I4A Wrap-Up Ceremony Recap

I4A Winners (Team Outcome, Team Pennsurance, Team Backe and DeGagne) and Organizing Committee (Djordjija Petkoski, Mahmoud Mohieldin, Demet Cabbar, Hanah Bae, Martin Sterlicci)

On May 12, the winners and finalists of Ideas for Action had the opportunity to present their ideas to leaders at the World Bank. Four of the teams were able to travel to the World Bank Headquarters in Washington, DC, and two teams presented their proposals via webcam.
Speakers at the event included World Bank Corporate Secretary and president’s special Envoy Mahmoud Mohieldin, Vice President of Global Practice at the World Bank Nena Stoiljkovic and lecturer and senior fellow at the Wharton Business School Djordjija Petkoski.
Mohieldan began by thanking all participants for their contributions to the competition and emphasizing the importance of youth in the post-2015 development agenda.
“The world needs new ideas,” Mohieldan said. “Big corporations can contribute but it will be the youth that are responsible for the ideas.”
Stoiljkovic expressed how impressed she was by the proposals.
“[When first reading the proposals] I didn’t realize that the people were so young.”
Petkoski added that “everybody is a winner”. “It is not about having the six best proposals but having 400 proposals submitted.”
He also emphasized that I4A does not offer the winners and finalists money, but something much more important — “the opportunity to influence the development process.”
First to present its proposal was Pennsurance, the winner of I4A, which presented a its proposal on microinsurance products for remittance service providers in India. All members of the team were seniors at the Wharton School of Business.
Pennsurance spent four to five months developing its winning ideas. Team member Keshav Garud said that five team members had not known each other prior to the competition, but were brought together by mutual friend and team member Arjun Bhaskar based on all of their interests in development.
“[I4A] incentivized us to construct an idea we would not have thought about otherwise,” Garud said. “I liked how it was self-motivated rather than driven by grades.”
Garud said that the team knew that it had a well-written proposal, but was surprised to win.
“The next step is implementation,” he said. “We are optimistic that the framework can be applied.”
Second to present was Team Outcome, the third placed team in the competition, whose members came from Bolivia, Peru, and the U.S. Its proposal concerned decreasing poverty in Peruvian mining communities.
Like Pennsurance, the members of Team Outcome were strangers prior to beginning I4A and were connected by team member María Eugenia Robles Mengoa. Given the geographical distance between members, the team had to develop and write its proposal via Skype calls and Google docs. Team member Rolando Barreto said that its proposal was based on his own experiences and observations about the use of mineral royalties in Cuzco, Peru.
Barreto said that winning third place was “really nice” and that his team is “motivated to make the ideas real.”
Team Backe & DeGagne presented third, with a proposal about development impact bonds and their application to clean cookstoves. Both members were also seniors at the Wharton School of Business and spent about two months developing the proposal.
“Lena [Backe] had expertise in cookstoves and I was familiar with social impact bonds,” team member Matthew DeGagne said. “This parlayed into development impact bonds.”
“We are excited to keep working on it in any capacity,” Backe added. “Most other competitions provide funding but [I4A] is a sustained opportunity rather than a one-off, which is especially important for this setting.”
The next two teams presented their proposals via webcam. From the Philippines, runner-up Team Impact PH discussed its ideas to develop the nonprofit sector in the Philippines, and from Nigeria, the second-placed Team Oxygen presented its proposal on promoting financial deepening and inclusion in the rice value chain in Nigeria. Finally, a representative from Team Rolling Stone gave a presentation on its ideas for introducing internet-based funding mechanisms for World Bank Operations.
Following the presentation of the proposals was a brief question and answer period and a reception.
The proposals of the top six teams can be found on the I4A website.

(written by Bryn Ferguson from the Daily Pennsylvanian)

Team Oxygen was able to present to our audience all the way from Nigeria!

I4A 2015 Winners Event Reminder

Join us to celebrate the I4A ’15 Winners and learn about their development finance ideas!

TUESDAY, May 12

3PM-4PM

J 1 – 050

A Reception will follow

The event will be live streamed on Youtube

Speakers include:

Mahmoud Mohieldin, Corporate Secretary and president’s Special Envoy

Prof. Djordjija Petkoski, Lecturer and Senior Fellow at Wharton Business School

Nena Stoiljkovic, Vice President, Global Practices

Ideas for Action Top Teams

Wrap-Up Ceremony

The World Bank Group and Wharton School invite you to celebrate the top six teams and discuss the future that these ideas have in financing the Post-2015 development agenda. Meet the winners, listen to their proposals, engage with their ideas. The event will be live-streamed. We hope to see you there!

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

3 PM – 4 PM EST

The World Bank Headquarters
J1-050
1818 H Street, NW, Washington, DC 20433

I4A May 12 Closing Session

Luis Montoya (President, PepsiCo): Responsible Leadership in the Post 2015 World

The Post-2015 Development Agenda- what’s it all about? who’s responsible for it? why does it matter to us?

These are the questions Luis Montoya will answer for us on Monday, April 20. The I4A team proudly welcomes the President of PepsiCo Latin America Beverages to Penn for an engaging conversation about #Post2015, development goals, Latin America, and youth engagement. Come hungry, leave with food for thought (and eat during – dinner will be served!).
Monday, April 20, 2015
Room 360 Jon M. Huntsman Hall

Webinar (3 PM): Post-2015 Agenda and Sustainable Development Goals
PepsiCo’s Eco-Challenge case study
Talk (5:30 PM): Responsible Leadership in the Post 2015 World
**Dinner will be served by PepsiCo at 5:30.**
Please RSVP to agale@wharton.upenn.edu by April 10
For questions or more information please contact Djordjija Petkoski at petkoski@wharton.upenn.edu

Luis Montoya flyer - 5 30pm talk (2)Luis Montoya flyer - 3pm Webinar (2)

Recap from the Case Competition Event

On March 30, we were happy to see about 30 young students sit excitedly to hear from Dr. Djordjija Petkoski and begin working on their case studies. Dr. Petkoski shared a little on how he got involved at the World Bank and how many countries he’s been fortunate to work with. His passion for world progress showed as he enigmatically spoke out about why young people should care about the development goals. “The world will not be the same once you graduate. In one year, two years, five years, ten, the world will look very different,” he said. He spoke about the respective responsibilities held by the government, corporations, and NGOs, and what each can do to make the world a better place to live for all people.

A Wharton + World Bank Event this coming Monday, Dec. 1

Mahmoud Mohieldin (World Bank) and David Shipman (Firmenich) will be joining us at the Wharton School for a presentation of Financing the Post 2015 Development Agenda and the Ideas for Action Initiative, and Sustainability with Passion, Talent and Integrity, respectively. We hope that registrants will be able to participate in this event.

The event will be live-streamed for the first 300 viewers. During the event, you have the chance to ask a question directly to the presenters through Twitter. All you need to do is write your questions to @2015_ideas. We will collect all questions and answer as many as we can at the Q&A session following the presentations.

Learn more about the event here. Click here to be directed to the live-stream video. Click here to view the powerpoint Mohieldin will use in today’s presentation.

Monday, December 1, 2015, 3:00 – 6:00 PM EST

Another update – The World Bank published on their Today Story regarding our joint initiative. You can download the document in PDF form.

We’re excited about all the recent activity. We hope you rest well this weekend and give many thanks. Have a Happy Thanksgiving!

The Youth Dialogues: Short Recap

Yesterday, thousands of visitors joined in the Youth Dialogues to discuss finding innovative financing solutions for the Post-2015 agenda.

According to the WB live report, 714 unique visitors watched the event online and there were 1,117 unique visitors to the page. According to the WB Live team these are good numbers. Online visitors represented a wide range of countries – top 10 being USA, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Egypt, UK, Peru, India, Canada, Nigeria.

Click here to see the flyer for the event. Click here to watch the video in full.

Youth Dialogues: Post-2015 Agenda

The Youth Dialogues: Post-2015 Agenda

On Thursday, November 6, at 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. ET, you can watch the live stream of the Youth Dialogues, an event held by the World Bank and the WGB Youth2Youth Community. The event is a conversation that will engage young development professionals on the post-2015 agenda and its importance for the youth today.  Through an engaging presentation and discussion the event will highlight their active role and encourage open dialogue and action between all involved.  In addition, the event will host the launch of the Ideas for Action competition.

The participants can tweet, ask questions and comment on it as they watch. We hope you can participate in watching the event.

Read more about the event and share your views here: wrld.bg/DRFWT