Discount Book Store - Rbookshop.comOnline Book StoreBusiness BooksComputer BooksEngineering BooksMathematics BooksScience BooksView All Categoriesnavmap
arrow Search for books at ARC Spider:
arrow Search for books at Powells:
arrow
Buy a Book from Amazon.com
bar
How to buy? - A step-by-step guide

Book Categories


Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future...

Buy Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future... here, one of many Ebay books offered for sale at discount prices here at Rbookshop.com.  We greatly appreciate your patronage at Rbookshop and look forward to offering you great products and prices now and in the future.
You Are Here:  Home > Computer Books > Ebay > Item 105

View Previous Product in our Ebay Store      View Next Product in our Ebay Store

Click here to buy Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future... by  Muhammad Yunus. Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future...
by Muhammad Yunus
Sales Rank: 2538
5.0 out of 5 stars
$17.16
At Amazon
on 10-18-2008.
Buy Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future... now! Get Info on Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future...
Features
  • Cover Type: Hard Cover with 296 pages
  • Published by: PublicAffairs January 7, 2008
  • Written in: English
  • ISBN 10 Number: 1586484931
  • ISBN 13 Number: 978-1586484934
  • Book Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.2 x 1.2 inches
  • Weighs: 1.2 pounds

From Publishers Weekly
Economics professor Yunus claims he originally became involved in the poverty issue not as a policy-maker, scholar, or researcher, but because poverty was all around me. With these words he stopped teaching elegant theories and began lending small amounts of money, $40 or less, without collateral, to the poorest women in the world. Thirty-three years later, the Grameen Bank has helped seven million people live better lives building businesses to serve the poor. The bank is solidly profitable, with a 98.6% repayment rate. It inspired the micro-credit movement, which has helped 100 million of the poorest people in the world escape poverty and earned Yunus (Banker to the Poor) a Nobel Peace prize. This volume efficiently recounts the story of microcredit, then discusses Social Business, organizations designed to help people while turning profits. French food giant Danone's partnership to market yogurt in Bangladesh is described in detail, along with 25 other businesses that operate under the Grameen banner. Infused with entrepreneurial spirit and the excitement of a worthy challenge, this book is the opposite of pessimistic recitals of intractable poverty's horrors. (Jan.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Product Review
"(I)n Creating A World Without Poverty, Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus argues convincingly that social business is an achievable way of exploiting capitalism to help the poor. Yunus moves the debate beyond the tired argument that the rich should simply donate to those less privileged, and demonstrates that the free market can in fact be used to the advantage of the less well offThis book is a must-read for policymakers or philanthropists, and its conversational style and straightforward logic also make it appealing to the layperson." -- Scotland on Sunday, January 27, 2008

"In this great work of popular economics, he tells the story of how he came to the idea and the impressive results it has generated." -- Winnipeg Free Press, February 24, 2008

"The influential economist and winner of the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize outlines his vision for a new business model that combines the power of of free markets with the quest for a more humane world. Includes stories of companies that are already doing social business." -- Bookseller (UK), October 8, 2007

"an inspiring volume, full of practical information for people who are motivated to try out his ideas." -- BusinessWeek, February 8, 2008

Reader Reviews
I realized close to two years ago, after reading C. K. Prahalad's The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid: Eradicating Poverty Through Profits (Wharton School Publishing Paperbacks), that I wanted to be intelligence officer to the poor instead of to a president, and that I needed to create the field of public intelligence (decision support for everyone at no cost). I strongly recommend that the two books be read together. See my review of that book. See also John Bogle's The Battle for the Soul of Capitalism as well as William Grider's The Soul of Capitalism: Opening Paths to a Moral Economy. Natural Capitalism, Capitalism 3.0, Green to Gold, Cradle-to-Cradle, all book titles, are converging with Social Entrepreneurship and Social Business as well as unconventional Global Assemblages. This book, the last that I read during a power outage lasting most of the day, really rocked me. Apart from the fact that the author has labored anonymously for three decades before being propelled into the public consciousness with his well-served Nobel Peace Prize (a prize that Prahalad should be considered for as well), everything in this book resonates with the path the 24-founders of Earth Intelligence Network have chosen. The author's Nobel presentation, "Poverty is a Threat to Peace," is at the back of the book, and has since been validated by the UN High-Level Threat Panel in A More Secure World: Our Shared Responsibility--Report of the Secretary-General's High-level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change. The author not only lent to the poor, he lent to beggars at no interest with no schedule, and proved conclusively that the poor and beggars are "credit worthy" by virtue of "being alive." He also pushed technology to rural areas. By page xvii I have goosebumps and a glorious feeling that good stuff is happening faster and bigger than most realize. The author notes early on that unfettered capitalism creates sccial problems rather than solving them. He suggests most compellingly that social business fills a gap left by government, foundations, and multilateral institutions. While the book is missing a sense of shared information and a global Range of Gifts Table that anyone, from individual to foundation, can use to make precision contributions and interventions, it is very easy to see how this book and Yochai Benkler's book, The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and Freedom as well as How to Change the World: Social Entrepreneurs and the Power of New Ideas, Updated Edition and all come together with Prahalad's vision and my own of public intelligence in the public interest. The author recognizes, as Alvin Toffler and others have pointed out, that all of our institutions are failing. I recommend books I have listed and reviewed on how complex societies collapse. I would venture to say that the US Government, with 27 secessionist movements, is collapsing from a mix of political and economic corruption compounded by cultural arrogance, but most importantly, because the government is stuck in the top down elite driven secret information Weberian model, and the government has failed to empower all local communities and all individuals with bottom up resilient adaptable information sharing capabilities. The bookm draws a stark contrast between the World Bank which measures loans given out, and the Grameen Bank, which measures outcomes at multiple levels including kids staying in school. As I read about a social business, I envision every village as its own business. The author addresses and dismisses Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) as insufficient. He calls for proactive collaborative engagement with potential customers in the five billion poor, and I am instantly reminded of the Business Week cover story of twenty June 2005, on the power of mass volunteer collaboration. The author focuses on women, mothers, and their children. This tallies with Michael O'Hanlon and Ralph Peters, both of whom regard the education of women as the single best investment bar none. The author took several steps beyond his pioneering micros-cash loans. He created social networks of those being helped, and he froze payments or interst and did whatever necessary to get defaulters back on track without penalty. This guy is the Mother Teresa of micro-economics! Today self-help groups of around twenty can apply to the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development for group loans. His integrity is without peer. Interest over the life of the loan would never exceed the loan itself. He prefers social business to charity because charity encourages corruption (in my own experience, 50% of every AID or contractor dollar goes toward corruption or fraud). He observes that social business does not have conventional metrics, but it provides meaning and opportunity, and I observe in my own note, it lowers the "true costs" of virtually everything it touches. Featured in this book, the middle half, is the French company Danone, and the joint venture to create a yogurt for the poor children, ultimately being delivered in a bio-degradable cup that converts into fertilizer. The last chapter is on information technology for the poor. I personally envision free cell phones for each village, then for each neighborhood, and finally for each household, monetizing the transactions and the real-time knowledge. The author concludes that we need new social value metrics and even a Social Dow Jones Index. This is the opposite of what I have been thinking about ever since Paul Hawkins taught me about "true costs." Now that Scanback allows a person at the point of sale to photograph a bar code and send it to Amazon to get their price, the channel is open to send back water content (4000 liters in a designer shirt from Bangladesh cotton), fuel content, child labor hours, and tax avoidance status). The last note is one I want to present to a Fortune 50 Assets Management firm. Danone is to be admired and respected for committing to a sccial business, and it found a solution that permitted it to engage without letting down its investors: it created a new fund explicitly advertised as 90% traditional and 10% social business, and it was over-subscribed instantly. On page 25 are listed 25 distinct Gameen companies. On pages 58-59 are Sixteen Decisions that alone warrant the Nobel Peace Prize. What these sixteen decisions do for the beneficiaries of micro-cash loans is nothing less than a socially-inspired form of the Ten Commandments, focused on creating health people in a healthy family within a healthy community. A few other exceptional books: The leadership of civilization building: Administrative and civilization theory, symbolic dialogue, and citizen skills for the 21st century How to Change the World: Social Entrepreneurs and the Power of New Ideas, Updated Edition Society's Breakthrough!: Releasing Essential Wisdom and Virtue in All the People I am increasingly uncomfortable with the fact that all the books I am reading and reviewing are in English. I have read a few in English stemming out of India and elsewhere, and I am beginning to feel a very deep vacuum that needs to be filled. I envision 100 million volunteers using Telelanguage.com to educate the poor one cell call at a time, but I now also see an urgent need to translate and make available non-fiction literature in other languages, easily retrievable in micro-text for micro-cash.


Back To Top

View Previous Product in our Ebay Store      View Next Product in our Ebay Store

Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future...
List Price: $26.00
Available from Amazon
Price: $17.16
Updated on 10-18-2008.
Buy Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future... now! Get Info on Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future...




NOTICE: All prices, availability, and specifications
are subject to verification by their respective retailers.




We offer Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future... and other related Ebay Books here at Rbookshop.com. To view more books about Ebay please use the previous and next buttons near the top of this page.




Alternative Med Books | Art Books | Business Books | Comic Books | Computer Books | Cook Books | Engineering Books | History Books | Hobby Books | Law Books | Mathematics Books | Medical Books | Popular Authors | Rare Books | Religion Books | Romance Books | Science Books | Science Fiction Books | Sports Books | Travel Books | Unusual Subjects Books
Discount Book Store
Rbookshop

Copyright © 2008, dvddispatcher.com

118652 Computer Books Online and Available as of 10-18-2008.