Yunus Social Business – Global Initiatives
Yunus Social Business (YSB) is a social business fund and corporate social innovator. Co-founded in 2011 with headquarters in Berlin, YSB's mission is to expand the social business model pioneered by Prof. Muhammad Yunus through the Yunus Center in Bangladesh, to countries throughout the developing world and to corporations globally. The primary goal is to utilise the tools developed in the business world, to create financially self-sustaining companies dedicated to reducing poverty. A secondary goal is to finance social businesses that directly contribute to achieving the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
Industry | Impact investing |
---|---|
Founder | Muhammad Yunus |
Headquarters | , Germany |
Area served | Albania, Brazil, Colombia, Haiti, India, Kenya, Tunisia, Uganda |
Website | http://www.yunussb.com/ |
YSB has supported over 2,000 social business entrepreneurs, helped create over 74,000 higher incomes and impacted the lives of over 13 million people.
Background
Founded in 2011 by Muhammad Yunus, Saskia Bruysten and Sophie Eisenmann, YSB's aim is to replicate the social business model, pioneered by Prof. Yunus, across the developing world. With a focus on providing financial and business support to social businesses outside of Bangladesh, the fund focuses on financing companies that either provide income or essential products and services to the poor.[1][2] Yunus Social Business acts as the international implementation arm for Prof. Yunus's Social Business concept[3][4] and operates under the same principles as the Social Businesses it finances, in particular, the social business model.
Yunus Funds
Yunus Funds finances and grows social businesses in developing countries focussed on ending poverty. Companies like Impact Water that have been financed by YSB tackle similar challenges to those traditionally addressed by aid agencies or charities, providing employment, education, healthcare, clean water and energy to over 13 million people worldwide.
It has teams in India, Brazil, Colombia, Uganda and Kenya to invest and grow the impact of its social business portfolio. Local country teams focus on identifying and sourcing networks, communities and individual social entrepreneurs or existing businesses built around a strong social mission. Promising social businesses that have the potential to scale quickly can then apply for either financing or an investment readiness programme, to help them prepare for investment.
Investment amounts range from $100,000 to $300,000. Financing is provided in incremental steps based on milestone and KPI achievements with below-market-conditions and tailored grace and repayment periods.
Yunus Corporate Innovation
Yunus Corporate Innovation partners with large corporations to grow social businesses - to serve society rather than extract from it.
Country Offices
YSB Albania
YSB Albania began operations in April 2012 with the support of the Albanian National Government, and in 2014, it expanded its outreach to Kosovo. YSB Albania has financed 5 social businesses to date, and ran its first intense accelerator program in 2014.
YSB Brazil
In March 2013, YSB Brazil was launched to spread the social business concept throughout Brazil; Rio was officially declared a ‘Social Business City.’ Yunus Negocios Sociais Brasil, as it is locally known, ran three cycles of accelerator programs in São Paulo and Rio in 2014.
YSB Colombia
YSB Colombia was created in 2011 originally as Grameen Caldas and officially became YSB Colombia in 2013. It currently manages a portfolio of 3 social businesses to date, including a joint venture with potato giant McCain.
YSB Costa Rica
Launched the first corporate social business joint venture with a Costa Rican leading food company, Florida Ice and Farm Company, to produce food to combat malnutrition targeting children.
YSB Haiti
Based in Port-au-Prince, the YSB Haiti office was opened in 2010 with the support of our founding partner SAP. Currently, the team manages a portfolio of 9 social businesses. In 2013, YSB set up a new social business joint venture together with Virgin Unite and the Clinton Foundation – The Haiti Forest initiative.[5] The main objectives of Haiti Forest are to engage the local community in re-foresting Haiti, provide sustainable livelihoods to farmers across Haiti, create job opportunities and create an affordable and clean fuel source to reduce dependency on charcoal.
YSB India
YSB India was launched in 2011 in Mumbai, and 7 social businesses have received financing to date.
YSB Tunisia
Launched in 2013 in partnership with the African Development Bank, Tunisia was the first in a series of African countries to replicate the social business concept. In 2014, it launched its first accelerator program, locally known as iBDA.
YSB Uganda
In partnership with the African Development Bank, YSB Uganda was started in November 2013, and the first social businesses were supported in 2014.
See also
References
- Muhammad (2011). Building Social Business: The New Kind of Capitalism that Serves Humanity's Most Pressing Needs. PublicAffairs. pp. 256.ISBN 978-1-58648-956-4
- "'Social Business': Nobel Peace Prize Winner Muhammad Yunus Promotes New Way To Fight Poverty". Huffingtonpost.com. 2011-08-11. Retrieved 2013-11-17.
- Yunus, Muhammad (2009). Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future of Capitalism. PublicAffairs. pp. 320. ISBN 978-1-58648-667-9.
- "Nobel peace laureate Muhammad Yunus announces financing for 'social businesses' in Haiti". Fox News. 2012-10-13. Retrieved 2013-11-17.
- Rashmee Roshan Lall in Port-au-Prince. "Haiti to plant millions of trees to boost forests and help tackle poverty | World news". theguardian.com. Retrieved 2013-11-17.