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Publication database

This database contains a diverse range of more than 2,000 publications about inclusive business and relating topics, such as impact investing, microfinance and market systems approaches. You will find not only reports but also market intelligence, case studies, tools and videos that touch upon of several sectors and regions.

The diverse range of publications in this database all relate to inclusive business - meaning business models that engage base of the pyramid (BoP) consumers, suppliers, entrepreneurs and/or employees in low income and/or emerging markets.

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Database: Publications

Displaying 1 - 10 of 118

UNDP ‘s Ecosystem Development Approach provides a tried-and-tested methodology for bringing stakeholders together around a shared objective. Pilots in Lesotho, Senegal and Uganda show that the approach effectively enables collaboration, e.g. for more inclusive tourism, access to energy or mobile money, even beyond the end of the program. We documented the pilots and insights – so others can replicate the approach.

PublisherUNDP, Endeva
Publish Date
AuthorB. Jenkins, C. Pirzer, C. Tewes-Gradl
LanguageEnglish
Region/CountrySub-Saharan Africa
Lesotho, Senegal, Uganda
No

The idea of Inclusive Business is taking Africa by storm. The timely publication of a new concise book 'Inclusive business in Africa': A business model aims to take readers on a journey into the subject of Inclusive Business in Africa and shows how companies can be agents of change, contributing to inclusive development and growth. The publication brings together research supported by the Partnerships Resource Centre (PrC), a specialist research centre at Rotterdam School of Management, Erasmus University (RSM) and RSM’s Professor Rob van Tulder. 

PublisherThe Partnerships Resource Centre, Rotterdam School of Management
Publish Date
AuthorR. van Tulder, S. Lijfering
LanguageEnglish
Region/CountryMiddle East and North Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa
Ethiopia, Kenya
No

An increasing number of poor households are gaining access to financing for physical assets ranging from smartphones to solar panels. However, even as poor people increase their borrowing for these assets, their impact on people’s livelihoods - and how debt affects the benefits of asset ownership - remains poorly understood. CGAP has undertaken a comprehensive review of the available evidence to understand (i) how asset ownership can lead to improvements in well-being for poor households and (ii) whether obtaining an asset through a loan or lease as opposed to a transfer, grant, or outright purchase affects the benefits associated with ownership.

PublisherThe Consultative Group to Assist the Poor (CGAP)
Publish Date
AuthorE. Hernandez, M. Mattern, S. K. Kumaraswamy
LanguageEnglish
Region/CountryGlobal
No

This white paper seeks to articulate the impacts of connectivity and propose a framework of financial, social and economic key performance indicators for the last-mile connectivity (LMC) sector, in order to ultimately drive investments in the sector. The purpose of the framework is to illuminate impact pathways that link investments in LMC enterprises to positive development outcomes.

PublisherUSAID, FHI 360, mstar, Intellecap
Publish Date
AuthorH. Skelly, M. Prasad
LanguageEnglish
No

Digital bulk payments have the potential to connect millions of poor farmers to digital financial services. This report from CGAP and UNCDF recounts UNCDF's efforts to digitize payments to coffee farmers in Uganda, where just 29 percent of adults actively used mobile money in 2014. It shares lessons for donors, financial services providers and agricultural firms that are interested in digitizing agricultural value chains.

PublisherThe Consultative Group to Assist the Poor (CGAP)
Publish Date
AuthorA. M’Bale, N. Were, R. Pillai
LanguageEnglish
Region/CountryGlobal
Uganda
No

Developing solutions that address ill health can be a triple win for clients, society and financial service providers. Keeping clients and their families healthy makes business sense, but while there is great demand for such solutions, only a few providers have focussed on tackling health challenges. Our latest paper includes case studies and outlines the scope for financial service providers to develop holistic health solutions.

PublisherThe ILO's Impact Insurance Facility
Publish Date
AuthorC. Churchill, L. Morgan
LanguageEnglish
Region/CountryGlobal
No

This paper reviews possibilities for, and experience with, credit-linked crop insurance, including different types of insurance and credit arrangements, ranging from insurance sold to individual farmers to meso insurance sold to financial service providers to cover losses suffered by farmer borrowers.

PublisherThe ILO's Impact Insurance Facility
Publish Date
AuthorP. Hazell, P. Varangis, R. Meyer
LanguageEnglish
Region/CountryGlobal
IB Topics: BoP as customer
No

Insurance supervisors in emerging markets have developed different approaches to foster markets for inclusive insurance. Several markets have undergone transformative changes as a result, but what has been the impact of these measures? The Access to Insurance Initiative (A2ii) and the Facility have commissioned this study to assess the impact of microinsurance regulatory frameworks on developing inclusive insurance markets by way of a Regulatory Impact Assessment. 

PublisherThe ILO's Impact Insurance Facility
Publish Date
AuthorH.L. Chiew, M. Wiedmaier-Pfister
LanguageEnglish
Region/CountryEast Asia and Pacific, Global, Latin America and the Caribbean
Peru, Philippines
No

The paper discusses agricultural insurance subsidy in detail and draws upon available literature and case study experiences to propose good practice guidelines for the design and implementation.

PublisherThe ILO's Impact Insurance Facility
Publish Date
AuthorP. Hazell, P. Varangis, R. Sberro-Kessler
LanguageEnglish
No

Bundling agriculture insurance with other services like credit and better farm inputs is fast emerging as a possible solution to help agriculture insurance to achieve better social outcomes, make insurance more tangible and enable schemes to scale faster. There is evidence that states that access to agricultural insurance leads to significantly larger agricultural investment and riskier, yet more rewarding, production choices in agriculture. However, insurance as a standalone product may not be sufficient to overcome the binding constraints of farmers. Hence, bundling provides more value for all the players in the value chain. 

PublisherThe ILO's Impact Insurance Facility
Publish Date
AuthorP. Mukherjee
LanguageEnglish
No