The document summarizes the 18th Microcredit Summit to be held in Abu Dhabi in March 2016. The summit will bring together over 700 people from Africa and the Middle East to explore innovations in microfinance and financial inclusion that can help alleviate poverty. Previous summits have attracted over 16,000 participants since 1997. The 2016 summit will focus on advancing financial inclusion strategies, creating pathways for vulnerable groups, promoting entrepreneurship, and connecting remote areas to markets. It aims to support the goals of expanding access to financial services and ending extreme poverty by 2030.
Aidf Africa Summit 2016 - Speaker BrochureSonjaRue
Summits by the Aid & International Development Forum (AIDF) are timely, high profile meetings, bringing together humanitarian and development experts, influencers, investors, thought leaders, policy makers and entrepreneurs.
If you have a compelling case study or research to share, one that will inspire and inform other senior development leaders and decision makers, one that goes to the heart of how the world is changing, then we have an exclusive audience eager to hear from you. Our speakers are themselves senior directors, thought leaders and experts from all stakeholders involved in development and aid outcomes. They are authoritative figures who are leading change by creating new ideas and initiatives, innovations and services.
Following a prosperous year, UAE already enjoy benefits of the #YearofGiving initiatives.
Check out our new blog and brochure to find out how we can achieve the same advantages!
https://sustainabilityknowledgegroup.com/the-inspiring-initiatives-of-uaes-year-of-giving/
Aidf Africa Summit 2016 - Speaker BrochureSonjaRue
Summits by the Aid & International Development Forum (AIDF) are timely, high profile meetings, bringing together humanitarian and development experts, influencers, investors, thought leaders, policy makers and entrepreneurs.
If you have a compelling case study or research to share, one that will inspire and inform other senior development leaders and decision makers, one that goes to the heart of how the world is changing, then we have an exclusive audience eager to hear from you. Our speakers are themselves senior directors, thought leaders and experts from all stakeholders involved in development and aid outcomes. They are authoritative figures who are leading change by creating new ideas and initiatives, innovations and services.
Following a prosperous year, UAE already enjoy benefits of the #YearofGiving initiatives.
Check out our new blog and brochure to find out how we can achieve the same advantages!
https://sustainabilityknowledgegroup.com/the-inspiring-initiatives-of-uaes-year-of-giving/
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions: February 2007 IssueDavid South Consulting
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter for the United Nations Development Programme’s South-South Cooperation Unit (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006.
Stories by David South
Design and Layout: UNDP South-South Cooperation Unit
Follow @SouthSouth1
Speaking notes for a Presentation to the Nordic Council of Ministers’ Seminar...Wayne Dunn
A presentation that outlines the work undertaken during the 1994-96 period to try and put indigenous business and economic development on the international development agenda. In the early 1990s Indigenous issues were largely framed in terms of human rights and culture. This report summarizes some of the early work to move the donor and development community to also incorporate business and economic development and deal more effectively with economic marginalization.
Senior Vice President and Regional Head, Africa; Accion
Brian Kuwik leads and manages Accion's operations and relationships with partners in Africa and Haiti. Accion's regional program aims to improve financial inclusion in the region through equity investments in microfinance banks and other new ventures as well as the provision of management and technical services to Accion Microfinance Bank in Nigeria, Akiba Commercial Bank in Tanzania, EB-Accion in Ghana and Cameroon, SOGESOL in Haiti and other microfinance banks. Mr. Kuwik sits on the boards of these partner banks, plays an active role in governance, and provides strategic and financial advice. He also supervises Accion's technical assistance activities in the areas of strategic and business planning, product and operations development, human resources management, information technology, and risk management from its office in Ghana. Previously, he served as resident advisor and senior manager for Accion partners in Zimbabwe, Uganda and Haiti. He has supported the design and start-up of new institutions in Nigeria, Ghana and Cameroon.
Before joining Accion in September 2001, Mr. Kuwik worked for three years at the Small Enterprise Foundation in rural South Africa. Prior to these positions, he was a Fulbright researcher in Cameroon.
Mr. Kuwik holds an M.B.A. in finance and international business from the University of Washington and a B.A. in international development from American University.
RBF Africa 2017 Event Report: Accelerating Inclusive Growth to Deliver the SDGsGlobal Initiatives
The Responsible Business Forum on Sustainable Development, Africa 2017, was held on 31 August – 1 September and convened more than 400 participants over two days at the Maslow Hotel, Johannesburg.
This report details the key findings from RBF Africa which involved over 100 speakers in keynote presentations, plenary discussion panels and 17 workshops which addressed each of the SDGs in detail. Experts from across sectors came together to share opportunities for partnerships and find ways to accelerate inclusive growth and deliver the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions: February 2007 IssueDavid South Consulting
Development Challenges, South-South Solutions is the monthly e-newsletter for the United Nations Development Programme’s South-South Cooperation Unit (www.southerninnovator.org). It has been published every month since 2006.
Stories by David South
Design and Layout: UNDP South-South Cooperation Unit
Follow @SouthSouth1
Speaking notes for a Presentation to the Nordic Council of Ministers’ Seminar...Wayne Dunn
A presentation that outlines the work undertaken during the 1994-96 period to try and put indigenous business and economic development on the international development agenda. In the early 1990s Indigenous issues were largely framed in terms of human rights and culture. This report summarizes some of the early work to move the donor and development community to also incorporate business and economic development and deal more effectively with economic marginalization.
Senior Vice President and Regional Head, Africa; Accion
Brian Kuwik leads and manages Accion's operations and relationships with partners in Africa and Haiti. Accion's regional program aims to improve financial inclusion in the region through equity investments in microfinance banks and other new ventures as well as the provision of management and technical services to Accion Microfinance Bank in Nigeria, Akiba Commercial Bank in Tanzania, EB-Accion in Ghana and Cameroon, SOGESOL in Haiti and other microfinance banks. Mr. Kuwik sits on the boards of these partner banks, plays an active role in governance, and provides strategic and financial advice. He also supervises Accion's technical assistance activities in the areas of strategic and business planning, product and operations development, human resources management, information technology, and risk management from its office in Ghana. Previously, he served as resident advisor and senior manager for Accion partners in Zimbabwe, Uganda and Haiti. He has supported the design and start-up of new institutions in Nigeria, Ghana and Cameroon.
Before joining Accion in September 2001, Mr. Kuwik worked for three years at the Small Enterprise Foundation in rural South Africa. Prior to these positions, he was a Fulbright researcher in Cameroon.
Mr. Kuwik holds an M.B.A. in finance and international business from the University of Washington and a B.A. in international development from American University.
RBF Africa 2017 Event Report: Accelerating Inclusive Growth to Deliver the SDGsGlobal Initiatives
The Responsible Business Forum on Sustainable Development, Africa 2017, was held on 31 August – 1 September and convened more than 400 participants over two days at the Maslow Hotel, Johannesburg.
This report details the key findings from RBF Africa which involved over 100 speakers in keynote presentations, plenary discussion panels and 17 workshops which addressed each of the SDGs in detail. Experts from across sectors came together to share opportunities for partnerships and find ways to accelerate inclusive growth and deliver the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
The Digital International Youth Forum is an international platform that aims to create the largest Youth Based Content, and promote the youth on an international level. We offer youth an opportunity to create and shape their own unique experiences through the wide range of interactive and leadership activities.
The forum will build content from youth leaders, and contributors from all over the world in the fields of Global Citizenship, Young Entrepreneurship, Empowering Women, Smart Living, Entertainment and Gaming, Future Sports, Environmental Products, Youth Finance, and Education and Training. The participants are expected to be actively participating in building the content, and make benefit of the loaded webinars and resources. The forum is self paced, and no physical presence will be required. It is all digital.
Philanthropedia’s mission is to improve nonprofit effectiveness by directing money to and facilitating discussion about expert recommended high-impact nonprofits.
This paper considers that the most challenging needs facing the development of Microentrepreneurship, are the need to develop innovative socially-oriented banks that care about the ―unbankable‖ segment of the society. Family Bank is considered to be one of the ―social businesses‖ which are based entirely upon the partnership as well as social corporate responsibility (CSR) of private sector.
A presentation supported by a research report that focuses on development issues in Africa. The report is themed Innovation and Impact and is presented in three sections, hindsight, foresight and insight
2. 2
The Campaign & 2014 Summit Overview
Since the launch of the first Microcredit Summit in 1997, the Campaign has been organizing Summits to
gather microfinance practitioners, donors, and stakeholders to discuss the current state of the sector,
diffuse innovations, address challenges, and galvanize the use of microfinance in the effort to end extreme
poverty. To date, the Summits have attracted nearly 16,000 delegates from over 140 countries and carved
out its position as a global convener of an unmatched diversity of actors within the ecosystem of those
addressing the financial needs of the very poor.
Recognizing that microfinance is just one strategy among many interventions used to alleviate poverty, the
Campaign launched a new vision for the Summits, moving away from regionally focused summits to wide-
ranging collaborative events. This new vision was carried out
both in the 2013 Summit theme Partnerships against
Poverty: Finance, Government and Civil Society, and in the
2014 Summit theme Generation Next: Innovations in
Microfinance.
These ground-breaking events served as an opportunity for
microfinance stakeholders to promote best practices and to
engage in a thoughtful discussion around the challenges and
opportunities associated with the growth and
transformation of the sector. We characterized this as the
“next generation” of microfinance guiding the sector to look
forward in the financial inclusion movement and continue
targeting the world’s poorest. Innovative leaders shared strategies for reaching those living in poverty, such
as savings groups and asset-building cash transfer programs, and the challenges that come with growth and
scale, such as leadership development and client protection.
The 2014 Summit brought together 875 people from 60 countries and featured 160 speakers and
presenters in 7 plenary sessions and 35 workshops. We recognized Truelift Milestone award-winning
organizations for their exemplary work in providing financial and other services to those living in extreme
poverty. We also highlighted the Campaign Commitments made by 35 organizations to take specific action
to help bring about the end of extreme poverty, and 60 more individuals wrote out their commitments
during the Summit. Together, we built a vision for the next generation of financial services that reach
everyone and that provide even the poorest and most remote with the tools and resources they need to
complete the journey to sustainable livelihoods.
Courtesy of Enda Inter Arabe
3. 3
18th Microcredit Summit
We stand today at the edge of a new frontier. Over the horizon lie uncharted experiments in sustainable
development and technology, unanswered questions on best practices for gender equity and youth
employment, and unresolved debates on the most effective social and financial inclusion policies that
create shared solutions for social change. It would be an easier task to stay the course and accept the status
quo, but we believe current times require innovativeness, boldness and determination.
The Microcredit Summit Campaign, in partnership with the Arab Gulf Fund Program for Development
(AGFUND) and the Khalifa Fund for Enterprise Development, invites you on a journey over the horizon. Join
us as we explore Frontier Innovations in Financial Inclusion at the 18th Microcredit Summit this March 14-
17, 2016, in Abu Dhabi, U.A.E. More than 700 people from the Middle East, Africa, and beyond will explore
how microfinance and financial inclusion strategies can create clear pathways out of poverty for the most
vulnerable segments of society across the globe.
In recent years, Africa and the Middle East
have experienced success, especially with
innovations in growing mobile money
accounts and experimentations in sub-
Saharan Africa. Recent Global Findex 2014
numbers show there is a major opportunity
in expanding financial inclusion among
women and the poorest households in
Africa and the Middle East. But outreach is
still low in the Middle East and North Africa
(MENA), compared to other regions. We
must do more to reach those new frontiers in social and financial inclusion for women, youth, the elderly,
people with disabilities, and those living in poverty.
Leaders from around the world will convene at the 18th Microcredit Summit to partake in partnership
building, knowledge-sharing, and thoughtful discussion around practices and policies that promote
outreach, put clients at the center, and accelerate social change. The Summit agenda will explore these
questions:
How do we advance national financial inclusion strategies that create the appropriate policies and
regulatory framework that promote social inclusion for all?
How do we create more innovative pathways that build resilience and empower those who are often
excluded, including women, the elderly, and those living with disabilities?
4. 4
How can we use financial inclusion to promote entrepreneurship and provide the appropriate
products and services to empower the youth?
How do we ensure a full range of microfinance products and services reach those who are socially
and financially excluded?
How can we capitalize on the natural synergies between different sectors to contribute to the
success of the Universal Financial Access 2020 goal, the World Bank 2030 goals, and the U.N.
Global Goals?
How can we connect rural and remote areas with high levels of poverty with growing markets in
their own countries and in other parts of the world?
The Microcredit Summit Campaign and its partners are seeking the support of leading organizations and
champions for this event to coordinate the efforts in closing the gender gap in financial inclusion and
contribute to the success of the post-2015 Global Goals for
Sustainable Development and the World Bank goal of ending
extreme poverty by 2030. We invite you to take a look at the
complete list of sponsorship packages offered and consider
the opportunity to be recognized at this forward looking
event.
Your sponsorship and participation at the Summit will give
you exclusive visibility, unique connections, and an extensive
list of benefits. We hope you agree to partner with us and
sponsor the 18th Microcredit Summit.
For more information on sponsorships or any other
questions, please contact Fabiola Diaz, at
diaz@microcreditsummit.org.
We thank you for your consideration and look forward to a
rewarding partnership.
Larry Reed
Director, Microcredit Summit Campaign
Courtesy of Enda Inter Arabe
5. 5
The Microcredit Summit Campaign is the world’s
largest global network of microfinance practitioners
and stakeholders. The Campaign was launched at the
first Microcredit Summit in 1997, which remains the
largest gathering of microfinance practitioners to date. Since then, the Campaign has led the sector
toward reaching the ambitious goals set by its members at the 1997 Summit and expanded in 2006.
The Campaign’s Goals
1. Reaching 175 million poorest families with microfinance.
2. Helping 100 million families lift themselves out of extreme poverty.
The Campaign is the only microfinance organization that has set bold, measurable goals for using
microfinance to end extreme poverty and regularly measures progress toward achieving those goals.
The aim of the Summit is to catalyze commitment toward the Campaign’s goals, accelerate
innovation, promote best practices, and command mainstream media attention to microfinance.
Responding to the World Bank’s movement to end extreme poverty by 2030 and acknowledging that
full financial inclusion can only be achieved by targeting the extreme poor, the Campaign has created
the 100 Million Project, aimed at motivating microfinance stakeholders to provide products and
services that reach those in extreme poverty and facilitate their movement out of poverty. Launched
at the 2013 Partnerships against Poverty Summit, the 100 Million Project galvanizes the industry
through recruiting Campaign Commitments: building capacity, using measurement tools, and
disseminating innovations that facilitate movement out of poverty in the effort to meet Goal 2, or the
“100 Million Goal.”
As the administrative home for Truelift, an industry initiative to advance pro-poor microfinance, the
Campaign is focusing not only on the number of clients reached (Goal 1) but also on the client-level
outcomes (Goal 2). Truelift will recognize those MFIs doing the most to help families lift themselves
out of poverty.
6. 6
The Arab Gulf Program for Development (AGFUND) is a regional
development organization, established in 1980 upon the initiative of HRH
Prince Talal Bin Abdul Aziz Al Saud (AGFUND’s President) with the support
of leaders of the Arab Gulf States. AGFUND works to support sustainable human development
toward the targeted groups in the least-developed countries (LDC).
The core developmental works of AGFUND involve alleviating poverty through Financial Inclusion, Early
Childhood Development, Women Empowerment, NGO’s Enhancement, and Open Education.
Proceeding from these core activities, AGFUND had led several initiatives that construe its main
objectives. Several initiatives were embodied in specialized development organizations and large
projects that reflect and express AGFUND objectives.
Poverty Alleviation and Financial Inclusion
The approach that AGFUND follows in alleviating poverty is traced back to 1997, when HRH Prince
Talal Bin Abdul Aziz, AGFUND’s President, launched his initiative to establish Banks for the Poor in the
least-developed countries, with the aim of integrating the target groups in the financial system of
their respective countries, and transforming them into self-reliant productive force. Since then,
through advice, consultancy and technical assistance in many countries, AGFUND has sought to pave
the way for the regulatory environment of this type of banks. These efforts yielded in 2006 with the
opening of the first Microfinance bank in the Arab World in Jordan, namely Alwatani, followed by
Alamal in Yemen, then Ibdaa banks in Bahrain, Syria, Sierra Leone, Lebanon, Sudan, Palestine, and
Mauritania.
Thus, AGFUND has become the major player in the Arab World in establishing Microfinance banks
and providing people who suffer extreme poverty with financial services. In addition, more banks are
in the pipeline in Morocco, Tunisia, the Philippines, Comoros and Senegal. AGFUND banks provide
services and products ranging from loans, savings, deposits, to current accounts, health insurance,
remittances and currency exchange. These banks provided 466,000 loans to more than 2,600,000
beneficiaries, 64% of them are women. They also hire 1,000 employees in 72 branches.
7. 7
Khalifa Fund for Enterprise Development has been established in 2007 as
an independent body of Abu Dhabi Government to implement the long-
term vision of His Highness Sheikh Khalifa Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, President
of the UAE and Ruler of Abu Dhabi, under the direction of H.H. Sheikh
Mohammed Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, The Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, Deputy
Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces and Chairman of the Abu Dhabi
Executive Council. Khalifa Fund aims to contribute towards enhancing the country’s competitive
economy and to transform the Emirate of Abu Dhabi into a major investment and economic hub in
the region.
Vision
To lead entrepreneurship development and to facilitate the growth of competitive SMEs.
Mission
To fuel an entrepreneurial culture, drive innovation and sustainable growth of Emirati SMEs that
contribute to the social and economic development of the UAE by providing access to services and
financing, and by facilitating an SME-friendly environment.
The Fund provides financing solutions for viable projects, which help to feed the national economy.
These financing programs are Khutwa, Bedaya, Zeyada and Tasneea, which cover all segments. In
addition, there are number of social initiatives like Sougha, which targets the Emiratis who work on
heritage handicrafts, Al Radda that targets rehabilitation center inmates, Ishraq for those who have
recovered from addiction at the National Centre for Rehabilitation. Amal is a Khalifa Fund initiative
that target special-needs Emiratis. In addition to Al Hasela which targets the Emiratis fishermen.