Media Contact:
Carrie Conko
Director of Communications
Mercatus Center at George Mason University
Office: 703-993-4899
Email: cconko@gmu.edu
Fighting Poverty through Entrepreneurship in Africa
A panel discussion with development scholars and African entrepreneurs
| Start: | Thursday, April 26, 2007 09:00 AM |
| End: | Thursday, April 26, 2007 10:30 AM |
| Location: | Washington Press Club Building |
*Continental breakfast served at 8:30am
To register, click here.
Panelists
Peter J. Boettke, Professor of Economics, George Mason University, and Research Director, Mercatus Center
Karol Boudreaux, Senior Research Fellow, Mercatus Center, and member of the Working Group on Property Rights at the United Nations Commission on Legal Empowerment of the Poor
Eustace Davie, Director, Free Market Foundation
John Kasaona, Assistant Director, Integrated Rural Development and Nature Conservation, Namibia
Shadrack Mabuza, Smallholder Team Member, Monsanto South Africa
Temba Nolutshungu, Director, Free Market Foundation of Southern Africa
While most regions of the world witness increased living standards and greater economic opportunity, Africans continue to face famine, poverty, and political corruption. Billions of foreign aid dollars spent by western governments have made little difference to the lives of ordinary Africans. Yet while western elites hold conferences on how best to redistribute wealth, unsung African innovators are quietly erasing the effects of poverty at the local level. This fresh perspective-that solutions to Africa's poverty are not to be found in international aid bureaucracies but in Africa's entrepreneurs-is the focus of Enterprise Africa!, a project which uncovers examples of successful entrepreneurship in Africa and shares them with policy makers and opinion leaders world-wide.
This panel presentation, sponsored by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University is part of a week of Enterprise Africa! events in New York and Washington, DC. Drawing on two years of field research with African entrepreneurs, the panel will discuss specific and innovative ways that Africans are developing their own solutions to the problems of poverty, corruption, conflict resolution, and environmental degradation. Participants will learn about what is working in African development and gain an understanding of the obstacles Africa's entrepreneurs must overcome to achieve long-term growth in their communities.





