Pages

WELCOME TO OUR INSEAD BLOG!

THE PURPOSE OF THIS BLOG IS TO SHARE INFORMATION AND PROVOKE DISCUSSIONS AROUND SOCIAL INNOVATION.
WE HOPE THAT IT CAN SERVE AS A CONNECTION POINT FOR VARIOUS AUDIENCES – ACROSS GOVERNMENT, NON-GOVERNMENT, ACADEMIA, BUSINESS AND MEDIA – AND THAT ITS INFORMAL FORMAT ENCOURAGES EXCHANGE WITH A LARGER AUDIENCE THAN CAN BE REACHED BY OUR INSTITUTIONAL MECHANISMS.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Let's Hear Those Ideas

In America and Britain governments hope that a partnership with “social entrepreneurs” can solve some of society’s most intractable problems

---- The Economist, 12 August 2010 ---- 
POLICYMAKERS on both sides of the Atlantic are keen on a new approach to alleviating society’s troubles. On July 22nd Barack Obama’s administration listed the first 11 investments by its new Social Innovation Fund (SIF). About $50m of public money, more than matched by $74m from philanthropic foundations, will be given to some of America’s most successful non-profit organisations, in order to expand their work in health care, in creating jobs and in supporting young people.

Although the SIF accounts for a tiny fraction of the federal budget, the fund embodies anapproach that the administration plans to spread throughout government. The fund is one of several efforts to promote new partnerships of government, private capital, social entrepreneurs and the public, pushed by the White House’s Office of Social Innovation and Civic Participation (OSICP), which Mr Obama created soon after taking office. These initiatives include another fund, i3 (for “investing in innovation”), in the Department of Education and cash prizes for novel answers to social problems.

Three days earlier David Cameron, Britain’s prime minister, gave a speech in Liverpool outlining his vision of a “Big Society”. At its heart, he sees a similar partnership to Mr Obama’s. A Big Society Bank will “help finance social enterprises, charities and voluntary groups through intermediaries”, which sounds very like the task of the SIF. The government, said Mr Cameron, urgently needs to “open up public services to new providers like charities, social enterprises and private companies so we get more innovation, diversity and responsiveness to public need” and to “create communities with oomph”.

A New Name for Brains and Money
“Social innovation” is the increasingly common shorthand for this approach to public-privatepartnerships. It differs from the fashion in the past couple of decades for contracting out the delivery of public services to businesses and non-profit groups in order to cut costs, in that it aims to do more than save a few dollars or pounds—although that is part of its attraction. The idea is to transform the way public services are provided, by tapping the ingenuity of people in the private sector, especially social entrepreneurs.
A social entrepreneur is, in essence, someone who develops an innovative answer to a social problem (for instance, a business model for helping to tackle poverty). A decade ago the term was scarcely heard; today everyone from London to Lagos wants to be one. Social-entrepreneurship conferences are invariably the best attended events for students at leading business schools.

To read the rest of this article, please go to: http://www.economist.com/node/16789766?story_id=16789766

No comments: