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December 31, 2008

Entrepreneurship - the key to prosperity ctd.

World Bank data show a strong correlation between measures of entrepreneurship and income. But how does this relationship come about, and what drives what? Abhijit Banerjee, of Poverty Action Lab fame, gives his take:

It turns out that the businesses of the poor are also poor businesses: The typical business has zero paid employees and no machines in almost every country where we have data and where we have the information to be able to calculate this, what the household earns from the business is less than what they would earn on the lowest end of the labor market. They are in effect buying a job and not [a] particularly good job at that...

...The problem is that for a business to rise beyond its many competitors—the thousands of fruit vendors in Chennai---it has to have something special about it: The product (P) must be different or the quality (Q) must be especially high, or the firm must have special reputation for reliability (R) or the scale of operations (S) must be large enough to generate significant cost savings. And each of these requires a combination of special skills and substantial amounts of money, both beyond the reach of all but a few poor or even not so poor business owners.

It is these PQRS businesses that generate the good jobs that other aspire to, and the earnings that come out of them lead to other businesses and so on. This, to a first approximation, is my vision of the process of how growth happens. It is what China has managed to do very successfully and Africa will have to find a way of doing.

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Ryan - your readers might be interested to know that the UK Aid Agency, DFID, is launching its new Private Sector Development Strategy later this month.

Department for International Development Minister Mike Foster will launch the strategy at an event on 20 January in London. The theme of the event is “Private Sector strategies for development: access, competition and engagement in a down-turn.” Other speakers include Barbara Stocking, CEO of Oxfam GB. The event will be chaired by Simon Maxwell, Director of the Overseas Development Institute.

This event launches a meeting series from ODI, DFID and Business Action for Africa on how the private sector will contribute to the development agenda, and how the climate for business and investment can be strengthened in 2009 and beyond.

More information on the event and details of how to register are available on the event site at Business Fights Poverty: http://snipurl.com/9cf3k


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