Posts Tagged ‘Ambassador Young’

Legislation Introduced in Congress to Create Haitian Version of SAEDF

As SAEDF’s Chairman Ambassador Andrew Young and others have suggested, U.S. Congresswoman Yvette Clarke (NY) last week introduced legislation to establish a Haitian-American Enterprise Fund. Modeled after SAEDF and other successful Enterprise Funds, the legislation is intended to promote the development of the Haitian private sector following a devastating earthquake in January 2010.

Ambassador Young first suggested the creation of a Haitian-American Enterprise Fund in a January Huffington Post op-ed titled, “Rebuilding Haiti With Public Purpose Capitalism.”

Funded initially by U.S foreign aid dollars, the Haitian-American Enterprise Fund will help spur long term, sustainable economic growth by providing capital to small and medium sized indigenous businesses through loans and equity investments.

Enterprise Fund expert Francis Skrobiszewski also recommended a Haitian version of SAEDF in a recent story in Forbes: “If the United States is committed to doing something quickly and truly sustainable to relieve conditions and rebuild Haiti, a starting point for Haiti’s reconstruction must be in the form of the ‘enterprise fund’ model of a publicly capitalized, privately managed investment fund designed to accelerate private-sector growth.”

For a section-by-section summary of the bill as well as the full text, please click here. Thewritten testimony from Mr. Skrobiszewski is available on the Committee’s site, as well as an archived webcast of the hearing.

30

03 2010

Huffington Post: Rebuilding Haiti With Public Purpose Capitalism

Ambassador Andrew Young, Chairman of the Southern Africa Enterprise Development Fund, discussed how the SAEDF model could help in rebuilding Haiti. This column originally appeared on January 26, 2010, on The Huffington Post.

The Obama Administration is to be congratulated for immediately committing food, doctors, military assistance and $100 million in aid for the people of Haiti following their devastating earthquake. Our country’s swift response has been essential to saving lives and giving hope to the survivors. In the short term, grants have been the necessary form of assistance. But in the long run, another very useful tool the U.S. should consider is a Haitian Enterprise Fund, similar to the Southern Africa Enterprise Development Fund (SAEDF) or eastern European equivalents that have proven so effective for economic development and sustainable growth in developing countries.

Haiti needs assistance that will produce a sustainable economy, not just a relief economy. This horrible tragedy may present just the opportunity for Americans to put their resources to work in a way that will create long-term economic sustainability in a country bereft of stability.

Read the rest of this entry →

02

02 2010