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What we ask of co-publishers is that they are committed to 2010s Being Youth's Most Productive Decade - there's plenty of space to publish journals by language and practice; we aim to make all authorised content on multi-win economics part of the creative commons - questions/comments chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk tel washington dc 1 301 881 1655
Some of the Jouranls 

 Some of the news of the journals

 

Sunday, December 25, 2011 , The Daily Star Bangladesh

Celebrating the successes of small efforts

 

 

'NO society can surely be flourishing and happy, of which by far the greater part of the numbers are poor and miserable' - Adam Smith in The Wealth of Nations (1776). Sadly, poverty is still a scar on humanity's face and a denial of every 'basic human right' -- health, education, housing, food, water and energy, and access to fairer banking and credit.

The idea of small, 'collateral-free' loans for poor -- developed by Nobel Peace Prize-winning Bangladeshi economist Muhammad Yunus in 1976, followed by founding the Grameen Bank (village bank) in 1983 -- or microcredit as a tool to alleviate poverty has become a global phenomenon. After two decades, this movement has gained a centre-stage with Microcredit Summit Campaign planted in 1997, followed by its year-on-year strength. The Global Microcredit Summit 2011 marked the 15th year of this campaign.

As the editorial lens of this excitingly new journal defines, the purpose of a more 'encompassing economics paradigm' is to progress the productivity and sustainability of our next generation out of every community. From this perspective, bold entrepreneurial challenges emerge all over the world in which developed nations can gain a lot from going back to basic community-grounded lessons as Bangladesh has shown the way and is branded as the epicentre.

And, our attempt to develop a special 'Action Research' issue of this journal to match the aspirations of the fifteen years of the microcredit summit campaign would refresh readers with what Dr John Hatch of the Foundation for International Community Assistance (FINCA) emphasised at the US-based citizens lobby -- RESULTS' International Conference in 1994 calling for a microcredit summit to launch a vigorous campaign to reach the world's poorest families:

“Behold the largest self-help undertaking in human history-- bringing hope, dignity, and empowerment to tens of millions of the world's poor and poorest families. Behold a movement with global outreach that has penetrated beyond city slums and market towns to even the most isolated villages. Behold an industry that embraces thousands of NGOs, credit unions, public and private banks, and an infrastructure of hundreds of thousands of community-based peer lending groups that are enabling many of the planet's most disadvantaged households to generate the additional income and savings they need to keep their children alive, nourished, healthy, and able to attend school.”

Just a couple of days after the first microcredit summit held in Washington, DC, USA from February 2-4 in 1997, Prince Charles during his visit to Dhaka met the 'real-world' microbanker Prof Muhammad Yunus, who, he -- as expressed in a Foreword to Banker To The Poor (1998) -- found remarkable, speaking the greatest good sense … “I have since done all I can to encourage a wider consideration and appreciation of micro-credit... It has a use, too, in the developed world -- whether in remote rural Norway or run-down suburbs of British cities. It is remarkably cost-effective. It has a proven track record ... Best of all, it allows poor and disadvantaged people to take control of their own lives, make something of themselves and improve the lot of their own families.” His expression resonates what microcredit enthusiasts in Europe now advocate, it could just easily help the unemployed in Europe, where a sovereign debt crisis and eventual public spending cuts are currently compounding stubbornly high jobless figures. Even in normal circumstances, it could help those -- with pitiful credit scores and the lack of collateral -- who don't stand a chance of getting loans from traditional lenders, pull themselves off welfare by staring their small businesses. In this context, European Commission's new 10-year plan to boost economic growth and create jobs, known as 'Europe 2020', presents an opportunity to integrate microcredit into EU priorities. But existing regulatory obstacles to micro-finance institutions (MFIs) operations in Europe need to be lifted.

Recently, Microcredit champion Prof Yunus and European Commission President José Manuel Barroso had discussions on the prospect and promotion of microcredit in Europe to lift disadvantaged communities out of poverty, and the urgency of introducing appropriate laws and regulations. It is, however, a welcome development that a consortium of 20 law firms are now working for a major study on the regulatory obstacles to microcredit across the EU's 27 member states. Maria Nowak, founder of ADIE International, the biggest MFI in Western Europe, is actively assisting in this move.

In the face of worsening global economic crisis the battle between the macroeconomics that disinvests in youth's futures and sustainability, and the entrepreneurial economics that improves the net generation's productivity, is accelerating. The lack of a pro-youth investment mindset virtually poses a challenge to transformative economics. It would seem probable that both developed and developing worlds now need to learn the transparent truth about the models that microcredit summit set out to empower worldwide knowledge exchanges around the first Microcredit Summit in 1997. In other words, all of our media now needs to value the leadership and working heroes and heroines of Bangladeshi microcredit now more than ever. As an innovative micro-up route to economic transformation, among other things, the success of micro initiatives represents aggressive use of market forces and sustainable business practice to achieve substantive social goals. Both BRAC and Grameen Bank are classic examples of such a model. Also, originated in 1999, Jamii Bora is a recent addition. In this spirit, perhaps, Queen Sofia of Spain and Prince Charles of the UK were inviting wider audience to understand how Bangladeshi microcredit worked as a transformative system from assumptions that 'fatal conceit' economics has spun over the last 40 years. As such, this journal forms a part of wider movement to transform economics.

This special issue aims at celebrating connectivity between 'basic human rights' areas of health, education, housing, food, water and energy, credit and banking. And we have attempted to illustrate, alongside BRAC and Grameen, a number of micro initiatives/projects like Jamii Bora of Kenya which originated during the first 15 years of Microcredit Summit Campaign, with focuses on -- does this programme integrate with other micro-practice areas or millennium development goals beyond financial impacts of ending poverty, what makes the model of the project sustainable, and what collaboration help is needed next?

The Microcredit Summit Campaign has recently shown that while more than 205 million people worldwide received a microloan in 2010, this multi-year campaign focuses on outreach to the poorest clients. According to the report, over the last 13 years, the number of very poor families with a microloan has grown more than 18-fold from 7.6 million in 1997 to 137.5 million in 2010. The latest data comes from more than 3,600 institutions worldwide, with more than 94 percent of the information having been collected within the last 18 months.

The Campaign's goal set for 2015 that 175 million of the world's poorest families, especially the women of those families, would be receiving credit for self-employment and other financial and business services. With an average of five in a family, this would affect 875 million family members.

Figures released by the Microcredit Summit Campaign on January 28 this year shows that nearly two million Bangladeshi households involved in microfinance, including almost 10 million family members, rose above the $1.25 a day threshold between 1990 and 2008. Dhaka-based Economic Research Group (ERG) undertook the survey between February and August in 2009, covering more than 4,000 Bangladeshi households. This survey included a large number of clients from BRAC and Grameen Bank -- the two Bangladeshi institutions known for their groundbreaking efforts to end rural poverty.

While successes of micro initiatives leading to improved lives out of microloans continue, overindebtedness from multiple loans, coercive collection practices, exorbitant interest rates and mission drift arising out of two MFIs (Compartamos in Mexico and SKS in India) hugely profiting from initial public offerings (IPOs), appear as grey areas and pose a challenge to the sector's direction. It is good that the summit's plenary and workshops sessions were well designed to address, debate, interact and redefine the way forward while reasserting integrity of the MFI sector -- not to benefit out of poverty and lose sight of its development focus. Also, many action learnings described in this special issue via deliberations by resourceful practitioners of exciting initiatives devoted to ultra-poor in rural areas and in urban slums, institutions offering student loans and scholarships to tens of thousands of children from extremely poor and illiterate backgrounds, and initiatives linking microfinance with health and clean energy, and with agriculture and clean water, will hopefully reinforce the promise of MFI sector.

It is an optimism that the Global Microcredit Summit 2011 in Valladolid, Spain, attended by over 2,000 delegates representing micro initiatives from all over the globe -- remarkably BRAC, Grameen and Jamii Bora -- would joyfully celebrate successes and remain as a lively, interacting assembly of understanding, respect and commitment towards microcredit borrowers worldwide -- the millions of women and men who have set their great expectations on this summit.

Finally, this special issue of the Journal of Social Business carries the announcement of launching a new think and action tank by Adam Smith and Yunus scholars on Social Business Entrepreneurship and New Economic Ideas, known as “Global Institute for New Economics”. The think and action tank would develop an assembly of 'social consciousness' entrepreneurs and practitioners, policymakers and economists committed to action research on social intervention issues.

The writer is managing editor of Journal of Social Business, and economist and director of the Centre for Development (CfD) Scotland.

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0.1  Has a continental or worldwide search solutions on job creation that can be replicated across communities been organised before this EU launch of Nov 2011?
While alumni of entrepreneurial economics have always valued job creation searches- we know of no clear evidence that this has been top of mind in the way that continental-wide government has operated since 1984 even though it was scripted by The Economist's Unacknowledged Giant as the number 1 question the first net generation would need to mediate if sustainable futures and humanity's most needed millennium goals are to be served
what's different about nov 2011 is 4 top directorates of the EU have nailed their future reputation to this search  -more

Not youth's economics of the world Not our schools of the worldYouthandYunus.comLeadersandYunus

Muhammad Yunus expresses faith in entrepreneurs at G20 summit

Posted on: November 23, 2011
Category: News

Microfinance Focus, November 4, 2011: Professor Muhammad Yunus was invited to deliver a key note speech during the G20 Young Entrepreneurs Summit held in Nice, France. Professor Yunus addressed an audience of more than 400 entrepreneurs from all G20 countries. In his speech, he shared his personal entrepreneurship experiences, his faith in young entrepreneurs to be the pillars of society and the need to include poor countries in the discussion process in making global decisions.

Professor Yunus being an entrepreneur himself started off creating the Grameen Bank that provides microfinance services to the poor who had little access to financial provisions. From that, he ventured into a wide number of social businesses such as Grameen Nursing College, Grameen Eyecare Hospitals, Grameen Shakti, etc.

He has always considered young entrepreneurs to be the most effective solution for the future. He said “In my opinion, G20 YES is a fabulous initiative, gathering so much energy and momentum from all over the world. Because of their creativity and leadership, provided that they commit to share the value they create, these 400 young entrepreneurs in this room can change the world.”

Professor Yunus is also a member of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) Advocacy Group, advising the Secretary General of the United Nations. Hence, he believes that the next generation of youths should be handed over the process of the MDGs as soon as possible. He believes that entrepreneurs will have a key role to play in fulfilling the MDGs, if they are committed to the social value created by their companies, and social business can be part of the solutions.

In his speech, he added that the G20 needed to broaden its scope to deal with the current world crisis. It can no longer remain a political forum with economic agendas. The G20 needs to create a social agenda as well. Professor Yunus proposes that ‘social business’ should be brought to the agenda of G20, as one of the concrete and effective solutions to be considered for immediate implementation so as to guide capitalistic investment towards social value and jobs creation, rather than sheer profit maximization strategies. A social business is a cause-driven business where profits stay within the company for its sustainability.

Lastly, Professor Yunus concluded that the G20 should be expanded into the G25, where poor countries from each continent should be included in the global agenda which they are part of. He added that “Their problems are inter-related with others, and their proposals of solutions should be considered by the most economically advanced countries in making global decisions. A G25 would be a big step toward ensuring that global social issues are raised, and MDGs implementation is fully shared on the global agenda. And finally, because fighting poverty together is the only way to bring long lasting peace in this world.”

Source: http://www.microfinancefocus.com/muhammad-yunus-expresses-faith-entrepreneurs-g20-summit

inquiries chris macrae info @worldcitizen.tv us tel 301 881 1655 ; us office 5801 nicholson lane suite 404, North Bethesda, MD 20852 USA - skype chrismacraedc
 Mapping is a process of discovery. Crucially maps are only as usable as updating correctness of bottom up information. Think of your own use of a map. You look for the "you are here arrow". You want to be directed to somewhere/someone you dont know how to get to; you want your return vist to be safe as well as a value multiplying win-win.
Does anyone remember the simplest findings of einstein and jon von neumann. Einstein proved that to innovate more value you need to go more micro in what you model; von neumann showed that there is more value to be networked by interfacing safe flows across systems instead of ruling over separation of boundaries. There isnt a single global metrics profession that gets these mathematical -and natural - principles right. Unless we change this global markets will cycle through ever greater collapse and more and more communities will lose sustainability. Mapmaking is that critical an idea to what the net genration will achieve in 2010s; but its also one that children from primary age up can action learn. Its simple. Its just that it works the other way round from top-down people's fatal conceit.
It explores how to make the invisible principles and practices of real wealth creation visible, and therefore useable. Our planet needs case studies underline the search for new win-wins that build ‘system integrity’
Trust-flow is the unseen wealth to invest sustainability in. Tranpsarently mapped it develops a goodwill gravity  tyhat invites with roleplayer in a community to multiply goodwill while sustaining their own cashflow.. Trust is not some vague, mushy, abstract warm-hearted sentiment. It is an economic powerhouse – probably just as economically and socially important as oil.
The point is, there are specific things you need to do to get trust flowing, just as there are specific things you need to do to get oil flowing. And like oil trust has a dark side. Right now, the world is awash with the carbon emissions which threaten the stability and sustainability of its ecosystems. Right now, the world is also awash with the ‘carbon emission’ of trust – mistrust. Indeed it may well be that our ability to tackle the one issue – the threat of environmental catastrophe – depends on our ability to tackle the other issue: how to generate, deepen, extend and sustain trust.>br>But what is the best way of doing this? One thing is for sure. You don’t build and sustain trust via some sentimental exercise of goodwill to all and sundry. There are three very simple principles at the heart of effective trust generation. 
First, trust is generated via win-win relationships. It’s virtually impossible to generate or sustain trust without mutual benefit for those involved. But beneficial outcomes are not enough in themselves. For trust to be built and sustained, both sides need to signal a demonstrable commitment to finding win-win ways forward. Such a  commitment may require real changes to what we say and do. Second, real ‘win-wins’ are hardly ever purely financial or material. You don’t build trust simply by walking away with more cash in your pocket. Trust works at all the dimensions and levels of human exchange. Yes, it’s about financial and material rewards. But it’s also about purpose (what people want to achieve). It’s about politics with a small ‘p’: the use and abuse of power, the crafting and application of rules of fair play. And it’s about emotions: the sometimes overwhelmingly strong emotions, both positive and negative, that are generated when people deal with other peopleWhat’s constitutes a ‘win’ – a sense of real improvement – is therefore highly specific. It depends absolutely on the details of who the parties are, what they are trying to achieve, in what context. Building trus, therefore involves discovering these specifics. Just as oil doesn’t flow out of the ground, get refined and pump its way into motor vehicles automatically and without effort, so identifying and doing what is necessary to get trust flowing requires dedicated, skilled effort. It requires a disciplined, structured process, not a vague sentiment.

3) Third, even if we do steps 1) and 2) there’s still a good chance it won’t succeed. Why? Because it ignores an invisible third factor. In the real world, purely two way bilateral relationships don’t exist. There is always a third party whose interests or outcomes are affected by what the other two parties do but who is not a party to the contract. The environment is a case in point. Producers and consumers may both benefit from buying and selling to each other – but what happens if, in doing so, they destroy the environment they both depend on?

This raises a hugely important question. When two parties pursue win-wins and build mutual trust, are they doing so in a way which creates a win and builds trust for the third party at the same time? Or are they simply pushing the problems – and the mistrust – further down the line on to this third party? Building vigorous, healthy networks of trust is a different kettle of fish to ‘you scratch my back and I’ll scratch yours’ win-win conspiracies. It requires a Map of all the key relationships plus careful consideration of knock-on consequences. It requires a different perspective.

These three simple, basic steps do not happen automatically. They need to be worked at. The territory needs to be deliberately Mapped and explored. What’s more, there are obstacles in our way – mental and practical obstacles that need to be cleared. Prevailing economic theories about ‘rational economic man’ for example, deny the need to commit to win-win outcomes. Instead, they promote supposedly ‘rational’ (i.e. narrowly selfish behaviours) which actively undermine trust The same theories insist that the only valid measure of human benefit is money, thereby excluding from consideration many of the biggest opportunities for improvement. Meanwhile many vested interests do not want to extend the circle of trust to third parties and complete networks because their positions of power depend on their ability to take advantage of the weaknesses of these third parties. That’s another job for Mapping: helping to identify and mount such obstacles.
The potential benefits of doing so are unthinkably huge. They start with a simple negative: the relief that comes from when you stop banging your head against a brick wall. Mistrust breeds wasteful, wealth destroying conflict that tends to feed on itself. Anger and hatred engender anger and hatred. Simply easing or stopping the terrible waste of mistrust would transform prospects for many millions of people. We desperately need to find ways of doing this. Then there are the positive benefits. Understanding the real nature of human wealth – all those dimensions of purpose, ‘politics’ and emotion as well as money and material comfort – means we can start being human again; human in the way we think, and act. What’s more, many of these intangible benefits won’t cost a penny. They’re there for the taking, if only we puts our minds to it.
But there’s more, because trust is also an economic superpower in its own right. In the pages that follow we will show conclusively that material and financial riches are also dependent on trust. In fact, we will argue the case for going one step further. We will say that material and financial riches are a by-product of trust: the visible fruits of invisible, intangible human exchange. Once you understand that sustainable cash flows are a by-product of sustainable trust flows, your understanding of what makes a successful business is transformed.
Separately, each of these three fruits – reducing the waste of conflict, unleashing the potential intrinsic benefits of human exchange, and energising the sustainable creation of material wealth – are massive in their own right. Put them together and they represent a vast new continent of opportunity.
As we said, this book is addressed to entrepreneurs and system  innovation revolutionaries. Wherever you happen to be, whatever the change you want to make is, the principles explored in this book apply. The wish to change and the will to change are not the same as being able to change successfully. For that you need to understand your territory. You will need new Maps
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