With thanks to Brother Shafi:
Intel-Grameen deal on ICT – based business services
The Daily Star - Wednesday, May 10, 2008
Global computer technology giant Intel has signed an agreement with Grameen Trust to form a new venture dedicated to social and economic development.
Intel Corporation Chairman Craig Barrett announced this while addressing the World Congress on Information Technology (WCIT) 2008 in Malaysia on Monday.
The Grameen-Intel joint venture aims to bring about self-sustaining solutions based on information and communications technology (ICT) to help empower the world’s impoverished.
The initiative, which will be launched in Bangladesh, is based on the ’social business’ model created by Nobel Peace Prize winner Dr Muhammad Yunus, who founded Grameen Bank in 1976 to promote microfinancing and community development.
“Technology offers the means for scaling up our efforts towards global change and progress,” said Barrett, who also chairs the United Nations Global Alliance for ICT and Development (UN GAID). “By creating new business models based on ICT, as Intel is doing today with Grameen, we can bring people the tools they need to improve their future.”
“I am very happy to collaborate with Intel in this new direction and create opportunities for poor people to rise above social and economic barriers,” said Yunus, also the author of the best-seller, Creating a World Without Poverty.
“I believe technology-based services will provide the ‘hand up’ that people need to discover their full potential. Once we show that this business model works in Bangladesh, we hope the successes we achieve there can be applied to the rest of the developing world.”
Grameen-Intel combines Intel’s technology innovation and Grameen’s extensive experience in creating economic development and income-generation opportunities at the village level. The new company will use a private sector-based approach to address social and economic problems such as poverty, healthcare and education in developing countries.
Intel and Grameen foresee a number of ICT-based services and entrepreneurship opportunities growing out of such a business model. Examples include remote villagers receiving medical attention through internet connectivity, rural communities being able to order medicine locally instead of having to walk 10 miles to a hospital, and families being notified of money received from relatives abroad.
According to Kazi I Huque, the Intel manager serving as the CEO of the joint venture, “The creative usage of technology has the potential to make a real impact on people in the developing nations who today are not part of the digital age.”
“To narrow the gap, we must address specific needs at the grass-roots level,” Huque said.
I would love to hear if there are any success’s in the UK deprived areas where the inner city communities have cronic poverty problems.
I line in such an area Pollok in Glasgow where debt and povery is rife, how can your organisation help people in this position?
John M Graham
Dear John
Your comment makes me sigh. Yes, yes, there are lots of people who see ‘poverty’ only in terms of developing worlds. However, I’ve come to the conclusion that we have “institutionalised cruelty” in the UK. This leads to “mega-poverty” such as home repossessions, over-indebtedness, bankruptcies and suicides.
So no. For the moment we can’t help yet. But trust me to do as best as I can with my 10 fingers. I’m dreaming of a “Sustainable Investment Network” that should fund what doesn’t get funded by ‘normal channels’.
“Money as Debt” is a video that illustrates the systemic causes that we’re all suffering from. The trouble is that those who could make a difference don’t seem to want to.
So we each have to find ways of trying. At least the web and the net are here to help!
With many thanks for your comment,
Sabine