Global Poverty Entrepreneurship

🛟Global Poverty Entrepreneurship Unit 5 – Social Entrepreneurship & Impact Investing

Social entrepreneurship and impact investing are transforming how we address global challenges. These approaches blend business acumen with social mission, creating innovative solutions to poverty, inequality, and environmental issues. They're reshaping traditional notions of value creation and investment. The field has evolved from early microfinance initiatives to a diverse ecosystem of social enterprises, impact funds, and measurement tools. Key concepts include the triple bottom line, blended value, and social return on investment. As the sector grows, it faces challenges in balancing financial returns with social impact and standardizing impact measurement.

Key Concepts and Definitions

  • Social entrepreneurship combines entrepreneurial skills with a mission to address social or environmental issues
  • Social enterprises are organizations that apply commercial strategies to maximize social impact rather than profits
  • Impact investing directs capital to companies, organizations, and funds with the intention to generate positive social and environmental impact alongside a financial return
  • Blended value proposition asserts that all organizations create value that consists of economic, social, and environmental components
  • Triple bottom line (TBL) is a framework that measures a company's performance in three areas: social, environmental, and financial
  • Social Return on Investment (SROI) is a method for measuring the value of the social impact of an investment or organization
  • Theory of change is a methodology that defines long-term goals and maps backward to identify necessary preconditions for achieving those goals
    • Includes identifying interventions that will create desired change and indicators to measure outcomes

Historical Context and Evolution

  • Social entrepreneurship has roots in the cooperative movement of the 19th century (Rochdale Society of Equitable Pioneers)
  • Modern social entrepreneurship emerged in the 1980s and 1990s with the rise of microfinance and the work of pioneers like Muhammad Yunus (Grameen Bank)
  • Impact investing gained traction in the 2000s with the establishment of the Global Impact Investing Network (GIIN) and the Rockefeller Foundation's coining of the term
  • The 2010s saw the growth of social impact bonds, pay-for-success models, and the rise of B Corporations
  • Recent years have witnessed increased interest from mainstream investors, corporations, and governments in social entrepreneurship and impact investing
    • Driven by growing awareness of social and environmental challenges and the potential for market-based solutions
  • The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the importance of social entrepreneurship in addressing urgent social needs and building resilience

Social Entrepreneurship Models

  • Non-profit organizations that generate earned income through the sale of goods or services to fund their social mission
  • For-profit companies that prioritize social impact alongside financial returns (benefit corporations, B Corps)
  • Hybrid models that combine elements of non-profit and for-profit structures (low-profit limited liability companies, L3Cs)
  • Cooperative enterprises owned and operated by their members for their mutual benefit (worker cooperatives, consumer cooperatives)
  • Social businesses that reinvest profits to scale their social impact rather than distributing them to shareholders
  • Public-private partnerships that leverage the strengths of government, business, and civil society to address social challenges
  • Microfinance institutions that provide financial services to underserved communities, enabling entrepreneurship and economic empowerment

Impact Investing Fundamentals

  • Impact investments are made across asset classes, including private equity, venture capital, debt, and real assets
  • Key characteristics of impact investments: intentionality, measurable impact, financial returns, and range of return expectations
  • Impact investing ecosystem includes asset owners, asset managers, demand-side actors (enterprises and projects), and service providers (rating agencies, research firms)
  • Catalytic capital is patient, risk-tolerant, concessionary, and flexible funding that enables high-impact enterprises to scale
  • Gender lens investing incorporates gender analysis into investment decisions to advance gender equality and better business outcomes
  • Green bonds are fixed-income instruments that raise capital for projects with environmental benefits (renewable energy, sustainable land use)
  • Impact investment funds pool capital from multiple investors to make investments in social enterprises or projects aligned with specific impact themes (education, healthcare, sustainable agriculture)

Measuring Social Impact

  • Impact measurement is the process of quantifying the social and environmental outcomes of an organization or investment
  • Theory of change serves as a foundation for impact measurement by articulating the causal links between activities, outputs, and outcomes
  • IRIS+ is a standardized taxonomy for measuring, managing, and optimizing impact, developed by the GIIN
  • Social Value International (SVI) provides guidance and assurance on applying the principles of social value and SROI
  • Impact Management Project (IMP) offers a framework for building global consensus on how to measure and manage impact
  • Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are considered the gold standard for evaluating the impact of social interventions
    • Involve randomly assigning participants to treatment and control groups to isolate the effect of the intervention
  • Lean Data is an approach to impact measurement that emphasizes speed, cost-effectiveness, and actionable insights, often using mobile technology

Challenges and Opportunities

  • Balancing financial returns with social impact and managing potential trade-offs between the two
  • Lack of standardized metrics and frameworks for measuring and comparing social impact across investments and organizations
  • Limited deal flow and investment-ready social enterprises, particularly in emerging markets
  • Regulatory and policy barriers that may hinder the growth and scale of social entrepreneurship and impact investing
  • Need for greater collaboration and knowledge-sharing among stakeholders in the impact investing ecosystem
  • Opportunity to mobilize significant capital towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and addressing global challenges
  • Potential for social entrepreneurship and impact investing to drive innovation and systemic change in sectors like education, healthcare, and clean energy
  • Growing interest from millennials and women in aligning their investments with their values and making a positive impact

Case Studies and Success Stories

  • Aravind Eye Care System: A social enterprise in India that has provided affordable, high-quality eye care to millions of people through a sustainable business model
  • d.light: A global social enterprise that has improved access to clean, affordable solar energy for over 100 million people in developing countries
  • Acumen: A non-profit impact investment fund that has invested in social enterprises across Africa, Latin America, and South Asia, focusing on sectors like agriculture, education, and energy
  • Bridges Fund Management: A specialist fund manager dedicated to sustainable and impact investment, with over £1 billion in assets under management across three fund types
  • Root Capital: A non-profit social investment fund that provides loans and training to agricultural businesses in developing countries, improving livelihoods for smallholder farmers
  • Revolution Foods: A certified B Corporation that provides healthy, affordable meals to schools and communities, serving over 2 million meals per week across the United States
  • Warby Parker: A socially conscious eyewear company that partners with non-profits to distribute glasses to people in need, with over 8 million pairs distributed to date
  • Increasing mainstreaming of impact investing, with more traditional investors incorporating ESG (environmental, social, and governance) factors into their decision-making
  • Growing use of blockchain technology and tokenization to democratize access to impact investments and enable fractional ownership of assets
  • Emergence of impact-focused fintech platforms and robo-advisors that make it easier for individuals to invest in social enterprises and impact funds
  • Expansion of social impact bonds and outcomes-based financing models that align incentives and share risk between investors, service providers, and governments
  • Integration of artificial intelligence and big data analytics to improve impact measurement, risk assessment, and investment decision-making
  • Rise of place-based investing and community wealth-building strategies that prioritize local ownership and control of assets
  • Increased focus on climate finance and investing in nature-based solutions to address the urgent challenges of climate change and biodiversity loss
  • Shift towards more inclusive and equitable forms of social entrepreneurship that prioritize diversity, equity, and inclusion in ownership, governance, and beneficiaries


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© 2024 Fiveable Inc. All rights reserved.
AP® and SAT® are trademarks registered by the College Board, which is not affiliated with, and does not endorse this website.