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Technological innovation and entrepreneurship are crucial to development. A new entrepreneurial approach to development is emerging. This involves designing new technologies and adapting existing ones to suit the specific requirements of poor people. These are then bought by poor people to form the basis of small businesses or used to help people meet their basic human needs.
One example of this approach is KickStart – a non-profit organization based in Kenya that develops, adapts and markets technologies in Africa. Low-cost technologies are bought by local entrepreneurs (often farming families) and used to establish small businesses. They create new jobs and income for poor people. Examples of products include a brick press, oil press, treadle pump and hip pump (a manual water pump).
KickStart uses the following steps, which parallel many existing innovation approaches:
KickStart monitors the number of new businesses and jobs created and the amount of profits and wages earned by the new entrepreneurs and their employees. It has found that its innovations have had a significant impact towards improving livelihoods in their countries of work in Africa, which include Kenya, Tanzania and many others. KickStart estimates that $52 million per year of profits and wages is generated by the new businesses with which it has been involved across Africa.
The experience of KickStart highlights some key actions that can help foster pro-poor innovation through social entrepreneurship in Africa:
Source(s):
‘From Idea to Impact: Funding Invention for Sustainability’, Innovations:
Technology, Governance, Globalization, 1(1), pages 31-42, by Julie
Novy-Hildesley, 2006
id21 Research Highlight: 1 November 2007
Further Information:
Andrew Adwerah Ochieng
Institute of Development Studies
Brighton, BN1 9RE
UK
Contact the contributor: A.Adwera@ids.ac.uk
Institute of Development Studies, UK
Other related links:
‘Towards pro-poor innovation: putting public value into science and
technology’, id21 insights #68, September 2007
‘Biotechnology in Bangalore: the politics of innovation’
‘Nano-dialogues: helping scientists to meet poor people's needs’
‘Supporting local innovation in Nepal’
‘China: the next science superpower?’
‘Enhancing rural livelihoods: the role of ICTs’
Useful weblinks