Village Enterprise Development Impact Bond

NOME SIB : Village Enterprise Development Impact Bond
PAESE: UG – KE
CITTA’ (LOCATION): Uganda and Kenya
ANNO DI LANCIO: 2017
DURATA DEL CONTRATTO: 3 years
TARGET POPULATION: Households living in extreme poverty (less than $1.90 per day) & geographically targeted
POLICY SECTOR: Poverty reduction
SERVICE PROVIDER
INTERMEDIARIO/INTERMEDIARI: Village Enterprise (self managing)
INVESTITORI: Total of nine, but not all publicly disclosed: Delta Fund; The Halls Family; ImpactAssets (gathering 3 private investors, incl. Silicon Valley Social Venture Fund (SV2)); Jay Friedrich; Brian Lonergan, The Laidir Foundation; Bridges Impact Foundation; Anonymous Philanthropy
VALUTATORE (I): IDInsight
OUTCOME PAYER: USAID. United States Agency for International Development
PRESENZA DI SPV (società veicolo):
PRESENZA DI GARANZIE:
STRUTTURA SIB:
OUTCOME(S): to improve the income levels of 12,000+ extreme poor households in rural Kenya and Uganda by creating 4,000+ sustainable microenterprises.
METODO DI VALUTAZIONE OUTCOME: Outcome indicator 1: USD increase in monthly consumption per capita compared to control group (USD PPP 2016 units).
Outcome indicator 2: USD per capita increase in assets stock compared to control group (in USD PPP 2016 units).
CAPITALE INVESTITO: $ 2,325,000
OUTCOME PAYMENTS (previsto): $ 4,280,618
CARATTERISTICHE DEL SIB
SCHEDE TECNICHE:
https://golab.bsg.ox.ac.uk/knowledge-bank/resources/village-enterprise-dib/

RIFERIMENTI BIBLIOGRAFICI

REPORT:
Village Enterprise.
Instiglio – Village Enterprise Development Impact Bond.
BRAC (2017) Ultra-poor graduation programme.
Ecorys (forthcoming) Independent Evaluation of the Development Impact Bonds (DIBs) Pilot programme.
Ecorys (forthcoming) Village Enterprise Development Impact Bond (DIB): A case study produced as part of the DFID DIBs pilot programme evaluation.
IDinsight – Evaluating the Village Enterprise Development Impact Bond.
Innovations for Poverty Action – The PPI is business intelligence for those in the business of serving the poor.
Instiglio (2018) Village Enterprise Development Impact Bond for Poverty Alleviation.
International Policy Centre for Inclusive Growth. (2017). Debating Graduation. Policy in Focus, Vol. 14, Issue No. 2, July 2017.

AUTORI /TITOLO/ RIVISTA/LINK
Coady, D., Grosh, M., and Hoddinott, J. (2004). Targeting of Transfers in Developing Countries. Washington, D.C.: World Bank.
Collier, P. (2008) The Bottom Billion: Why the poorest countries are failing and what can be done about it. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Deaton, A. (2013) The Great Escape: Health, Wealth, and the Origins of Inequality. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
Devereux, S., and Sabates-Wheeler, R. (2004). Transformative social protection. IDS Working Paper 232. Institute of Development Studies.
Hashemi, S., and de Montesquiou, A. (2011) Reaching the Poorest: Lessons from the Graduation Model. Focus Note No. 69., CGAP.
Kidd, S., and Bailey-Athias, D. (2019) Hit and Miss: An assessment of targeting effectiveness in social protection. Development Pathways.
OECD (2018) Purchasing Power Parities – Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs).
Sen, A. (1981) Poverty and Famines Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Sen, A. (1992) The Political Economy of Targeting. In D. van de Walle, and K. Nead, (Eds). Public Spending and the Poor. Washington, DC: World Bank.
World Bank – Regional aggregation using 2011 PPP and $1.9/day poverty line.
World Bank (2015) FAQs: Global Poverty Line Update.
World Bank (2018) The number of extremely poor people continues to rise in Sub-Saharan Africa. 09 September 2018. Divyanshi Wadwha’s Blog

image_printStampa articolo