrivelse og en analyse - basisoplysninger og produktanalyse. Basisoplysningerne (organisation, titel, aktivitet, budget etc.) stammer fra producenten selv. Eva- lueringsteamet har efterfølgende tilføjet evt. yderligere oplysninger i kursiv. Produktanalysen (relevans, effektivitet, ressourceforbrug) er udfyldt af evalueringsteamet på bag- grund af de i skemaet anførte data samt yderligere dataindsamling (f.eks. interviewdata). For Udenrigsministeriets eget oplysningsarbejde fremgår i nogle tilfælde ligeledes data fra eksi- sterende effektundersøgelser, som er medtaget for at supplere evalueringens dataindsamling. Oplysningsbevillingen BASISOPLYSNINGER OG PRODUKTANALYSE BASISOPLYSNINGER Bevillingstype Oplysningsbevillingen Organisation/ansøger NN Producent/tilrettelægger (hvem har produce- NN ret, gennemført aktiviteten) Titel Bongo Superstars Tema Ungdomskulturer, hiphop, identitet, musik, drømme. Formål (beskrevet af producenten) Filmens formål er at følge en gruppe unge rappere fra Tanzania for herigennem at vække identifikation hos beskueren (vise et andet billede af Afrika end nød og fattigdom) Indhold (kort beskrivelse
    [Show full text]
  • Leveraging Information and Communication Technology for the Base of the Pyramid
    Leveraging Information and Communication Technology for the Base Of the Pyramid Innovative business models in education, health, DJULFXOWXUHDQG¿QDQFLDOVHUYLFHV A JOINT REPORT BY SPONSORED BY IN COLLABORATION WITH Authors Alexandre de Carvalho, Hystra Network Partner Lucie Klarsfeld, Hystra Project Manager Francois Lepicard, Hystra Network Partner Contributors Alessandra Carozza, AMGlobal Nicolas Chevrollier, TNO Chloe Feinberg, Ashoka Till Jaspert, Claro Partners Andrew Mack, AMGlobal Claire Penicaud, Hystra Bineke Posthumus, TNO Please direct queries about this report to: [email protected] Note: Hystra is the author of this report. Analyses and FRQFOXVLRQVUHSRUWHGKHUHGRQRWQHFHVVDULO\UHÀHFW WKHYLHZVRIWKH¿YHVSRQVRUVVXSSRUWLQJWKLVZRUN 1 Sponsors’ foreword Over the past twenty years, the number of mobile phone subscriptions has risen from 12.4 million to more than 5 billion. The majority of them, equaling 3.8 billion, are in developing countries, where the mobile telecommunications industry has expanded most quickly. Today, even in the most remote areas, people own or use a mobile phone. It is clear that with mobile penetration rates continuously increasing, connectivity – at least for basic voice services – will no longer be a major hurdle in the near future, and development concerns are SURJUHVVLYHO\WXUQLQJWR¿QGLQJZD\VWREHVWOHYHUDJHWKLVFRQQHFWLYLW\IRURWKHUVHUYLFHV Several of the services that can be delivered on telecommunication networks are directly linked to socio-economic development. The focus of this study is the tremendous opportunities
    [Show full text]
  • SPEAKER PROFILES Official Opening of Rwanda Sustainable Energy
    SPEAKER PROFILES Official Opening of Rwanda Sustainable Energy Week 2018 Amb. Claver Gatete, Minister of Infrastructure Rwanda Ministry of Infrastructure Biography Amb. Claver Gatete has been the Minister of Infrastructure since April 2018. Prior to this appointment, he served as Minister of Finance and Economic Planning starting in February 2013. He had previously served as the Governor of the National Bank of Rwanda (2011 to 2013). Amb. Gatete also served as Rwanda’s Ambassador to the Website: United Kingdom, Ireland, and Iceland from November 2005 to December 2009. He is www.mininfra.gov.rw also currently a member of the Presidential Advisory Council. In addition, Amb. Gatete’s previous posts include Personal Representative of the President on NEPAD Steering Committee, and National Economist at the Rwanda United Nations Development Programme (UNDP). Amb. Gatete has held various positions on Key Boards of Directors including: Chairman of Rwanda Revenue Authority, Chairman of School of Finance and Banking; member of the Board of the National Bank of Rwanda; Chairman of National Privatization Technical Committee; and Vice-Chairman of Community Development Fund. Amb. Gatete holds a Masters in Agricultural Economics from the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C., Canada (1993) and an undergraduate degree from the same University (1991). About the Rwanda Ministry of Infrastructure The MININFRA is a department of the Government of Rwanda. It is responsible for infrastructure policy and development throughout the country. The Ministry's mission is to ensure the sustainable development of infrastructure and to contribute to economic growth with a view to enhancing the quality of life of the population.
    [Show full text]
  • How to Design Online Models for Micro-Lending in Developing Countries? Making Sense to MYC4 in Africa Eric Van Heck Erasmus University, [email protected]
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by AIS Electronic Library (AISeL) Association for Information Systems AIS Electronic Library (AISeL) International Conference on Information Resources CONF-IRM 2013 Proceedings Management (CONF-IRM) 5-2013 How to Design Online Models for Micro-lending in Developing Countries? Making Sense to MYC4 in Africa Eric van Heck Erasmus University, [email protected] Marlei Pozzebon HEC Montréal, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://aisel.aisnet.org/confirm2013 Recommended Citation Heck, Eric van and Pozzebon, Marlei, "How to Design Online Models for Micro-lending in Developing Countries? Making Sense to MYC4 in Africa" (2013). CONF-IRM 2013 Proceedings. 25. http://aisel.aisnet.org/confirm2013/25 This material is brought to you by the International Conference on Information Resources Management (CONF-IRM) at AIS Electronic Library (AISeL). It has been accepted for inclusion in CONF-IRM 2013 Proceedings by an authorized administrator of AIS Electronic Library (AISeL). For more information, please contact [email protected]. How to Design Online Models for Micro-lending in Developing Countries? Making Sense to MYC4 in Africa Eric van Heck Erasmus University [email protected] Marlei Pozzebon HEC Montréal [email protected] Abstract This article explores a micro-lending platform linking investors mostly located in developed countries and micro-entrepreneurs located in Africa. At the heart of this social and economic innovation is the online auction model, a concept that has been intensively investigated and used in developed countries. However, little knowledge exists about how these new models are used and implemented in developing countries, and about how existing theories are able to explain such an emerging innovative phenomenon.
    [Show full text]
  • Market Survey on Possible Co-Operation with Finance Institutions for Energy Financing in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania
    Market Survey on Possible Co-operation with Finance Institutions for Energy Financing in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania February 2010 Phyllis Kariuki Kavita Rai Other Contributors: Felistas Coutinho, Anna Mulalo and Jon Gore (Tanzania) Hidde Bekaan and Andrew Obara (Uganda) Table of Contents Acronyms.................................................................................................................................................... 3 Executive Summary ................................................................................................................................ 4 1 Introduction..................................................................................................................................... 5 1.1 Study Outputs.................................................................................................................................................5 1.2 Financing Models .........................................................................................................................................5 2 Overview and access of the financial sector......................................................................... 6 2.1 The Financial Sectors .................................................................................................................................6 2.2 Overall Access to Financial Sector by Population.........................................................................8 2.3 Rural versus urban access to Financial Access...............................................................................9
    [Show full text]
  • Development Resources Beyond the Paris Declaration Final
    Development Resources Beyond the Current Reach of the Paris Declaration Evaluation of the Paris Declaration e-ISBN English: 978-87-7605-423-6 © Danish Institute for International Studies Suggested citation: Prada, F.; Casabonne, U.; Bezanson, K. Supplementary study on “Development resources beyond the current reach of the Paris Declaration”, Copenhagen, October 2010. Photocopies of all or part of this publication may be made providing the source is acknowledged. This report represents the views of the authors only. They are not necessarily the views of the participating coun- tries and agencies. Graphic design: ph7 kommunikation. www.ph7.dk The report can be downloaded from www.oecd.org/dac/evaluationnetwork/pde Supplementary study on “Development resources beyond the current reach of the Paris Declaration” Submitted by: FORO Nacional Internacional* September 2010 • This report has been prepared by Fernando Prada, Ursula Casabonne and Keith Bezanson, with the collaboration of Nestor Aquiño, Fernando Romero, Mario Bazán and Carlos Eduardo Aramburú. Francisco Sagasti provided general advice and suggestions. PREFACE This independent study was commissioned by the Secretariat for the Evaluation of the Paris Declaration as a background contribution to the work of the second phase and the Synthesis of the Evaluation. Comments on draft versions were offered by the Evaluation Core Team and the Secretariat, but the final contents remain the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Secretariat, the Core Team
    [Show full text]
  • Crowdfunding: Genesis and Comprehensive Review of Its State in Africa
    Open Journal of Business and Management, 2021, 9, 557-585 https://www.scirp.org/journal/ojbm ISSN Online: 2329-3292 ISSN Print: 2329-3284 Crowdfunding: Genesis and Comprehensive Review of Its State in Africa Oloutchègoun Josias Lawrence Adjakou School of Economics and Management, Chongqing Jiaotong University, Chongqing, China How to cite this paper: Adjakou, O. J. L. Abstract (2021). Crowdfunding: Genesis and Com- prehensive Review of Its State in Africa. In developing countries, the topic of crowdfunding is still in its infancy be- Open Journal of Business and Management, cause Europe; Asia and North America have monopolized almost all the re- 9, 557-585. searchers’ attention. Nevertheless, the number of scholars stressing the fact https://doi.org/10.4236/ojbm.2021.92031 that investigations should be conducted on the economic impact of crowd- Received: December 23, 2020 funding in developing countries where financial systems are still struggling is Accepted: March 13, 2021 incredibly increasing. But before getting to that point, as Gajda and Walton Published: March 16, 2021 stated, “An analysis of primary and secondary data; in-depth assessment of Copyright © 2021 by author(s) and live projects and statistical analysis could provide more insight (…) how to Scientific Research Publishing Inc. make crowdfunding more accessible to entrepreneurs in the developing This work is licensed under the Creative world” (Gajda & Walton, 2013: p. iii). Drawing on this and the fact that none Commons Attribution International License (CC BY 4.0). of the extant literature about crowdfunding in Africa has provided statistical http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ assessment of existing platforms on the continent; how much crowdfunding Open Access has been adopted and sustainably implemented across various region on the continent, this paper’s main goal is to depict and describe the current situa- tion of crowdfunding in Africa.
    [Show full text]
  • The Busines Model.Indd
    THE MYC4 BUSINESS MODEL CASE BUSINESS: FLORENCE NANDAWULAU IN UGANDA HAS LOANED EUR 250 THROUGH FED. SHE MAKES 50 FIREWOOD COOKERS A DAY AND SELLS THEM FOR EUR 0.25 A PIECE. By the end of 2008, MYC4 aims to reach 25,000 investors and facilitate investments of EUR 12.5 million in more than 5,000 African businesses. The MYC4 business model The MYC4 business model has been developed to tackle the problem that fi nance is available for large and micro-businesses in Africa, but limited for the many small and medium sized businesses. African macro-businesses are funded with international commercial fi nance by large banks, whereas micro-businesses are supported by donor money through a growing presence of microfi nance opportunities. Experience, however, shows that the wealth of nations is measured by the number of thriving small enterprises they possess, not by the giants. This is why MYC4 is determined to end poverty in Africa through growth amongst small and medium sized businesses deprived of funding from traditional fi nancing institutions or faced with excessive interest rates from local money lenders. Today, MYC4 is operating at the top of the microfi nance market (loans > EUR100) and at the bottom of the meso-segment, medium sized and small businesses (loans < EUR 100,000) with loans being offered not to the poorest of the poor but to entrepreneurs who already have a small business or company but lack access to fi nance. In the future, loans will also be offered to a broader section of the meso-segment.
    [Show full text]
  • “An Analysis of European Online Micro-Lending Websites”
    “An analysis of European online micro-lending websites” AUTHORS Arvind Ashta Djamchid Assadi ARTICLE INFO Arvind Ashta and Djamchid Assadi (2010). An analysis of European online micro-lending websites. Innovative Marketing , 6(2) RELEASED ON Wednesday, 09 June 2010 JOURNAL "Innovative Marketing " FOUNDER LLC “Consulting Publishing Company “Business Perspectives” NUMBER OF REFERENCES NUMBER OF FIGURES NUMBER OF TABLES 0 0 0 © The author(s) 2021. This publication is an open access article. businessperspectives.org Innovative Marketing, Volume 6, Issue 2, 2010 Arvind Ashta (France), Djamchid Assadi (France) An analysis of European online micro-lending websites Abstract With the development of web 2.0, a new kind of lending is taking place on the internet, termed peer to peer lending or social lending. In Europe, this includes commercial lending websites such as Zopa, smava, boober, Kokos and Monetto. At the same time, following the lead of Kiva in the US, European microcredit web platforms are coming up including MyC4 and Babyloan in Europe. The paper examines how the legal design of the online websites differs from the micro- credit websites in Europe and how this impacts social performance issues of the different models. Since the population size of these websites is rather small, we use a comparative case study approach. The case study approach is the most adapted to studying small samples in more detail. The case studies are based on exploring of web- sites and review of academic literature and press reports. We find that although web2.0 permits platform models, most sites (commercial or micro-lending) have retained inter- mediary roles and have not permitted direct peer-to-peer contact.
    [Show full text]
  • Peer-To-Peer Financing for Development: Regulating the Intermediaries
    \\server05\productn\N\NYI\42-4\NYI406.txt unknown Seq: 1 8-SEP-10 15:26 PEER-TO-PEER FINANCING FOR DEVELOPMENT: REGULATING THE INTERMEDIARIES KEVIN E. DAVIS* ANNA GELPERN** I. INTRODUCTION .................................. 1210 R II. OLD AND NEW CATEGORIES OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCE ......................................... 1218 R A. What Do Charities Do? ....................... 1218 R B. What Do Financial Institutions Do? ............ 1219 R C. The New Peer-to-Peer Intermediaries............. 1222 R III. Regulatory concerns ............................ 1224 R A. Interests of Donors, Depositors, and Investors .... 1226 R B. Interests of the Public in the Home State ........ 1229 R C. Interests of Recipients of Funds................. 1231 R D. Interests of the Host State...................... 1232 R E. Systemic Concerns ............................ 1236 R IV. REGULATORY RESPONSES: WHERE THE EXISTING FRAMEWORKS FALL SHORT ........................ 1238 R A. Regulation of Charities ........................ 1238 R B. Regulation of Financial Institutions ............ 1245 R C. Private Ordering ............................. 1255 R V. Policy Implications ............................. 1257 R A. Subject All Actors that Promise Financial Returns, Regardless of Charitable Status or Level of Returns, to Regulation as Financial Institutions . 1258 R B. Reform Charities Laws to Permit International Regulatory Competition........................ 1261 R * Beller Family Professor of Business Law, New York University School of Law. ** Associate Professor
    [Show full text]
  • Peer-To-Peer Lending and Beyond
    Is Financial Democracy a Click Away? Peer-to-Peer Lending and Beyond Moderator: Thomas Debass (USAID/MD) Presenter: Jennifer Powers (EA Consultants) Commentators: Harvey Grasty (MicroPlace) Steve Ma (Investors Without Borders) Microfinance Learning and Innovations After Hours Seminar October 20, 2008 Why Talk about Peer-to-Peer Lending? P2P lending is not a new concept (family and friends, ROSCAs) Internet has launched P2P lending to a new dimension, expanding communities beyond geographic boundaries & borrowing social networking ideas to create trust between strangers – Zopa UK first “domestic” P2P platform launched March 2005 (for-profit) – Kiva first platform geared towards microfinance (non-profit) Ultimate goal: link people with excess capital to those in need of capital, generally circumventing traditional banks, yet tapping into “retail” investors/lenders ByBy cutting cutting out out the the middle middle man man in in financial financial intermediation, intermediation, traditionaltraditional banks, banks, can can P2P P2P lending lending platforms platforms help help democratize democratize the the creditcredit markets markets for for lenders lenders and and borrowers? borrowers? Overview of P2P Lending Market Developed Economies Developing Economies Kiva launched in November 2005 Zopa UK launched in March 2005 5 online platforms launched: Now over 20 P2P platforms in 14 dhanaX (India), Kiva (Global), countries MicroPlace (Global), MyC4 Another 10 are expected to be (Africa), and RangDe (India) launched soon 2 more expected
    [Show full text]
  • Person-To-Person Lending: Is Financial Democracy a Click Away?
    PERSON-TO-PERSON LENDING IS FINANCIAL DEMOCRACY A CLICK AWAY? Prepared under AMAP/Financial Services, Knowledge Generation Task Order microREPORT #130 September 2008 This publication was produced for review by the United States Agency for International Development. PERSON-TO-PERSON LENDING IS FINANCIAL DEMOCRACY A CLICK AWAY? Prepared under AMAP/Financial Services, Knowledge Generation Task Order microREPORT #130 DISCLAIMER The author’s views expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect the views of the United States Agency for International Development or the United States Government. AKNOWLEDGEMENTS This report was prepared and compiled by Ea Consultants and Abt Associates under the Accelerated Microenterprise Advancement Project-Financial Services Component (AMAP-FS) Knowledge Generation Task Order. It was authored by Jennifer Powers, Barbara Magnoni and Sarah Knapp of EA Consultants. The authors would like to thank the Management of Calvert Foundation, dhanaX, Kiva, MicroPlace, MyC4, Prosper, and RangDe, for taking the time to speak candidly with us about their institutions, their industry and some of the challenges and opportunities they face. The authors also acknowledge the contributions of the microfinance institutions benefiting from these sites including: International Microcredit Organization (IMON), Norwegian Microcredit LLC (Normicro) and YOSEFO, who allowed themselves to be interviewed for this report. Finally, the authors would like to acknowledge the guidance and support of Thomas DeBass, USAID. CONTENTS I.
    [Show full text]