edited by Patricia Márquez, Ezequiel Reficco and Gabriel Berger
contributions by Gerardo Lozano, Mladen Koljatic, Roberto Gutierrez, Rosa María Fischer, Felipe Portocarrero and Rosa Amelia Gonzalez
Harvard University Press
Paper: 978-0-674-05336-6

ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK

The idea that market mechanisms can mobilize social change by engaging the poor in win–win scenarios is gaining increased world attention. Companies, social sector organizations, and development agencies are all beginning to glean the potential that lies among the world’s poorest people, both as an untapped productive force and a neglected consumer market. This book aims to demonstrate how the private sector can become part of the solution of poverty.

In this study, the authors assess market initiatives in Iberoamerica by large corporations, cooperatives, small and medium enterprises, and nonprofit organizations. A task force drawing on nine teams of researchers from various business schools and universities in nine countries examined 33 experiences, seeking to uncover “what’s needed” for building new business value chains that help move people out of poverty.