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Jimmy Breeze's Library tagged development   View Popular

17 Nov 09

Weekly Roundup: Nokia Releases New Phones, Nobody Sleeps Overnight on 5th Avenue to Get Them | Blog | NextBillion.net | Development through Enterprise

  • In the past two weeks, Nokia dropped several new hardware and software products that we noted in passing in the Newsroom section - a new line of inexpensive phones, expansion of its Life Tools service from India to Indonesia, and the upcoming rollout of Nokia Money
  • I say this because I'm pretty confident that these price drops in handsets alone - an almost 40% reduction from Nokia's least expensive phones two years ago - will reach more people, faster, than any of the innovative approaches profiled elsewhere on NextBillion.net.  For better or worse if I had to choose the single organization driving the most market development at the base of the pyramid globally, it wouldn't be the Gates Foundation or Grameen, it would be Nokia.  While the company is losing out in the smartphone market it's shipping almost half a billion handsets a year, accounting for their 60% market share in India and 45% market share in China.  They intend for Nokia Money to reach 300 million people by 2011.  As a benchmark, the global microfinance industry has something shy of 150 million clients.
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31 Oct 09

Dirty elections: To the rigger the spoils | The Economist

  • Strikingly, the authors contend that “dirty elections are bad for economic growth by skewing politicians’ incentives.” This is because, they find, good economic performance makes a huge difference to an incumbent’s chance of re-election whether the vote is free or rigged, adding about three years’ to his or her tenure. Although economic success wins rewards in both systems, in clean ones, it adds 40% to a president’s time, whereas in dirty ones, the rewards of growth are swamped by those of rigging, which more than doubles the time in power. So rigging makes the economy less important to a president’s future—a rejoinder to the Chinese claim that in developing countries “managed democracy” is better for growth than an electoral free-for-all.
13 Oct 09

Marginal Revolution: Elinor Ostrom and the well-governed commons

  • A formally government protected forest, for example, will fail to protect if the local users do not regard the rules as legitimate. 
  • In Hayekian terms legislation is not the same as law.  Ostrom's work is about understanding how the laws of common resource governance evolve and how we may better conserve resources by making legislation that does not conflict with law.
12 Oct 09

Designing for UNICEF: Class Notes - Jan Chipchase - Future Perfect

  • the students project brief? To design useful services with for sub-sahara Africa assuming a technology base of a ~Nokia 1100 and FM radio, and 'any degree of complexity in the cloud'.
28 Sep 09

A special report on telecoms in emerging markets: : Beyond voice | The Economist

  • But Uganda’s traditional growing seasons are shifting, so he is worried about droughts or flash floods that could destroy his crop. Michael Gizamba, a local village-phone operator, offers to help using Farmer’s Friend, an agricultural-information service. He sends a text message to ask for a seasonal weather forecast for the region. Before long a reply arrives to say that normal, moderate rainfall is expected during July. Mr Makawa decides to plant his tomatoes.
  • Rice farmers who had trouble with aphids texted for advice and received a message telling them how to make a pesticide using soap and paraffin. A farmer with blighted tomato plants learned how to control the problem by spraying the plants with a milk-based mixture.
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Financial innovation and the poor: A place in society | The Economist

  • the crisis should have given fresh impetus to “social finance”, a movement based on the belief that financial innovation can be used directly to help society’s neediest people.
  • SoCap09, a conference dedicated to building “social capital markets”. The event was abuzz with novel ideas such as a “social stock exchange” and “sustainable hedge funds”.
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Telecoms: The power of mobile money | The Economist

  • an extra ten phones per 100 people in a typical developing country boosts GDP growth by 0.8 percentage points, according to the World Bank.
  • With such phones now so commonplace, a new opportunity beckons: mobile money, which allows cash to travel as quickly as a text message.
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