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i would strongly recommend african and youth pioneers of job creating economics consider joining forces with summit announced as wise@accra may 2018 - as you may know, wise is the summit network that has awarded the education laureates since 2011; its original laureate whom many of us are alumni of : sir fazle abed of http://brac.net - as far as i can see brac is the only bangladesh based microecredit network which has sustained partnership impacts in african countries; sir fazle was also celebrated by george soros as his overall open society laureate during the first 20 years of that network- i believe ysi and new economics networking is largely funded by george soros'
the wise suumit in accra will be hosted by the 2017 wise laureate patrick founder of ashesi university - a model being benchmarked by at least 10 african countries designed round universityes for disadvantaged students
also at wise was the president of ghana; wise's other big summit of 2018 has been announced to be at UN general assemby sept 2018; ghanas president is one of 15 eminent people including jack ma ( whose good news we study at www.amychina.net ) advising un leader guterres- a special focus of the wiase@Un summit will be education for refugees
there were only a few young africans among the 2000 delegates to wise in qatar earlier this month but these included the liberian who convened the yocel.org youth summit last year - write me chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk if you would like me to put you tooch with him or have questions you prefer to detail on what the world would miss without wise's belief that education for jobs is the core all people growing economies the 21st c needs to sustain; there is a very close framework of economic valuation between wise and the win-win partnerships that china seeks ; this is actually the number 1 curriculum that interests me education belt road so to speak www.aieib.org www.africanidol.tv
related references linkedin-unwomens
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Which are Africa's main millennials/citizens engagement spaces -
1 Nairobi leading ladies empowerment banking; first to linking to 5 billion elearning satellite- Ushahidi/Ihub world's benchmark for open tech youth hubs and worldwide multi-win trade
2 Rwanda home of community health training networks linked into partners in health and youth celebrations of 2030now- how to make africa the safest continent for preventing plagues
3 Joburg home of partners in mandela extranet and the race to design 7th graders most massive jobs developing curricula -gravitating such partners as maharishi, google africa, branson. oprah winfree, skoll ...
4 Mali expats how can satellites empower women and the UN and millennials- the Toure family's crusade orbits round their home nation mashing up every goodwill connection the UN and ITU can muster
 | April 2015 Breaking News from Future of Economics-
On the Road to Obama Entrepreneur summit Kenya July, I wanted to update you first
on how Africa's 5 billion person elearning satellite yazmi has focused testing in africa on what kenyas second lady rachel ruto wants ---now she is not only table banking for 1 million poor women but in effect is their small business school mentor too (see slides) and infrastructure developer -when I met her 2 weeks ago she demanded urgent research of clean water service entrepreneurs If you'd like a quick demo of yazmi please say- making sure Kenya gets the most out of elearning satellite has become an absolute priority after rachel ruto kindly gave 3 hours of her new york diary to this during the un womens summit a fortnight ago
there is now quite a lot to discuss including women4empowerments talk at un women conference rough video here . |
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--- you tell us http://yunuscity.ning.com chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk DC millennials and POP mobile hotline mob 240 316 8157
Sample our best news of african millennials and job creation
october 2014 good news inbox sampler
dear raphael at Kenya Youth Congress can I suggest that you ring up jamii bora head office ask for ingrid's personal assistant and ask her to give message " chris macrae thinks it would be good idea if ingrid or someone from her office meets you so that you can 1) tell her about your mission, 2) tell her about youth summit at world bank and all the other events you were kenya's youth entrepreneur/governance ambassador to last week":
the point is that ingrid knows me well but I dont have easy ways of communicating with her from usa
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apple dbanj kim - Google Search
Search Options Any time Past hour Past 24 hours Past week Past month Past year All results Verbatim About 4,160,000 results D'banj Becomes Apple/beats By Dre African Ambassador, Gets His ...
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Chris Macrae - Superstars Ending Poverty JIm KIm, BRAC,... | Facebook
If you would like more samplers or ca help co-create them please contact chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk -tell us best news you have seen across job creating africa
WELCOME. AfricanIdol is a youth economics web co-edited in association with microeducationsummit and alumni of The Economist's Norman Macrae (first journalist of open learning net geneartion from 1972) chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk washington dc 301 881 1655
August Gamechanging Event Selection -Open Learning Campus : MBAlumni
Launch of Young African Society 1 August World Bank further ref Jim Kim 2030nowjimkim2transcripts.doc, 40 K next world bank youth summit - worldwide millennials 7 oct 2014
....Replay launch of Young Africa Society: http://live.worldbank.org/african-youth-forum-2014 ... conference reports
DEAR FRIENDS,
The World Bank Group (WBG)-International Monteray Fund (IMF) Young African Society (YAS) is excited to invite you to the 1st African Youth Forum 2014 on July 31st, 2014. This year's theme, "Equipping and Inspiring the Next Generation for Productive Jobs" . Inspired by a report published by the World Bank Group in January 2014, on Youth employment in Sub-Saharan Africa, the WBG-IMF YAS has decided to organize its first African Youth Forum, to establish a platform where youth can actively participate in discussing, implementing and evaluating the development agenda in Africa.
Please feel free to contact us to discuss issues pertinent to Africa’s development, at: wbimfyoungafricansociety@worldbank.org
We look forward to welcoming you to the World Bank Group!
Regards,
Yvonne Catherine Kirabo and Elikia Kamga Nenkam
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The continent must move beyond commodities led growth to focus on human capital development internally. We believe that inclusive growth will only be achieved by equipping young people with the skills needed for a vibrant economy.
To empower Africa's young population to move forward, topics such as education, entrepreneurship and employment, health and good governance must be addressed and knowledge must be shared. | .The African Youth Forum 2014 will feature external and internal participants discussing Youth as an critical component of the Africa development agenda and specifically addressing the thematic areas as identified by the United Nations.Our goal is to equip every attendee with new tools to achieve a positive vision for Africa. We invite you to start the process now by registering today and interacting with our online community... | .... |
Can Africa's communications revolutionaries lead youth economics' collab celebrations @ The World Record Book of Job Creation ?
7 Wonderful Roles of Africa's Most Human Communications Alumni
Mandela Elders -education core to Gandhian peaceful revolution beyond top-down professions
Samara- Europe's leap out of dark ages by communications so I gave Africa a free satellite
Ibrahim (and Barro) - Benchmark places & sectors responsible leaders by & for future of Africans
Julian Kyula - Nanocredit -design most urgent telecom networks around those in most urgent local needs
Toure ITU - who in united nations and out of africa understand telcommunications for good
YP/Young Africa Society - 25-35 professionals most connected, educated world has ever enjoyed- millennials' goals #2030now
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AFM1 Samara - Ethiopia & DC
Unlike the $100 laptop as the first product launch of the MIT media lab, Noah Samara pioneered the early 1990s launch of an African satellite with a continent-wide frequency reserved for life critical information in parallel with 2 other worldspace satellites for Asia and America. He experimented with satellite radio which turned out to be unsustainable as a life-changing information network for Africans but a highly portable medium in USA. Nearly 20 years later his company yazmi.com is converging all resources on satellite empowered learning ( expected tablet price $50 for built in satellite use and access to all the world's most job creating open edu
AFM10 IHUB/Ushahidi - Kenya
AFM11 MIT Media Lab Africa
AFM12 MIT D-lab Africa and Abdul Latif with Toyota
AFM121 Paul Polak last mile multinationals Africa –eg green energy and clean water distrib
AFM13 Ibrahim Foundation
AFM14 Africa24tv
TB1 Free University and Jobs Schools : Mandela's (and Gandhi's) legacy : Changing schools in south afrca can create million extra jobs for youth by 2020; why wouldn't vnery nation with a future want to join in changing schooling to be job creating?
TB11 Open Learning Campus : From Africa to World Bank and everywhere young professionals can reach
AFM15 Young Africa Society –world bank YP milennials’ goals 2.1 -25-35 year old rofessionals as most educated, connected group ever to save the human race's netxt generation
AFM2 Jamii Bora –end slums youth banking and partner labs : starts kenya's gifts to world ofmobile-empowered banking for all
TB20 Primary financial literacy curriculum – eg Afaatoun out of Orphanages from India
AFM21 Bridges primary schools
TB21 Love of self- empowerment curriculum – eg Maharishi (TB1)
TB22 Coding curricula from primary up
AFM31 Kiva Africa
AFM32 Acumen
AFM33 BRAC African Girl Jobs-creating banking
AFM34 Eagri-Africa
AFM35 African health millennials www –and PIH Rwanda, Free Nursing College Africa
AFM36 Mara Mentors Africa - 20 country peer to peer entrepreneur assistance
AFM4 MPESA/Safari
AFM5 Nanocredit Julian Kyula - Kenya
AFM51 Women4Empowerment - Africa, Asia, Hispanics, &
AFM52 ITU transforantion by Toure family - other best UN foundation changes from Turner family billion dollar communications reformation
AFM6 USADBC - diaspora association benchmarking african food security value chains
AFM61 –diaspora multi-country celebrations eg AfricaTip (AgeTip)
AFM611 NEPAD
AFM612 Makerfaireafrica |
| Learning Africa shares 2 questions with worldwide youth: Is a good news broadcaster possible? What makes a nation happy and free to spend a life in?
Investing in Africa. August 2014 saw USA discussing this openly with African leaders. Example: this sequence from GE/Economist conference and webcast 4 august
09:30 - 10:00 am
Powering entrepreneurship: Innovative solutions to address energy poverty
Matthew Bishop, US Business Editor and New York Bureau Chief, The Economist. Mr. Ashish Thakkar, CEO & Founder, Mara Group Dr. Mo Ibrahim, Founder and chairman, Mo Ibrahim Foundation
09:55 - 10:00 am
Economist Intelligence Unit presentation
Joseph Lake, Global economist, Economist Intelligence Unit
10:00 - 10:30 am
Building Africa’s infrastructure: Lighting up the road ahead
Matthew Bishop, US Business Editor and New York Bureau Chief, The Economist. K.Y. Amoako, Founder and President , African Center for Economic Transformation Dr. Jim Yong Kim, President, World Bank IAAN
| June 2014- DC's largest diaspora - Ethiopia facilaites - final rehearsal of 7 days in August - the week tha tSustainability of Africa took over from DC's Beltway Lobbies | ..On August 5th 2014, Presidents of all African countries will converge in Washington DC for President Obama’s African Leadership Summit. The International Association of African Non-Governmental Organizations (IAAN) has been given the honor to host the Social Accountability Summit which will be held on August 7th-8th 2014 as a side event to the African Leadership Summit. The summit will be held at the Washington Marriott, 1221 22nd Street, NW. Washington DC. 20037. Please join us for this impactful event. Participants will include; African Presidents, Governors, First Ladies, Private Sector, NGOs/CSOs, the Clergy and the Youths. The topics include:
9:30-11:30 AM
Accountability and Leadership – Invited Presidents will speak on the state of governance in their various countries, what improvements have been made and what needs to be done in the future.
Speakers:
President Olusegun Obasanjo - Former President of Nigeria - confirmed
President Uhuru Kenyatta of Kenya - Invited
11:30 AM - 12:00 PM TEA BREAK
12:00 PM – 1:30 PM
Transparency for Better Accountability – Subject matter experts will speak on how to improve transparency in both private and public sectors.
Speakers
Dr. Deji Olaore - Governance Specialist - World Bank Group - confirmed
Susan Markhaw - USAID Senior Coordinator for Gender Equality and Women's Empowerment - confirmed
H.E. Ambassador Charles Hubert-Commonwealth of Dominica - confirmed
Mr. Obong Umanah Okon-Former Secretary of State, Akwa Ibom Nigeria - invited
H.E. Ms. Angela Brown Burke-Mayor or Kingston Jamaica - confirmed
1:30 PM – 2:30 PM LUNCH BREAK
2:30 PM - 4:00 PM
Social Accountability and the Private Sector – Executives will discuss issues on corporate social responsibility. Specifically, how businesses address their moral responsibility to the society, particularly to the citizens of the area where they operate.
Speakers
Mr. Alhaji Aliko Dangote - Dangote Group - invited
Mr. Lee Karuri - Business Leader, Enterpreneur & Chairman of Home Afrika Kenya - confirmed
Mr. Robert Brunner - Vice President Arik Airlines - confirmed
Ms. Candance Bond-CEO, ASEA Inc. - confirmed
Dr. Titilola Gonzalves - Enterprenur, CEO - confirmed
6.00 PM - 8:00 PM...... |
Ethiopia is DC's and MD's most vibrant millennial african diaspora.USADBC.org invites all diaspora to share end to end value chain models pioneering Benefit Corp partnerships in this regard; blessed coffee and rose value chain models out of Ethiopia are already world changers for huge cooperatives of small farmholders. Noah Samara, an Ethiopian MD-American launched Africa's first satellite and owns the continent-wide frequency for elearning see yazmi and elearning-africa.com.Associated millennial groups linked in eg AFRICATIP during DC's August 2014 celebrations of African millennials' goals. ETM 1nw 2ps 3no
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South Africa (land of Mandela and inspiration of Gandhi's Satyagraha)leads world in redesigning job creating schooling for 14 million children. Started 1999 , Taddy Blecher partners include Branson Mandela elders, Google Africa, Maharishi Institutes.summary of maharishi uni.doc, 556 KB
South Africans are now the first to enjoy such previously missing curricula from 3rd grade as: empowerment, entrepreneurship, financial literacy, coding. Missing processes include teen apprenticeship, P2P learning, lifelong learning for small business academies. Links with lead Gandhi educators in India offer breakthroughs in adult reading literacy
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Youth African Society at World Bank has resources and rational optimism to linkin all young professional networks concerned with job creation Africa. These resources include:
World Summit on Youth Jobs (2nd annual Oct 2014)
Support of 1500 member African Society
Open Learning Campus
Jim Kim #2030now value chain maps and social movement
World Bank-UN millennials jobs competition (launched by Kim and Bank Ki-moon Spring 2014 for Spring 2015)
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jim kim #2030now transcripts- shared with 50000 class of how to change the world MOOC
microwiki on who's M who at WB
next world bank millennials summit 7 october 2014 washington dc- next millennials solutions competition spring 2015
Keynsians & NMF's youthworldbanking project: 25-35 year old (female) professionals 1 are most educated, connected ever- let reesign economics and governance to invest in their milennial goals and to sack economists who dont value jobs and livelihoods fully |
Missing in DC 1 ? - Open Education and sustained investment in Green Energy and Nature's Capital Networks. However leapfrog model of green energy for a billion off-grid has been discussed at world bank spring 2014- and reactivating Wangari Mathaai's greenbelt movement womens knowledge networking could be timely http://www.usaid.gov/powerafrica
oalternate routes 1 2 3 (Dlab 2014 wilmer)
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Africa's Youth Creative Lab:

chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk wash dc 301 881 1655
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Kenyans have led world in open tech youth wizardryUshahidi, IHUB, Mpesa, Nanocredit, Jamii Bora banking for orphans and ending slums. Through first ladies of women4empowerment and MIT media labs they have connected partnerships with the world's most resourced technologists and open tech wizards. Additionally Ibrahim foundation prizes public leaders young african nations can trust most; Crowdfunding (eg Kiva) and Patient capital networks (eg Acumen) strong links with Kenya
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Missing IN DC 2? - Movement to FreeNursing Colleges and telemedicine- However personal conversation with Paul Farmer suggests Haiti's training hospital will be his test lab for this; PIH connections with Africa are renowned in redesigning helatcare for Rwanda and for the original value chain intervention with Big Pharma regarding HIV drug innovation. IN USA, Arkansas was main state investment in community broadband testing of telemedicine - see FCC
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African Partnerships with Bangladeshi's original microcredit-microeducation networks have many of the most scaled projects in africa regarding 1 girl apprenticeship networks, 2 ultra poor movements, 3 transferring crop science knowhow to include small producers. See eg BRAC and mastercardfoundation - Uganda; BRAC and Gates Foundation Tanzania. BRAC is world's largest and most collaborative ngo because Sir Fazle Abed regards its core as open job creating education- first WISE education laureate, 20th George Soros Open Society Laureate. Sir Fazle is committed to helping MOOC and Khan Academy type platforms
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Women4Empowerment and Fashion4Development partnerships are inspired by African innovation networks:
*Kenya's Nanocredit
*ITU Geneva currently run by Mali technolgist
Various other UN networks particularly those impacted by billion dollar change catalyst of Ted Turner family
Many first ladies across Africa & mobile telecom owners
Furthermore there are lead examples of BlackAmerican superstars leading change in cost of media in freeing life-saving grassroots solutions networks. And Sino-African basketball al stars for education link through Brookings and the HBUC funding agency Thurgood Marshall
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Youth Creative Lab is an idea inspired by Dr Yunus and 10000 Youth Ambassadors starting from his 69th birthday party in Dhaka in June 2009. Opposite to the trillion dollars a year spent by ad agencies to hollow out local jobs replication, it provides space for youth to celebrate 1000 most exciting jobs concepts- many of which need to customse multi-win Private Public Mobile partnership models to scale. NB identifying journalists and media experts passionate about jobs responsibility is opposite process to most PR lobbies and much NGO fund-raising. Also SWOT the difference if the net generation succeeds in designing internet as smartest open education media for sustaining millions of global villages and not an adjunct to the ways that tv advertising dumbed down and added to poverty by exponentially increasing costs to middle men. While Dr Yunus has been trying to embed YCL in the last 3 Nobel peace laureate summits (Warsaw 2013, Cape Town 2014, Atlanta 2015, a problem is that many of the regional elders no longer have health to ensure knowhow survives them - note Mandela's passing, Gorbachev has was not well enough to lead his east Europe conference. Nonetheless time has come for youth to map how peaceful societies through time exponentially generate strong economies not ice versa. Yunus also invites youth to viralise impossible become possible postcards to the future- see typical design case: free nursing college.

millennials world record job creators 10-way cataloguing legend left-
jim kim gamechanging milennials journey right and lower down
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Open Learning Campus launched by world bank aug 2014- missing
curricula rehearsals 1 RISK summer 2014; climate spring2014
Urgent question from Bottom Billion: Can you help identify the greatest
Bottom-Up and youth professionals networks ever mobilised -stories of 8 ABED "small beautiful, open planetwide scale absolutely essential"
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AFM1 Samara
Unlike the $100 laptop as the first product launch of the MIT media lab, Noah Samara pioneered the early 1990s launch of an African satellite with a continent-wide frequency reserved for life critical information in parallel with 2 other worldspace satellites for Asia and America. He experimented with satellite radio which turned out to be unsustainable as a life-changing information network for Africans but a highly portable medium in USA. Nearly 20 years later his company yazmi.com is converging all resources on satellite empowered learning ( expected tablet price $50 for built in satellite use and access to all the world's most job creating open edu
AFM10 IHUB/Ushahidi
AFM11 MIT Media Lab Africa
AFM12 MIT D-lab and Abdul Latif with Toyota
AFM121 Polak last mile multinationals africa –eg green energy and clean water distrib
AFM13 Ibrahim Foundation
AFM14 Africa24tv
TB1 Free University and Jobs Schools
TB11 Open Learning Campus Africa
AFM15 Young Africa Society –world bank ypa milennials’ goals 2.1
AFM2 Jamii Bora –end slums youth banking and partner labs
TB20 Primary financial literacy curriculum – eg Afaatoun out of Orphanages
AFM21 Bridges primary schools
TB21 Love of self- empowerment curriculum – eg Maharishi (TB1)
TB22 Coding curricula from primary up
AFM31 Kiva Africa
AFM32 Acumen
AFM33 BRAC African Girl Jobs-creating banking
AFM34 Eagri-Africa
AFM35 African health millennials www –and PIH Rwanda, Free Nursing College Africa
AFM4 MPESA/Safari
AFM5 Nanocredit
AFM6 USADBC - diaspora association benchmarking african food security value chains
AFM61 –diaspora multi-country celebrations eg AfricaTip (AgeTip)
AFM611 NEPAD
AFM612 Makerfaireafrica
AFAM 7 WONDERS
AFAM1 on june 21 ethiopians (largest african diaspora around dc) are hosting a value chain development summit aimed at benchmarking how little even obama usaid has moved towards designing value chains to sustain poorest african agriculture producers -please say if you can come or would like to know the organiser
AFAM2 these women4empowerment videos 1 2 3 linked by Naila the first lady to direct grameen phone and now living in our region show why its now time to unite all superstars to change fashion industries and promote youth voices. Understanding whoch telcoms billionnaires really want to give back by promoting new levels of leadership transparency can be critica- follow eg ibrahim foundation in valuing national leaders and how friends of ibrahim have extended this to africa24tv's search for diferent sectir eladers africans can trust most
AFAM3 Re Brookings Yao Ming Chinese-African American exchanges: I would love to know eg what past commissioner of nba thinks of them - and whether hbu youth see this as a defining opportunity to join in. Also on the theme of uniting millennial movements world bank Jim Kim and UN ban ki-moon ended the spring series of millennials meetings with the invitation to any millennial to pitch before next springs world bank summits- how are we going to c onverge hbu students participation in this once in a lifetime DC offer
AFAM4 what these videos dont yet show (but naila can b. rief you on) is how extreme mobile innovations originated in kenya (such as nanocredit recipient of the IBM award of year) now offer best in world opportunities to use mobile to end digital divides- already there is an issue in usa of who would do most good with a million phone give away - I wonder whether your hbu student competition pitches would be different if that freedom was known as a currently open- there's also a very exciting opportunity for anyone to start up savings and loans circles www.puddle.com that anna can tell you about -perhaps that would change the feasibility of that marvelous student pitch at atlanta last year of how rural colleges could start up credit unions. Kenya remains the greatest youth women world trade innovation epicentre ; Jamii Bora, ILAB, Crowdmap, Mpesa, Nanocredit to name but 5
AFAM5 more generally the calendar up to end 2015 seems to me to be the last deadline for all the potential possibilities for black youth top lead community generation that 8 years of obama could have built on; vivienne's film of obama's mama as a world leading networker of women end poverty premieres end may in seattle
AFAM6 The 16 year open education partnership out of south africa to find and free missing job creating curriculum of entrepreneurship and empowerment led by Taddy Blecher and linking in such as Branson, Mandela Elders and Google starts a 6 weeks usa tour in late May
AFAM7 I trust that atlanta november 2015 will serve to have a full and open inquest or celebration of this issue-ultimately its over to you to tell me if there is any way I can mediate between your ways of networking through atlanta for the benefit of hbus as the others connected around yunus, ted turner, luther kings, jimmy carter, the mayor etc
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AF-AM Youth world summit series -a twin capitals movement with more valye for hosts and sponsors than the Olympics Coming Next Cape Town October Nobel Youth Summit 2014; Atlanta Nobel Youth Summit November 2015 -previously one world summit s.africa 2013 (see right) |
GGTWIT: mail isabella@unacknowledgedgiant.com if you too twitter good news on youth jobs creation: Videos 1 2 3 from W4E and F4D; help 20000 job creating youth celebrateAtlanta live and millions linkin-
Best News of 2013 from our diaries of YunusAfrica.com: June 2013: African Development Bank and Yunus : the AfDB along with Prof Yunus's organisation, Yunus Social Business, have launched the Holistic Social Business Movement in Africa (HSBM) programme which includes pilot projects in Tunisia and Uganda. This programme will be implemented in two phases that include awareness raising and capacity building programmes for the stakeholders in Social Business, and with the implementation of social business incubation funds. In both these countries an incubation company named as Yunus Social Business Tunisia (and Uganda) will be set up, and simultaneously a "Social Business Fund" will be established in each country. The HSBM is funded by the Japan government and co-financed by the AfDB. In the second round, social business initiatives will also be extended in Egypt, Tanzania, Senegal, Ivory Coast, Togo and Morocco.
Mid Year 2014 Breaking News on AFAM 7 wonders -please tell chris.macrae@yaoo.co.uk if you have any good news to linkin tpo the open education curriculum of Entrepreneurial Revolution (started by my father Norman Macrae to benefit the millennial generation in 1972)

cheers
chris macrae dc 301 881 1655
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Who are your African Idols in 2014? Taddy Blecher? Ingrid Munro? NIck Hughes? MO Ibrahim? .. One timely reason for asking: Cape Town 2014 is the last stop of the Nobel Youth Action Networks before Atlanta 2015. 2014 is also 50th year since martin Luther King's Nobel and inauguration of Atlanta's Museum of Rights. Does Mandela curriculum live on in every youth and can end -to-end African American Diaspora value exchange models help change world by and for youth ?
Colaboration Entrepreneur Research coordinates : Linkedin 9500; Nobel Peace Laureates invite Atlanta 2015 Unites Agrican American Job Creating World of Youth - S. Aftica origin of 1 Entrepreneurial Revolution Surveys in The Economist 1968; of Soros Philanthropy Cape Town 1978; Home of Mandela and 2nd Home of Gabdhi
blog with norman macrae foundation- how many of youth's 10000 greatest job creators will come from Africa? celebrate good news africa at http://africa24tv.com - ask why bbc world service gave up being world's number 1 brand investigating youth and peoples futures the way africa24 now does for africans
 | help us log most important summits ever hosted out of africa- eg bric meeting durban march 2013 will this lauch a bric development bank and if so what will be africa's roes - guests include leaders of china and india
 | .The Economist Debate March 2013 The moderator's opening remarks Mar 12th 2013 | Oliver August
Sub-Saharan Africa has made huge leaps in the last decade. Malaria deaths in some of the worst-affected countries have declined by 30% and HIV infections by up to 74%. Life expectancy across Africa has increased by about 10% and child mortality rates in most countries have been falling steeply. A booming economy has made a big difference. Real income per person has increased by more than 30%, whereas in the previous 20 years it shrank by nearly 10%. Africa is the world's fastest-growing continent just now. Over the next decade its GDP is expected to rise by an average of 6% a year, not least thanks to foreign direct investment, which has risen from $15 billion in 2002 to $37 billion in 2006 and $46 billion in 2012.
But Africa has seen booms before, only to crash-land. Violence is still common in some parts of the continent. Corruption has not gone away and in some cases has actually increased thanks to growing commodities revenues. Proper governance could take care of this but all too often it is missing. Too much hype surrounds the rise of Africa. Boosters proclaim an "African century" and talk of "the China of tomorrow" or "a new India". Sceptics retort that Africa has seen false dawns before. They fear that foreign investors will exploit locals and that the continent will be "not lifted but looted".
Over the next two weeks we'll be debating the question: "How real is the rise of Africa?" Proposing is Wolfgang Fengler, the lead economist in the Nairobi office of the World Bank, its largest on the continent. Opposing is Rick Rowden, a development consultant who has worked as an adviser for the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) in Geneva and as a senior policy analyst for ActionAid, an NGO.
During their debate they are likely to touch on the role that industry will play in Africa over the coming years, how population growth is going to affect development and what part new international partners like China, India and Brazil may be expected to take. The debate will focus on the future as much as on the present. That Africa has changed in the last decade is hard to dispute, but how durable is this change?
Employment and equality are likely to be the indicators that count most. For change in Africa to become permanent, many more residents would have to earn a decent income and wealth could no longer creamed off by elites to the extent that it is now. To find out how likely that is, let's turn to our experts....
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africanidol.tv are youth making africa the most microentrepreneurial place on earth? 

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African Experts Discuss the Region's Top Issues in 2013 |
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As 2012 draws to a close, African and global policymakers look to 2013 with optimism and hope. Anne Kamau talks to experts from five leading think tanks in Kenya, Senegal, South Africa, Nigeria and Uganda, asking them what they see as the major challenges facing their respective countries in the year ahead and how those issues will likely affect relations with the United States and the welfare of their citizens.
Watch the interviews with global experts »
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paradoxically i have nore idols inafrica than any other contient but less direct contacts - how about you rsvp chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk
Idols i have contact with
taddy blecher the person inteconnecting mandela parthers and replication of free universities out of south africa www.taddyblecher.com
ingrid munro - withouth whose organsaition www.jamiibora.org The Eonomist would havent had the good bews mas 2012 story of kibera slum the most entrepreneurial place on earth http://www.economist.com/search/apachesolr_search/kibera
5801 Nicholson Lane Suite 404 N.Bethesda MD 20852Tel 301 881 1655 email chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk
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other main entrepreneurial revolution diaries since 1972 launch of ER and 1843 pro-youth capitalism at The Economist
2013- 170th birthday of The Economist'
 | Yunus diary 2013 - selected incident reports
18 January Tuskegee University | 2013 year of MOOC
 | 1972 year that The Economist's pro-youth economics editor first sees experiments of youth sharing knowhow on a digital network and launches Entreprenurial Revolution to help map, value, invest net generation's 3 billion new jobs | 1984 first future history (since 1972) and(to 2024) of valuing the net generation |
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There is no reason why africa's peoples shouldnt be as healthily and wealthily productive as any other content - but much depends on ; empowering youth see eg www.taddyblecher.com ; on searching out the highest trust and most productive leaders on the continent of every industry that can shape the 21st C sustainably
Good news this doesn't need to be a lot of work and a mass media news channel is doing it and welcomes any advice you have www.africa24tv.com
Help AfricanIdol.Tv add to its Nations League Tables of New Economics Heroes
Kenya
JamiiBora.org Ingrid Munro
Ushahidi.com
MPESA
Greenbeltmovement.org
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Ghana/Nigeria
Lagraychem.com
Cwlgroup.com
Flyingdoctorsnigeria.com |
Multi-Africa
MakersfaireAfrica.com
Brac.net
Wholeplanetfoundation.orgMicroloanfoundation.org |
S.Africa
the-hub.net
Taddy Blecker & Branson EntrepreneurUni
Mandela & Ubuntu training
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latest good news of african entreprenurial revolution at our crowdmap:
- ethiopia how 50000 jobs created from roses;
- nigeria how the first flying doctor service in west africa has been built by a 25 year old lady
- do you have a an african job creation idol - nominate at crowdmap or tell me chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk - networker of Norman Macrae Foundation project to connect 100 leaders of 2010s being youth's most productive decade
GREAKING QUARTER - 2012.1
Melanie and everyone interested in linking accra in as major good news hub of africanidol
- I am passionate about quickly studying the case study of CEIBs in Africa - chinese business schools have a different learning model and Accra has become their experimental centre for this- try listening to the podast at http://econaud.prohost.mobi/21705/show/aeb336aa00eed1ffa665cae9310f0b9f&t=alormsm4btcrre987b5uulf0m6
it doesnt work in all brwosers
do you have a contact in accra who would be interested in doing some intreviews with cibs- I want to publish something in journal of new economics and have budget of $2000
if this can be a way of seeing if CEIBs will partner your april summit then all the better
chris macrae www.erworld.tv skype/instant chat chrismacraedc tel wash dc 1 301 881 1655
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extracts of e-dialogue: Africa Local Summit, Ghana... (localizing health, economy, +) Re: dear dr alexandria and melanie Friday, 23 December, 2011 1:19
From: Melanie St James
Dear Dr. Graham,
Please pardon my delayed response and THANK YOU for your visionary work promoting local health solutions and openness to get involved in our efforts.
While I am deeply fascinated and in deep solidarity with you on your mission promoting African medicine, to capture our immediate opportunity to create change via the African Local Summit in Ghana, to be held April 1-4, 2012 - Kumasi, Ghana, West Africa at Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (KNUST),it is my pleasure to introduce my esteemed colleague and Chair / local instigator of this timely initiative, Kofi Kankam. ( kofi@theglobalsummit.org)
Perhaps after Christmas weekend, or after the new year, we can all meet on skype? We would be honored to share what we have planned so far and have the benefit of your vision and wisdom as we continue. My skype contact name is: melaniestjames
Warmest wishes for a happy holiday season,
Melanie St.James
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help us update our log of african idols
Projects of Foundation Norman Macrae- The Economist's Unacknowledged Giant
from our assocate weBLOGGERS
help us update log of education idols
Develop Consider Kenya Leaflet and celebrate world's number 1 slum youth development model http://jamiibora.ning.com : continue with wish to see JB replications in 50 southern hemisphere countries made by Queen Sofia of Spain and other leaders of www.microcreditsummit.org
Currently here is the favourite concept for African Idol of world class brands network - rsvp info@worldcitizen.tv if you may have a better concept
- compose song that mandela and the white house like playing; ask mandela to host a dance competition to match celebrating ubuntu with the song
- mix the metaphors of the end or the rainbow a 3rd millennium goals- actioning white house's star is born, along with youth world banking
- encourage entrepreneurial revolution hubs to link to joy of economics pamphlets on consider bangladesh and consider kenya
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Thursday, February 12, 2015DC, Rome and the joy of a few days in the diary of African Idol Rachel Ruto
POP and MOBILE POP (Preferential Option Poor)
Natasa Please could you try phoning Naila's mobile usa . Luis if you have a mobile number please could you give it to Naila
1 RACHEL Ruto 2nd Lady Kenya - Africa's most active leading lady in Preferential Option for POOR?
There are a lot of gamechanging things going on around naila and her womenempowerment networks- which (due to her experience as first female director of gramenphone) for 20 year now link the most edgy partners in how to use mobile technology to live and learn with poorest women. I have explained at 2 hour meeting naila today how unique you Natasa and Antonio are in connecting everything franciscan and truly social business around Italy and across trough Serbia and Open Society across East Europe
One exciting thing is that at last week's kenya visit Naila demonstrated the 5 billion elearning satellite to Rachel and Rachel was so excited that she has started to put up her own course content on it. A couple of years ago at skoll world championships moocyunus - YouTube proposed that youth should have access on elearning channels to the 50 people they most wanted to learn from to scale social movements and race to end poverty. Rachel is the first vip on her continent to also be a top 50 world change trainer to be doing Massive Open Online Collaboration on the world's largest teaching channel with outreach to 5 billion people. Moreover Rachel knows what her women students need next - eg water learning is absolutely critical -how do we start assembling pieces of that curricula?
Rachel is a former teacher and has evolved her own womens banking movement called Table Banking which she personally goes to the villages to celebrate and train up women round.
JOYWO is a Kenyan registered non-governmental organization (NGO) formed to empower Kenyan women economically and enhance house-hold food security
Her curricula will become a benchmark of women empowerment and Preferential Options for Poorest link together in Kenyan context. Since Kenya is also the world leader in nanocredit, few countries are more exciting to partner in womens POP movements that have solutions that can be shared the sustainability transformation world over. I have to assume Mrs ban-ki moon will want to meet Rachel next time Ruto is in new york since Ruto is already scaling te peoples movements not just theorising at the great and the goods summits including UN sepytember billed as greatest poverty summit UN has ever convened. She has asked Naila to be her knowledge ambassador someting I assume laura Turner will also want to linkin to (before Atlanta Nobel Summit in November)
HOW CAN RACHEL RUTO HELP SPREAD POP AROUND DC
. Rachel has asked Naila to arrange visits for her to relevant DC networks when Rachel is in DC in middle of March.
Natasa I know you said Antonio has already worked on Ruto connected projects while he managed the Italian investment fund in Kenya
Luis we think that one way to accelerate the club round DC of catholic youth and womens empowerment workers who practice POP (Franciscan way) is if you can invite people you work with both in oas and at world bank to a customised session with Rachel. This can be relevant to anyone in DC connecting the Pope's or Jim way across Americas (o Africa- you mentioned that the head of global social value for jim kim is a kenyan)
Secondly on Monday 16th Naila is over in Los Angeles to develop wat will be main issue of te SAtgo Summit inside te World Bank in August. Tis will be perfent timing (about a mont before the Pope's history making speech at Congress) to ,link everyone in woprld bank who most practoces yout and womens empowerment and the POP { values of Jim KIm and Pope Francis. Aditionially Natasa Armine is Armenia so the same faith origins as you and Monica Yunus. Armine is a cnofidante of Rwanda's leader Kagama and Rwanda is Partner in ealt's main country in Africa- someting Jim KIm did muc to build until e joined te world bank- and educational epiecentre for te deep sorts of comunity elat trianing bneeded in every african country so ebola never spreads agian. Armine is also on te boarrd of the ITU the one wing of the UN that as becopme a bencmark for extreme change. Basically any first lady that gets ITU and does poorest vilage empowermenyt work is one that Naila's aims to make sure Mrs Ban Ki-Moon links in and that the TRurner family celebrates as best impacts from teir billion dollar investment in making UN more empowering to partner
Any ideas on how temes of Atgo summit at worlkd banmk in August can linkin all te tings we are most urgently trying to embed sould be urgently sared iwt Nails
I write this particularly to Natasa as she translates for Antinio. None of our Rome connections could have happened without Bernardo in Chile. Luis from Peru and Ana from Columbia have spent most of tis millennium linking in youht empowerrment networks across Americas. I ave aked tem to study te OP boook of dialogues between Paul Farmer and Guiteriez
They have some breaking news about a very special guiest will be at their Panama youth summit in the second week of April but I would rather they tell that to you when they have made sure that Youth get as much time with the guest
cheers chris.macrae@yaoo.co.uk usa mobile 240 316 8157
6:17 pm est
Saturday, August 23, 2014
Participants at the World Export Development Forum (WEDF), which will be held in Kigali, Rwanda, will have the opportunity to hear expert views from entrepreneurs, policymakers and representatives of trade support institutions on how both new technology and traditional sectors can help promote growth.
http://www.rdb.rw/media-centre/world-export-development-forum-2014.html Rwanda 16-17 september
Among the confirmed speakers at the event is Ashish J. Thakkar, Founder of Mara Group, which has activities ranging from real estate and tourism to financial services, information and communications technology, renewable energy and manufacturing. The company operates in 18 African countries and has a foundation to support emerging African entrepreneurs.
Tapping online, mobile markets
Experts working in emerging sectors, such as electronic commerce and mobile technology, will speak about the potential for economic growth in these areas.
Among those with success stories to tell are Maurice Kagame, the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Pivot Access, a Rwandan company that helps people to pay their electricity bills online and through their mobile phones. The company is now launching a new service that allows patrons to provide real-time feedback on service at restaurants, hotels and transport companies. There is also Yves Eonnet, CEO of the mobile-payment provider Tagattitude, which operates in more than 30 countries, and Josiah Mugambi, Executive Director of IHUB Kenya, a technology innovation community for investors and technology companies.
Linda Kwamboka, co-founder of the software company M-Farm, is also scheduled to speak at WEDF. M-Farm’s mission is to turn the subsistence-based model of farming to agribusiness by providing farmers with price information via text messages and mobile web to allow them to make better-informed business decisions.
12:10 pm edt
Tuesday, August 12, 2014Conference launching World Bank Young Africa Society
other links
bios of organisers
list of speakers
attachments
Introduction
The World Bank Group-IMF Young African Society, with the support of the AFRVP, organized and hosted last week’s inaugural Africa Youth Forum which was held at the World Bank on July 31, 2014. The Summit was attended by Jin Yong Cai, Vice president of The World Bank Group (WBG) and CEO of IFC; Makhtar Diop, Vice president of Africa Region, WBG; representatives of EDS13 and EDS25, Senior Staff at the World Bank Group (Claudia Maria Costin, Senior Director for Education, WBG; Robert Hunja, Director for Governance Practice, WBG; Anabel Gonzalez, Senior Director for Trade and Competitiveness, WBG; and Vera Songwe, Country Director for Senegal, WBG); Government officials such as his Excellency Mamadou Diarra, Minister of Youth and Civic Education of Mali; Mrs King-Akirele, former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Liberia; members of the State Department such as Ambassador Robert P. Jackson, Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary For African Affairs; 70 YALI fellows (Young African Leaders Initiative); Mamadou Toure, President of Africa 2.0; and representatives of the Youth from the Washington Metropolitan Area. Comments were received live from online participants.
Based on the rich and fruitful discussions from the event, this memorandum seeks to: (i) memorialize and crystallize the most pertinent issues affecting African youth today in the areas of entrepreneurship and employment, education, health, and good governance; and (ii) recommend possible solutions and plans of action.
For the purpose of this forum, we considered youth to the age group ranging between 15 and 35 years old.
(See attached file: YAS Recommendations general.pdf)
Youth Employment and Entrepreneurship· Some data: According to a survey done by ILO in 2012 (see annexes for more details), young people were asked why they could not find jobs; 28% of them said they looked but couldn't find anything and 29% said they don't feel like they are prepared/ have the work experience for the job they want. 8 in 10 jobs are in the informal sector.
· Governments across Africa need to recognize the fact that recent research findings (World Development Report) show that in the next 15 years, the global economy needs to create 600 million new jobs to keep up with the world’s population growth. The failure to deal with the challenge of chronic unemployment and intense poverty can be the source of social and political instability.
· Strengthening domestic markets is key for job creation and to the development of a middle class in Africa. The private sector should be given the enabling environment to thrive and grow locally so as to take its place as the driver of employment creation and allow the youth in our countries to feel that their future is in Africa.
· There is a need to re-conceptualize the approach to entrepreneurship in Africa. Emphasis needs to be placed on innovation and the deployment of today’s resources to creating businesses capable of solving developmental challenges in Africa.
· A balanced approach to youth employment requires the development of the formal and informal sector with emphasis on boasting the skill sets of the informal sector through the training and empowerment of youths that are involved in this sector. The promotion of entrepreneurship should form the agenda for the dialogue on youth employment and empowerment with all efforts geared towards creating cohesion between policy and practice. Entrepreneurship should not be seen as the solution to all problems in the region but any strategy should incorporate it. The challenge remains the adequacy between academic training and the market’s demands.
· Local governments should create more accessible platforms to boost information flow and data and discussions between youth and government officials, development partners and the private sector.
· So far, social entrepreneurship is one of the most effective concept, where youths come together to address social issues or advocate for their peers (inmate empowerment, orphans, etc.). Youths’ dynamism could help gear the government into developing this area of focus.
· Technology and innovation should be highly considered as important tools for market assessment and screening. Various examples in Asia demonstrate the ingenuity of young people in various fields. Using technology in the private sector can advance the development of African countries, by providing needed services in innovative ways while making profit (please refer to the annexes on youth employment from ILO for more details).
Education· There is a need for stakeholders (donors, governments, civil society organizations and the private sectors) to promote investment in education, in order to prevent the perpetuation of poverty. Investment in education here, involves not just formal education but also informal education with emphasis on vocational education, basing parameters of success on results and outcomes.
· In advancing the issue of educational empowerment, there is the need for a strategic approach to promote the acquisition of skills that equip African youths for effective leadership. The education of African youths must be approached from a holistic rather a narrow perspective of just academics.
· There should be a conscious effort to create a smooth transition from school to work. Efforts need to be focused on how to gear education towards empowering the youths with the relevant knowledge that they can apply in solving societal needs and challenges.
· Despite budgetary constraints, there should be a conscious effort on the part of government to invest wisely in education based on the peculiar needs and challenges of the community. Developmental expectations must be matched or anchored on adequate preparation and planning based on accurate and cogent data.
Health· Access to adequate health services and facilities continues to be a major problem in Africa. High rates of HIV/AIDS, exposure to environmental hazards, and stigma of mental health need particular attention.
· Proactive and preventative approaches are needed towards disease, as opposed to emergency reactive approaches. For example, in the case of epidemic outbreaks such as Ebola.
· Mental health is an issue that should be taken more seriously by governments and it is also part of the issue of motivation in Africa. Social determinants of mental health are same of other issues: adequate housing, good quality of education, good wages (young people), and equitable access to health care. Mental health should be part of our educational programs.
· Governments need to re-prioritize health, as it is an investment into human capital. Infrastructure investment alone, without a healthy, educated workforce and populace, will not yield the desired development and modernity African countries are striving for.
Good Governance· Youth engagement is crucial to good governance, as the youth will be the future leaders – they must take on challenges of corruption, job creation, and natural resource management. Need for more transparent and youth inclusive governance policies in sub-Saharan Africa.
· Technology could serve as a mean to strengthen governance on the continent. Integrating technology to provide accessible data is needed to measure impacts and progress and address the lack of accountability.
· Governments and political parties should encourage African youth to become stakeholders, take action, and participate in the decision making processes of their countries.
Next Steps
The World Bank Group-IMF Young African Society looks forward to working closely with the World Bank Group and IMF to use the preceding issues and recommendations as a starting point to develop a formal agenda and action plan,, geared towards the uplift of African youth. It is our hope that we can empower African youth by isolating the issues they face and formulating effective solutions by leveraging all of the available resources, networks, and expertise at our disposal. The WBG-IMF Young African Society proposes to organize its next Youth Forum during the annual meetings in order to discuss the conclusions that have been made both from the Africa Youth Forum on July 31st 2014 and the Africa Summit on August 5th and 6th 2014.
Attachments:
· Note from ILO on Youth employment in Africa
(See attached file: African Youth Forum 2014 ILO Remarks.docx)
· Presentation from ILO on Youth employment in Africa
(See attached file: African Youth Forum 2014 EZ presentation FV.pptx)
· Presentation from World Bank Group on Jobs in Africa
(See attached file: WB Africa Youth Forum July 2014 .pptx)
· YAS forum booklet
(See attached file: Africa Youth forum 2014 bio.pdf)
· YAS brochure
(See attached file: YAS brochure.pdf)
· Final Agenda of the Forum with the list of participants
(See attached file: WBG-IMF African Youth Forum Agenda July 31st 2014.pdf)
· A link to a video with comments and recommendations from Youth (including YALIs) that attended the forum : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iFqsNcjeEQs&feature=youtu.be&list=PL59FB6C9C9D741D01
· To replay to the forum you can use the following link: http://live.worldbank.org/african-youth-forum-2014
Cleared and cc: Mmes/Messrs. Elikia Kamga Nenkam and Yvonne Kirabo (Co-Presidents and Founders of the YAS)
2:11 am edt
Monday, August 11, 2014
The 7 billion humans responsible for planet earth - as the 21st Century comes of age - are faced with 2 sustainability challenges: is spending more on communcations than anything else a good idea? can the types of communications the 20th century used to power over people be replaced by empowering media that leads to jobs and the entrepreneurial joy of lifelong learning?
Africa may now be the best continent on earth for sharing 2 questions with worldwide youth: is good news broadcasting possible? what makes a nation happy and free to spend a life in?
Noah Samara, is an Ethiopian who spent his time as a student in california asking the question: what empowered European peoples to leapfrog out of the dark ages.? His conclusion : no single magic bullet but a range of innovations in communications. It was this belief that led Noah to gift African peoples a satellite with a common frequency across the continent for sharing life-changing information.
Mo Ibrahim probably made more money from telecommunications than any African. Today his foundation searches for public servants who lead their country to a better place for all their peoples. And it aims to share its lessons with educators of every age group. Meanwhile a former colleague has co-founded the satellite broadcaster Africa24tv whose reason for being is to employ 100 journalists to look for industry leaders who can be trusted to be building Africa by and for Africans. What will a best for Africa pharma industry look like? How could jobs across Africa gain if there was an IBM of Africa or if the next google was born in Africa? Is Africa already making progress in designing world-leading schooling for jobs?
mediators of economics of sustainable growth
*jobs - capital's (structuring of family savings) investing in youth out of every community
*ending poverty and loss of voice on future of 3 halves of the world
*public servants of end inequality - purpose of new media, purpose of religious service obama, kim, pope, walesa)
* global village search for each trillion dollar market's most productve local purpose
Africa24tv has a lot of work for its journalists to mediate- arguably even more urgent and valuable work than when The Economist was founded in 1843 to publicly test decision-making of leaders of the industrial revolution and the future potential of Comonwealth? 17 yeass after raising these freedom questions out of Lndon's Saint James, Svot James Wilson was asked to start reforming Raj systems out of Calcutta. This was not a good job for James who died of diarrhea 9 months into life in Calcutta but it is a shining example for all of us of the difference between the goodwill mediator of economics who seeks to free the higher purpose of any market in sustaining all peoples, and those journalists or economists with less transparent or more seflishly short-term monetary interests.
Interestingly, the journalists of Africa24tv are assigned to 6 Africas- recognising the diversity of future histories that the continent will need to converge if it is to be a happy region as a whole to spend a life in as well as one celebrating joyful national progress. Note how Mo Ibrahim chose to test American understanding in Aug 2014, it may be that the Cold War era was one in which our peoples suffered even more unsustainable impacts on nationhood than the era of colonisation. The plea: do not send us corporate or inward inestment partnerships now unless their purpose is for long-term win-win trades (especially empowering local people with knowhow), Goodwill economics maps will be those that value helping peoples of Africa entreprenurially grow their freedoms and happiness the way the USA used to celebrate in the D of I of 1776.
1:58 am edt
Friday, August 8, 2014MB Alumni
Naila thanks to all for the wonderful meeting yesterday
1 i dont know if MB (search learning) is going to be in new york during un week sept 22 on; if so would it make sense to try and arrange a meeting between her and sir fazle abed
the event (October 9) process she was talking about was founded by new york based www.ted.com
-its an exclusive once a year meeting is turned into videos- in every year but one these were hosted out of california; in one year they were hosted out of tanzania- the african who acted as main host of tanzanian ted is new york and boston based
george soros has been trying to mooc economics from ground up but not too successfully imo so far-i wonder if these connections could be made: out of budapest (soros central european university) -june 2013- soros appointed abed 20th open society laureate; soros hosted paul farmer of partners in health; clearly young eureopeeas east and west have more future if soros economics is freed than if we continue to have macroeconomics systems and banking designed out of brussels and moscow
ted-x now licences citizen groups to host their own ted festivals-
of ban-ki moon and jim kim - they announce a millennials competition for millennials- i wonder if maya is involved with that and whether a mooc could be made of millennials ideas that need accelerating; this could be connected with a new catalogue of which un networks now collaborate with youth and women from bottom up after the billion dollar restructuring by the turner family
still trying to find out more about next steps with samara and taddy blecher and sunita gandhi- ideally they would know how to connect with open learning campus
11:42 am edt
Thursday, August 7, 2014
Co-Presidents, WBG-IMF Young African Society (below); YAS wishes for africa at this 2 minute youibe by Lebogang Botswana, Percy S.Africa, Manamadou Mali, Aurielle Cameroon, Adegboyega Nigeria, Ndidiamaka Nigeria, Tsegahwot Etiopia, Cedric Cameroon, Eugene Tanzania,
Yvonne Catherine Kirabo
 Yvonne Catherine Kirabo is the Co-President and Founder of the WBG-IMF Young African Society. She also works at the World Bank Group as a Business Management Officer in the Information Technology Finance Line of Business. She started as a Junior Professional Associate (JPA) at the World Bank Group working for the Corporate Solutions office in the Information and Technology Solutions vice Presidency in January 2012. She served as the organizational management chair of the JPA Organizing Committee and Lead Chair on the Youth Summit Organizing Committee 2013.
Ms. Kirabo’s professional and educational backgrounds span the diverse disciplines of Project Management, Education, Business Analysis and IT. She mostly worked as a Database Systems lecturer at London School of Commerce, interned at the United Nations in New York City as a researcher and analyst on technology strategies for development in DPKO in addition to working as a strategy consultant for John Snow Inc.
Ms. Kirabo holds a BSc in Computer Engineering and Networks from Kharkov National University, Ukraine and an MSc in Information Science from University of East London, United Kingdom. She has been published in the Guardian and has received several awards including the World Bank’s Spot Award.
She is a national of Uganda and spent her childhood in Kampala, Uganda and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. Experience and demographic identity have driven Ms. Kirabo’s passion for Youth inclusion and development. She has been involved in several platforms including the Arab Youth Platform, established in 2013 in Saint-Marsel, France for promoting Youth inclusion and participation.[/toggle]
 Elikia Kamga Nenkam
Elikia Kamga Nenkam is the Co-President and Founder of the Young African Society. She also workd at the World Bank Group as Junior Professional Associate (JPA) in the Transport and ICT global practice ore precisely in the Transport unit of the Africa region. Ms. Kamga Nenkam current position in the transport unit of the Africa region gives her field knowledge of issues that Young African’s are currently experiencing in countries such as Tanzania, Senegal, Burkina Faso and other sub-saharan African countries. This experience fostered her desire to continue supporting Young Africans by founding the WBG-IMF Young African Society.
Ms. Kamga Nenkam professional and educational background s spans the diverse discipline of Project Management, operations, communication strategy and financial analysis/markets.. Prior to the Worldbank, Ms. Kamga Nenkam was working for one of the Top asset management company in Europe, Amundi Asset Management in Paris, where she assisted product specialist and fund manager in the selection of global picking, raw materials stocks and Luxury stocks. Prior to this, she worked at Natixis investment securities in Paris were she supported equity research analysts in the field of agribusinesses, beverages and consumer staples.
Ms. Kamga Nenkamholds an MSc in Risk and Investment Management and a Master in Mangement from EDHEC business school. She is the author of a research paper on Risk model and Foreign Direct Investment in Third World Countries
She is a national of Cameroon and spent her childhood in Douala, Cameroon. Her passion for development and for entrepreneurs empowerment led Elikia Kamga Nenkam to Found and serve as president for 2years of the Micro Drilling Project renamed later Develop which objective is to foster development in sub-saharan Africa through micro-lending. Elikia was also involved in Scola Africa an NGO that provided school supplies to remote villages in Bobo-diolasso, Burkina Faso [/toggle]
9:53 am edt
Sunday, August 3, 2014
Bravo Noah Samara - Gifetr of Africa's Free satellite now mainly at Yazmi.com, elearning-africa.com, DC and Ethiopia
I had always wondered what happened that catapulted Europe from a period of dark ages and what comparable experience could we do at African continent level -that could help enrich the continent - and I had this naive view that there would be this one thing or another but for the most part instead UCLA gave me an insight into the power and the role of communication, the power and the role of education, the power and role of spreading knowledge and how that impacts change
BRIEF ON NOEL SAMARA- from Top 10 Research of Book of Record Job Creators,
Norman Macrae Foundation - Youth Capitalism
HOW DOES A SATELLITE BRING THE CONTINENT OF AFRICA THE BEST JOBS CREATING EDU SYSTEM AT 50 DOLLARS PER YOUTH
Interviewer Nunu Wako : Noah Samara can you tell me a little a bit about yourself so that people can see if they want to partner your goal?
NS: I was born in Ethiopia to and Ethiopian mother and a Sudanese father. I grew up in Ethiopia to the 9th grade and then went with my dad who was working with African Unity - the whole family moved to Tanzania for 2 years, came back and completed high school at Addis Ababa ( English School ).
Then went to England and the States (Pennsylvania and UCLA California) studied for a number years various things finally studying law then space law which took me satellites- and satellites have been most of my career. (However before I got into law my phd in california was on renaissance reformation history- I had always wondered what happened that catapulted Europe from a period of dark ages and what comparable experience could we do at African continent level -that could help enrich the continent - and I had this naive view that there would be this one thing or another but for the most part instead UCLA gave me an insight into the power and the role of communication, the power and the role of education, the power and role of spreading knowledge and how that impacts change
I think growing up in a diplomatic household exposed us not so much just being in another country (the people of that country) but also the circles that our family moved in exposed us to people from Canada and from Germany and from Asia and from the Middle East as well as various African country - and that certainly gives you perspective of a bigger world that a a world of a single culture. But also growing up in a family my father from sudan, my mother from ethiopia, my father was a teacher in his early years - so my family exposed us to cultures , to religions , to languages- so I have always grown up thinking about the world as a wider larger lace that can accommodate a lot of different cultures not one that excluded one culture or oppresses another
WORLDSPACE emerged from a series of events, I was working for a friend and mentor and a partner and a layer who was practising space law, and I joined him as I was finishing law school, and later on joined a company called Geostar which launching unique type of service which ultimately led to the explosion of GPS - Geostar was the pioneer of position based information. So I gained a measure of experience of how to go about getting frequencies and I was emerged with various companies seeking different kinds of service and requirements from US government and internationally. My job title at the time was Staff Attorney and Global Coordinator (or some wonderful title) which basically said I was to coordinate the frequency allocation for Geostar but in process of doing that I met many other companies with parallel needs and learnt a lot about the whole area of space law, whole area of telecommunications FCC regulation, and the International Telecommunications Union that regulates frequencies for global networks. Essentially I helped geostar getting the global frequencies allocated for its services. It was an experience which made me popular for a few years with other companies who wanted me to consult on doing similar ting for them.
But I soon got a bit bored and at that time I read an article in The Washington Post at about how HIV was becoming a deadly epidemic oh huge proportion-so the question raised was what to do to avoid it. The article went on predict that the epidemic would be worst in Africa - the main reason being lack of communications infrastructure across the continent. (Interviewer How did you decide to be a pioneer in satellite radio? Actually that was more a process of elimination. I thought the article was predicting a tragedy of holocaustic proportion- so why cant we just put up a satellite and broadcast the necessary information across the continent to know about this scourge. And what to do to avoid it
But one thing led to another: I thought this same satellite can do this and that, there are so many things that can be done if one was to put a satellite above continent which at that time was highly deprived of information. That was the beginnings of what ended up being satellite radio. I went into radio at that tie because television was a very expensive thing to expect it to spread whereas radio at the time was widely in use by families across Africa . So we thought radio would spread faster. There were precedences too of companies already broadcasting to small hand-held devices like GPS - so if you could do GPS you could do radio.
Fast Forward 20 Years. As things turned out a profitable satellite radio model Syrius was found for usa. This has enable us to restructure- today we have the pan-africa satellite frequency and its all going to be focused on elearning satellite enable tablets- whole the hardware bought massively will cost 50 dollars- the one open education system this can beam in is now the most massive open partnering challenge a continent youth have ever been invited to play - check it out at
Further references:
millennial labs comparison -startups early 1990s
richest out of boston: negropronte founds media lab and $100laptop - note cost to connect extra
samara founds continent wide satllite, social product satellite radio for freedom of information; service ends up profitable in usa finacing relaunch 2014 of satellite channel across africa linked in bt 50$ laptop
version 26 July 2014
Usage notes:
reporting is continuous - any errors chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk
2:43 pm edt
One perspective of Africa comes to DC week http://www.inafricangos.org/
Wednesday, July 30
2:00pm
CCA Power Africa Working Group - "Navigating the Power Sector in Ethiopia" (Houston)
6:30pm
BCIU African Leaders Visit to Chicago Welcome Reception
7:00pm
USTDA African Leaders' Visit Welcome Reception (Houston)
Thursday, July 31
11:00am
Atlantic Council's The US-Africa Leaders Summit: A Preview
6:00pm
BCIU Dinner on Transportation in Africa (Chicago)
Friday, August 1
9:00am
USTDA African Leaders’ Visit: Luncheon and African Leaders Energy Briefing (Houston)
9:30am
BCIU Breakfast Discussion on Business Opportunities featuring African Leaders (Chicago)
2:00pm
Corporate Council on Africa Power Africa Working Group
Sunday, August 3
8:00am
Believe in Africa Day's US-Africa Summit High Level Dialogue
12:00pm
DC Africa Festival
Monday, August 4
9:00am
IPPF's Breakfast conversation on Global Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights
9:00am
U.S.-South Africa Business Council's U.S. - South AfricaBusiness and Investment Forum
9:15am
“The Game Has Changed: The New Landscape for Innovations and Business in Africa”
9:30am
Corporate Council on Africa Business Forum
9:30am
Atlantic Council: Morocco’s Emergence as a Gateway to Business in Africa
12:15pm
Corporate Council on Africa's Power Lunch
1:30pm
U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Presidential Plenary Discussion
5:30pm
Diaspora African Forum Foundation's African DiasporaBridge Builders Awards Dinner
WhenMon, August 4, 5:30pm – 8:30pm
WhereWashington Marriott at Metro Center, 775 12th St NW, Washington, DC, United States (map)
DescriptionWHO: Diaspora African Forum Foundation WHAT: The AfricanDiaspora Bridge Builders Awards Dinner
Tuesday, August 5
8:30am
African Summit Symposium on Science, Technology and Innovation for Development in Africa
9:00am
Growth and Opportunity in Africa Forum
11:00am
Atlantic Council's A Conversation with Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki
6:00pm
Corporate Council on Africa's African Ministerial Networking Reception
Wednesday, August 6
9:00am
National Endowment for Democracy's African Civil Society Conference
12:00pm
Atlantic Council's Investment and Ingenuity: Overcoming Obstacles to Doing Business in Sub-Saharan Africa
7:00pm
Presidential Dinner Discussion featuring President Goodluck Jonathan of Nigeria
Thursday, August 7
10:00am
IAAN Social Accountability Summit: "Call to Good Governance"
Friday, August 8
12:00pm
Presidential Luncheon with H.E. John Dramani Mahama, President of the Republic of Ghana
7:00pm
IAAN Social Accountability Summit Grand Ball
7:00pm
Presidential Dinner with H.E. Uhuru Kenyatta, President of the Republic of Kenya
Saturday, August 9
» 2:00am
IAAN Social Accountability Summit Grand Ball
7:34 am edt
Saturday, March 16, 2013
From Skoll http://skollworldforum.org/debate-post/for-africa-entrepreneurship-is-the-way/
Up For Debate
Q: What Does it Mean to be an Entrepreneur in Africa?
The future of Africa and the next generation of entrepreneurs are among the many global issues being addressed this year at the World Economic Forum, to be held January 23-27. In advance of the convening and to aid the discussion ahead, the Skoll World Forum partnered with the Financial Times' This is Africa magazine and designed a debate at the strategic intersection of Africa and entrepreneurship. We asked some of the continent's leading entrepreneurs and innovators to highlight some of the key lessons they learned working across and for Africa.
Founder and Director, One Acre Fund
Founder, York Zucchi Partners
President, mPedigree Network
Editor of This Is Africa, Financial Times Ltd.
For Africa, Entrepreneurship is the Way
Taddy Blecher
Community Individual Development Association and Maharishi Institute, CEO
VIEW CONTRIBUTOR PAGE >
Article Highlights:
- Several economies in Africa are growing at an extraordinary rate.
- There is a rising entrepreneurial spirit on the continent, in the wake of greater political stability and reduced war.
- In South Africa, new mobile technology strategies are being used to educate the youth and to promote entrepreneurship.
Something extraordinary is happening in Africa. In the wake of enhanced political stability and reduced war in many countries, it is clear that a vibrant spirit of entrepreneurship is kicking in with vigor. Between 2001 and 2010, six of the world’s ten fastest-growing economies were in Africa and the International Monetary Fund predicted that between 2011 and 2015, African countries will hold 7 of the top 10 spots. Many people think this growth is fueled purely by a commodity boom – shipping raw materials to the east and elsewhere. Interestingly enough, this accounts for only one third of the growth; the rest can be put down to genuine value creation, fueled by the spirit of entrepreneurship very much alive on the continent. Many also argue that its easy to cite high growth figures off a low base. Nevertheless, the growth levels being seen were certainly out of the ranges of prediction of many social and economic commentators even a decade ago.
However, all is not rosy on African soil. Several of the world’s poorest countries exist on the continent, and hundreds of millions of people ache under the yoke of poverty every day. If one considers the plethora of issues to solve: poverty and malnutrition, health crises, corruption, crime levels in certain countries, and so on, one can throw up one’s hands. At the same time, African populations are growing rapidly. It is expected that by 2040, the total African population will be the largest in the world, surpassing both China and India, further exacerbating these problems. Jobs are not keeping pace with population growth rates and issues of unemployment acutely affect the growing ‘youth bulge’ across the continent, which has implications for political stability across the continent, as has recently been witnessed by many of the northern Arab States.
The real solution for Africa is being driven every day by African people themselves – human creativity and hard work, the spirit of entrepreneurship and the creation of small businesses in their millions – leading to job creation, enhanced socio-economic stability, and the consequent benefits of greater purchasing power, which buys quality education and healthcare. In this way, millions have come from poverty into the middle class. Further, with the growing consumer classes, population growth rates–if harnessed correctly–will prove to be a major demographic dividend.
Harnessing this dividend requires the development of two key drivers simultaneously: the demand side and the supply side. The demand side requires nurturing the fire to build a thriving business sector, that is in turn hungry for talent. Stimulating the supply side requires the stocking of a quality skills base that can provide this talent to meet the growing demand for goods and services. For this particular article, I will focus on the demand side.
It is essential to recognize that the backbone of every African economy is in fact small business, usually organizations with less than 50 employees. They are not large domestic businesses, multi-nationals, or ‘overstaffed’ governments. In South Africa, in the formal sector alone, nearly 70% of all people employed in the country are employed full-time in small businesses. If the informal sector is added, this would take the figure to 85%-90% of all employment. In other words, small businesses are the backbone of the economy and the employer of millions. Therefore, it is in the removal of obstacles facing these small businesses, and in the creation of an enabling environment, that in fact the future of unemployment will be determined.
Creating this conducive environment for business is where government needs to step in, or ‘step out’ when it comes to the removal of red tape, and to the creation of a conducive policies. It is also essential to create a social compact for Government and Business to work together.
South Africa provides a unique example of how such a platform for engagement has been created where social partners can engage on issues of mutual concern. This forum is known as the Human Resource Development Council for South Africa, and is led by the Deputy President of the country. It consists of senior decision makers from all sectors of society. The Council is focused on resolving the problems facing education and skills development in the country, and has identified the fact that youth unemployment levels, particularly amongst black African youth, at over 50% are unacceptably high. As a result, amongst other interventions, it has agreed that urgent action must be taken to strengthen entrepreneurial activity in the country to build the ‘demand side’. The Council has appointed a Technical Task Team to develop a set of recommendations in this regard, which I am fortunate to chair.
“Many people think the economic growth in Africa is fuelled purely by a commodity boom – this accounts for only one third of the growth; the rest can be put down to genuine value creation, fuelled by the spirit of entrepreneurship very much alive on the continent.”
Our team is currently investigating a variety of ways to strengthen small business, including the delivery of entrepreneurship curriculum in schools, Further Education and Training Colleges and Universities, as well as interventions to support the small business sector directly.
I will dwell on one innovative approach, which through a collaboration of partners we have enlisted, has begun implementation with excellent results to date: a ‘National Virtual Incubator’ (‘NVI’). The NVI is a national intervention being built as a genuine public-private partnership.
We have identified that the best way to reach and support the millions of small businesses across the country is through mobile technology and the mass media. In South Africa there are more than 60 million mobile phones amongst the 52 million population, and across Africa there are now well over 600-million mobile phone users. Our National Virtual Incubator is focused on providing most of the support services that our country’s physical business incubators provide, but directly to the entrepreneur’s pocket. Currently, 33 physical business incubators have in total supported only a few thousand businesses over the past decade, whereas the ‘NVI’ we believe will be able to support millions of small businesses. By using mobile technology to provide services such as access to free business education and training, support for any business to build its own free website, access to finance and financial advice, online coaching and mentoring, free master-classes, and a host of other support tools under development, small businesses–wherever they are–can access quality services in real time. We are developing partnerships with a growing number of public and private sector organizations like Google, Vodacom, Internet Solutions, Pearson’s Books, Regenesys, University of Cape Town, and others in order to facilitate the development and delivery of these world-class services.
The strategy is starting to pay off: already nearly 50,000 small businesses have created free websites using the ‘wozaonline’ tool created by Google, which is having a measurable impact on their revenues and employment levels. Additionally, over 100,000 people accessed the Regenesys Business School website during the first 3 weeks when we opened access to all the learning materials for free (textbooks, videos, manuals, notes) for an accredited and registered MBA, Bachelors Degree in Business, and other degrees. We are hopeful that we will assist at least 1 million small businesses to employ at least one million youth across the country over the next five years. The National Virtual Incubator, amongst many other solutions being developed, will help stimulate the already growing entrepreneurial levels in the country, and we hope to share our learning’s across the continent.
Ultimately, it will not be through government, foreign aid or bi-lateral agreements that a nation gets on its feet, but as we say in Zulu – vuk u’zenzele – get up and do it for yourself. Africa has the resources, the land, the people, and hence the possibility to get it right. Entrepreneurship, along with the pre-requisite education and skills levels needed, is going to be the glue that holds it all together.
9:29 am edt
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
1:55 pm edt
Tuesday, December 28, 2010
Ed Board of The new harvest
Agricultural Innovation in Africa Project
Project Director and Lead Author
Calestous Juma, Harvard Kennedy School, Harvard University,
Cambridge, USA
International Advisory Panel and Contributing Authors
John Adeoti, Nigerian Institute of Social and Economic Research,
Ibadan, Nigeria
Aggrey Ambali, NEPAD Planning and Coordinating Agency,
Tshwane, South Africa
N’Dri Assié-Lumumba, Cornell University, Ithaca, USA
Zhangliang Chen, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region,
Nanning, People’s Republic of China
Mateja Dermastia, Anteja ECG, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Anil Gupta, Society for Research and Initiatives for Sustainable
Technologies and Institutions, and Indian Institute of Management,
Ahmedabad, India
Daniel Kammen, University of California, Berkeley, USA
Margaret Kilo, African Development Bank, Tunis, Tunisia
Hiroyuki Kubota, Japan International Cooperation Agency, Tokyo
Francis Mangeni, Common Market for Eastern and Southern
Africa, Lusaka, Zambia
Magdy Madkour, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt
Venkatesh Narayanamurti, School of Engineering and Applied
Sciences, Harvard University, USA
Robert Paarlberg, Wellesley College and Harvard University, USA
Maria Jose Sampaio, Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation,
Brasilia, Brazil
Lindiwe Majele Sibanda, Food, Agriculture and Natural Resources
Policy Analysis Network, Tshwane, South Africa
Greet Smets, Biotechnology and Regulatory Specialist, Essen, Belgium
Botlhale Tema, African Creative Connections, Johannesburg,
South Africa
Jeff Waage, London International Development Centre, London
Judi Wakhungu, African Centre for Technology Studies, Nairobi,
Kenya
Project Coordinator
Greg Durham, Harvard Kennedy School, Harvard University,
Cambridge, USA
3:13 pm est
Friday, December 24, 2010jamii bora google zeitgist
• Z2010 From Philipinnes journalists http://www.mb.com.ph/articles/261607/the-story-jamii-bora-beggars-and-thieves-entrepreneurs
In an internet report dated July 16, 2009 submitted by Danielle Dumm, he said: “Armed with hand-held POS (Point of Service) devices, Jamii Bora’s staff can connect clients to services at branch locations and in the field. Each member of Jamii Bora is issued an identity card embedded with a biometric reading of their fingerprint. To deposit or withdraw funds, Jamii Bora staff simply swipe the biometric card on the POS, open the member’s account and record the transaction. To confirm and authorize the transaction, the Jamii Bora member must press their thumb to the POS machine and a receipt is printed for the member’s records. All POS transactions are logged by a central server and reconciliation takes place at the close of each and every business day.
This system is more high-tech than that of many commercial banks around the world, and yet, it is brilliantly simple and perfectly suited to the needs of Jamii Bora and its members. There is no need to remember pin numbers or be fully literate. The POS model also allows for real-time transaction processing and overall cost-savings, both of which are pivotal to the organization achieving financial sustainability and growth.
FT London http://www.ft.com/cms/s/17b820e4-030a-11e0-bb1e-00144feabdc0.html
12:41 am est
Thursday, December 23, 2010
11:58 pm est |
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