Blog

Browse recent blogs of interest to the Marketlinks community. Use the search box or the filters on the left-hand side to refine the listing of blogs by keyword, topic, and/or region/country.

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Who Coaches the Coaches? Thinking Systemically about Non-Financial Support to Businesses in Fragile Settings

Author(s):

Dan Langfitt
The final blog in this series inspired by the four take-away messages from USAID’s primer on private-sector engagement in fragile and conflict-affected situations demonstrates why going beyond financial support is essential to provide partners with the coaching, networking, and advocacy needed to succeed in particularly complex, fragile and conflict-affected environments. It draws on the experience of the Strengthening Livelihoods and Resilience Activity in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.

Wild-Card Prospecting: Vetting Private-Sector Partners When Familiar Norms Don’t Apply

Author(s):

Dan Langfitt
This blog, the third in a series inspired by the four take-away messages from USAID’s primer on private-sector engagement in fragile and conflict-affected situations, focuses on the Strengthening Livelihoods and Resilience Activity's experience vetting private-sector actors as potential development partners in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo where a paucity of enterprise data, low standards for company operations, and an absence of familiar business norms make it difficult to apply a typical approach to partner prospecting.

Who You Calling a Bad Actor? Community Co-Creation and Self-Selection as Private-Sector Alignment Tactics

Author(s):

Dan Langfitt
This blog, the second in a series inspired by the four take-away messages from USAID’s primer on private-sector engagement in fragile and conflict-affected situations, focuses on managing private-sector actors who are problematically invested in maintaining a fragile, humanitarian-dependent socioeconomic system dominated by conflict. It describes the strategy of the Strengthening Livelihoods and Resilience Activity for selecting partners and co-creating activities with communities in a conflict-sensitive way in the eastern DRC and explores the team's discomfort with some aspects of the 'bad actor' paradigm.

Bread and Peace (and Honey): Social Entrepreneurship as Commercial Strategy

Author(s):

Dan Langfitt
This blog, the first in a series inspired by the four take-away lessons from USAID’s primer on private-sector engagement in fragile and conflict-affected situations, focuses on adding social inclusion and conflict sensitivity as a third dimension to shared value in the partnerships of the USAID Strengthening Livelihoods and Resilience Activity in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo.

Seeds2B Helps Smallholder Farmers to Access Good Seeds in Sub-Saharan Africa

Author(s):

Camille Renou
The population of Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is currently estimated at 1.2 billion people,1 and is projected to double by 2050. The continent’s smallholder farmers (SHF) account for 60% of the population,2 and produce 80% of the food consumed.3 These figures highlight the critical role that agriculture and SHF play in the continent’s food security and development.

The Role of Business-Led Food Safety in Sustainable Food Systems

Author(s):

Food Enterprise Solutions (FES)
The Linkage Between Food Safety and Sustainability Food loss and waste pose a major threat to both global food system security and sustainability. Postharvest loss is both nutrient and resource loss. When food is wasted, so are the resources required to produce it, namely land, water, and energy. In Africa, with the world’s highest rates of hunger and malnutrition, about a third of all food produced is lost before it ever reaches consumers.

The ENGIE Acquisition: With USAID Support, an Off-Grid Solar Fenix Rises

Author(s):

Taha Gaya
FROM SILICON VALLEY STARTUP TO LANDMARK ACQUISITION Access to technology is an essential component to development, especially in Africa. Africans use cheap mobile phones to pay their bills, conduct small business, and make calls anywhere and everywhere. However, even a small mobile phone is not useful if power is not available to charge it. Eighty percent of African households lack electric power, which limits opportunities to access information and mobile money, as well as business and educational opportunities. 

West Africa: An Ecosystem Approach to Catalyzing Female Entrepreneurship

Author(s):

USAID Private-Sector Engagement (PSE)
In the Sahel region of West Africa, small and growing businesses account for nearly 50 percent of new job creation. When these businesses are women-led, the potential to drive growth is even higher: a USAID study found that, globally, these businesses grow revenues 1.5 times faster and jobs twice as fast compared to male-owned businesses.

COVID-19 Underscores Need for Data Philanthropy

Author(s):

Mary Jane Maxwell, Ph.D.
When the COVID-19 pandemic first struck, the data science company Fraym understood its unique product was critical in mounting the most effective global COVID-19 response at scale.

Power Banks: How Commercial Bank Lending is Catalyzing Off-Grid Household Electrification in Rwanda

Author(s):

Stephan Hardeman
In many developing countries, the companies that build, supply, and sell clean energy solutions have difficulty obtaining bank loans or other financing to expand their businesses or reach new markets. This blog shares how Power Africa is working with the Climate Economic Analysis for Development, Investment and Resilience (CEADIR) Activity to support off-grid energy companies in Rwanda.

EEFS’ Food Safety and Trade Series

Author(s):

Feed the Future Enabling Environment for Food Security Project
In a four-part blog series, the EEFS project explores a central question: what enables cross-border trade for safe foods?

A Conversation with Nobel Laureate Dr. Michael Kremer and USAID

Author(s):

Mary Jane Maxwell, Ph.D.
This post shares thoughts from Dr. Michael Kremer on an experimental approach to alleviating global poverty. Dr. Kremer directs USAID’s Development Innovation Ventures program and is a recipient of the Nobel Prize in Economics.

Seed Systems in Fragile Contexts

Author(s):

Feed the Future Enabling Environment for Food Security Project
Given the primacy of seed for agricultural sector resilience and growth, development actors are eager to address seed needs in the wake of conflict. This post explores how to tailor those investments for fragile contexts in a way consistent with long-term seed market development.

Four Recommendations for Strengthening Seed Systems

Author(s):

Marketlinks Team
The vast majority of food grown in Africa is by smallholder farmers. Implementing these four recommendations will speed up the process of putting improved seed in the hands of Africa’s food growers permanently.