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“Communities seeking to grow their economy need to understand the impact entrepreneurship and small business play in economic growth.” — Grow Your Own: Entrepreneurship-based EconomicDevelopment for Local Communities, Dell Gines, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.
Leverage support organizations Vietnam has multiple support organizations to help entrepreneurs navigate these complex issues and create sustained business growth. These organizations include: The Vietnam Chamber of Commerce and Industry (VCCI) represents the interests of entrepreneurs and promotes economicdevelopment.
And yet, our economic policies espoused by governments and traditional economicdevelopers continue to focus on attracting existing big businesses. But ecosystem building still hasn’t gone mainstream—it’s a mostly unknown approach to economicdevelopment. This article is sponsored by CO.STARTERS.
I shared some of these in a previous article, “ Ecosystem Building and Ecosystem Builders: What is it? Someone who scopes out, provides strategy, and knows how to support, cheerlead, and provide sweat-equity to work toward collaborative economicdevelopment goals.” Who are they? ” Henry Rael. ” David Jay.
“Since 2011, the Bluhm/Helfand Social Innovation (BHSI) Fellowship has supported the work of 36 innovators—representing the United States as well as 18 other countries on five continents—who address pressing global issues, from healthcare delivery to college persistence and sustainable construction in developing nations.
Our 110 communities are diverse yet they all need an enabling environment of supportive regulatory frameworks, inclusive economicdevelopment initiatives, stronger social and environmental sustainability standards, and a brave impact funding environment.
In this article, we want to share two stories that highlight how the Impact Network is approaching this at a local level while aiming for global impact, in different regions around the world. The platform seeks to identify common goals and strategies towards a sustainable mobility future, which can be achieved through collective action.
Our 110+ communities are diverse yet they all need supportive regulatory frameworks, inclusive economicdevelopment initiatives, social and environmental sustainability policies, and a strong impact funding environment. Our mission is to build locally rooted and globally connected entrepreneurial communities for impact at scale.
In this article, we want to share two stories that highlight how the Impact Network is approaching this at a local level while aiming for global impact, in different regions around the world. The platform seeks to identify common goals and strategies towards a sustainable mobility future, which can be achieved through collective action.
“Since 2011, the Bluhm/Helfand Social Innovation (BHSI) Fellowship has supported the work of 36 innovators—representing the United States as well as 18 other countries on five continents—who address pressing global issues, from healthcare delivery to college persistence and sustainable construction in developing nations.
And yet, our economic policies espoused by governments and traditional economicdevelopment approaches continue to focus on attracting big businesses. It’s time for a radical rethink in how we do economicdevelopment. The New York Times article Where Are the Start-Ups? This focus needs to stop.
” As part of the package that directly impacts startups, there’s a proposal for a $27 billion Clean Energy and Sustainability Accelerator to mobilize private investment, according to the White House. Part of the money frm the Biden plan will aim to redevelop brownfields and turn them into more sustainable businesses.
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