Hi

<I just re-read what I wrote below. It is not meant as an attack on
people currently working in the field of micro-finance but rather a
dissatisfaction with the underlying assumptions involved. It is part
of a wider problem I see [1] with 'innovation' today>

Business orientated strategies have the associated need for results
and accountability and whilst such strategies are often implemented by
organizations which are very professionally managed and transparent I
am not convinced that they are the most appropriate solution we have.

The proposition is that low-income countries typically suffer from a
"missing middle" in which poor access to inputs leaves an economic gap
in small and medium-sized enterprises. This missing middle can
according to the theory best be created by providing capital to the
large number of informal micro-enterprises.
Whilst this 'middle' is definitely a problem it is not in our best
interests (in my opinion) to try to solve it by basing our efforts on
an economic model I believe is at best flawed (capital-intensive and
growth-oriented) in which people are consumers, firms earn profits by
defeating rivals and the goal is to maximize shareholder value by any
legal means, and so on.

I believe we should focus our efforts on a model based on relationship
capital - on collaboration and repeated interactions and on care and
maintenance. In this model risk can be shared and spread as
communities pool both knowledge and access. The challenge for us then
as software developers is to move beyond designing systems which
collect 'proofs' about 'social impacts' to constructing a framework
and the API's which enable this new relationship economy to flourish.




[1] http://ianlawrence.info/random-stuff/where-are-the-things-we-were-promised

-- 
http://ianlawrence.info

Reply via email to