Announcing the Winners of the Ideas for Action Competition 2015

First Place: Team Pennsurance
Creating New Microinsurance Products for Remittance Service Providers in India
Members: Ezgi Aytac, Arjun Bhaskar, Keshav Garud, Matthew McPhail, James Zhou

Second Place: Team Oxygen
Innovative PPP Model for Promoting Financial Deepening and Inclusion in the Rice Value Chain in Nigeria
Members: Michael Adeola, Chioma Ukwuagu, Ogomegbunam Anagwu, Henry Ushie, Maureen Orji

Third Place: Team Outcome
Decreasing poverty in the mining communities of the world through the empowerment of communities in the control of mining royalties: an application to the Peruvian case
Members: Alberth Rolando Barreto Fortón, Diana Lucia Chaman Salas, María Eugenia Robles Mengoa, Alexander Matthew Spevack

Runners up:
Team Impact. PH
An initiative to enhance and transform the Philippine nonprofit sector
Members: Carissa Feria and Joan Cybil Yao

Team Backe & DeGagne
Development Impact Bonds: The Power of Participatory Development in Creating Sustainable Market Demand: A Case study of Open Fires and Inefficient Cookstoves
Members: Lena Backe and Matthew DeGagne

Team Rolling Stones
Introducing Internet-Based Funding Mechanisms for World Bank Operations
Members: Joulan Abdul Khalek, Till Cordes, Zhenbo Hou, Tamara Zakharia

Top Eighteen Finalists:
Team Development Daredevils

Members: Aanchal Anand & Colin Sollitt

Team Synergy
Members: Abhimanyu Roy, Sanjula Bhaumik, Alok Kumar, Chinalee Garg, and Rajiv Krishna

Team Shark Tank
Members: Caroline Gezon, Laura Baker, Kate McNabb, Josh Talbot, and Sania Salmon

Team Politicuz
Members: Javier Rodriguez

Team EcoExperiencias
Members: Brenda López Miramontes, Damián Chan K’in Miranda, Héctor Albores León, Héctor Sandoval Vargas

Team Y&R
Members: Yugank Goyal and Ranjan Ghosh

Team Catalyst
Members: Arnav Siddhartha Kapur, Tom Rutter, William John Glennerster, Anand Sharma, and Henrik Sachs

Team HealthLending
Members: Fuming Guo, Finlay Mungall, and Tingting Guo

Team Bottom-Liners
Members: Leslie Ngwae Ngwa and Kingsley Nfor Monde

Team Africa Prosperity
Members: Landry Signé and Matthieu Ostrander

Team Migrants for Development
Members: Victoria Finn and Paul P. Maeser

Team Foster Capital
Members: David Berdugo and Roma Poberejsky

Knowledge-Exchange

Hello Everyone!

We hope everything is going well in your respective locations around the globe! As we are entering Spring, we are also nearing the final date where we will announce the final winner of our competition. Will I4A drop off the face of the earth after April 5? We’re glad you asked!

The answer is no, we hope to continue engagement with everyone keeping up with I4A activity.

Ideas for Action is primarily a knowledge exchange platform.

We are a platform connecting individuals all around the world with others who have valuable thoughts and ideas about the SDGs, Post-2015 Development Agenda, and any other topic related to the future development of our world. While connecting, we hope to engage and contribute our own voice to the conversation. The competition is the catalyst to sparking global conversation. We’ve been happy to see teams form by members on opposite sides of the globe. In a similar manner, we hope everyone who knows about I4A will take advantage of this blog, our Facebook, and Twitter to reach out not only to us, but also to other individuals all around the world who may have exciting ideas. We want you to reach out to us and others. We want your brilliant ideas.

Best,

I4A Team

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I4A first rounds

Thank you to everyone who made submissions to I4A 2015. We received hundreds of submissions and were incredibly impressed with the quality of your work. Please note that due to the quantity of submissions in different languages, we have evaluated submissions in English first, and will reach out to those who submitted non-English proposals soon about their finalist status.

We have selected and contacted a short list of “finalists” who will continue into the next phase of the competition. If you were not contacted, please know that we absolutely appreciate the time and energy you put into your submission and regret we cannot give personalized feedback on each document.

We hope to further recognize submissions that were particularly impressive but are not in our pool of finalists. Please stay tuned for more information about that and the outcome of the competition.

Best,
I4A Review Team

Implementing a transformative development agenda – key questions ahead of 2015 Addis Ababa Financing Conference

Mohieldin

Here at Wharton this past Monday, we were grateful to host Mahmoud Mohieldin (World Bank) to speak on financing the post-2015 development agenda and David Shipman (Firmenich) to speak on Passion, Talent, and Integrity. Their talks were thought-provoking, passionate, and left our minds alive with ideas. To all those who were able to attend the live-stream, we were glad we could hear your questions, and we appreciate your participation. To those who weren’t able to attend, you can watch the full Mohieldin talk here, and see pictures here.

As you prepare your proposals, you may want to keep up with the different voices speaking up about the agenda and the SDGs. Below is a post written by Leah Worrall (European Report on Development) and Dirk Willem te Velde (ODI) where they discuss their progress and some questions in light of the Addis Ababa conference. You can find more blogs like this through our twitter feed. Our Twitter is always updating with new videos, articles, and blogs you can use to hear what others have to say about the post-2015 mevelopment agenda and the MDGs.

As always, please reach out to us on email or twitter if you have any questions. If you need to recruit team members, comment on our blog to reach out to others. Make use of the comment functionality of our blog to speak to us or one another.

With only two months left before submission deadlines, we hope you are all as excited as we are. We look forward to the fantastic ideas ahead of us!


From Business Fights Poverty:

In September 2015, the international community is expected to agree an ambitious post-2015 development agenda (the Sustainable Development Goals, SDGs) to succeed the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), aiming to combine economic, social and environmental objectives in a balanced manner. At the same time there will be a financing for development conference in Addis Ababa in July 2015 which will discuss the means of implementation framework. A range of reports released this year are helping to frame the discussions. In August, the Intergovernmental Committee of Experts onSustainable Development Financing (ICESDF) discussed its recommendations. In September the New Climate Economyreported on green growth. This week’s OECD Development Co-operation Report is the latest to discuss financing for development.  This blog reviews the progress made so far in the context of the ongoing work for the European Report on Development (ERD) 2014/15 and concludes by formulating three questions we should be asking ahead of the Addis conference.

First let’s look at some history. The discussion that framed the implementation of the 2002 Monterrey Consensus on financing for development focused primarily on mobilising resources for development, and less on the effective use of finance. The approach was to estimate ‘finance needs’ to meet the MDGs, which we know are subject to significant variation under different models and underlying assumptions (including policy context considerations). The focus of the international community was on raising levels of ODA for specific social goals, which whilst vital also distracted the international community from considering the range of flows and complementary policies for a much broader sustainable development transformation.

So what do the reports say this time around? The OECD Development Co-operation Report released this week provides an important overview of the various sources of finance available for sustainable development financing and asks where the financial resources for the SDGs will come from. Policy considerations are woven throughout the report, although a more practical analysis of policies in the context of reaching SDGs would have merited further elaboration. A key contribution of the report is in recognising the importance of “catalytic use of ODA”, for example, in raising domestic resources (through domestic tax reform) or using development finance institutions to mobilise other resources including private sources. It also includes an innovative (finance) target of a 2% of GDP for international co-operation on global public goods.

The ICESDF report reviews four types of finance that can be geared towards development – domestic, international, public and private. There is a brief overview of finance needs but warns that “quantifying needs is complex and necessarily imprecise”.  Key areas of policy reform are presented for each of the categories of finance. These are a useful first step in discussions on a beyond-finance implementation agenda. This analysis could have been strengthened by drawing out lessons from country case studies and other evidence on the policies towards creating an enabling environment for sustainable development.

The New Climate Economy report, rather than starting from the point of view of finance flows, instead focuses on the goal of achieving lasting economic growth whilst also tackling the risks of climate change. The world will be undergoing transformation over the next 15 years and beyond, so how do we shape our economies in light of climate change? The role for finance and policy is woven into a storyline on raising resource efficiency, innovation and infrastructure. After transformations in labour and capital productivity, the next step will be to transform resource efficiency through effective policy and investment decisions (see also the ERD 2011/12 addressing resource efficiency). When dealing with infrastructure, the report further argues that: “Investment is hardly constrained by a shortage of savings”. After all some US$ 17 trillion of global investment is financed each year and part of this could be directed towards delivering the SDGs, including through infrastructure investment. The crucial question then relates to the effective mobilisation and use of finance flows through appropriate policy.

In preparing the ERD 2014/15 on finance and other means of implementation in a transformative post-2015 context, we turn the financing agenda up-side down. Instead of focusing on the supply side of finance, we take the transformation objectives (economic, social and environmental) as a starting point, and then examine how finance fits in. Further we focus on the effective use and mobilisation of finance. This approach targets four types of “enablers”, without which sustainable development is not feasible: institutions, resources (such as infrastructure or human and natural capital), technology and networks. The research examines the links between finance and policies in developing enablers for sustainable development.

This approach yields interesting insights. For example, ERD evidence from Tanzania suggests that whilst there was private sector interest in renewable energy, the complementary policies were not in place to scale-up investments in renewable energy. By contrast, a better regulatory framework in Kenya has allowed faster diffusion of renewables. In Mauritius, appropriate capacity and institutions (including the Joint Economic Committee that strengthened links between state and business) to design and implement a strategic agenda attracted the finance necessary for economic transformation. Hence, the enabling environment was the catalyst for finance, rather than the other way around. For more on these case studies, see our article from last month.

Global policies, rather than finance in isolation, are also essential for sustainable development transformation. For example, the removal of fossil fuel subsidies (at US$ 550 billion in 2010) and an international agreement on climate change at theUnited Nations climate conference in Paris in December this year would reduce the need for additional finance. If a global agreement was reached on trade facilitation, this would be worth just as much as the value of Aid for Trade which is currently being directed to developing countries. Better global banking rules would also help to avoid future financial crises and enhance the volumes and stability of international private finance.

Taking this together, we argue that the international community should be asking the following three priority questions ahead of Addis Ababa:

  1. Until recently, we have been asking “where is the finance coming from”? Instead we should be asking how can countries individually and globally create the conditions (through policies and enablers) to attract the various finance flows available for achieving sustainable development objectives? The Tanzania, Kenya and Mauritius are just some of the ERD examples showing that complementary policies matter from mobilisation and effective use of finance.
  2. Over the last decade we have been focused on mobilising ODA to fill estimated finance gaps, but instead we need to be asking how can international public finance best contribute to the enablers of transformative change? For example,ODI work in Uganda suggests that renewable energy investments by DFIs can transform the domestic economy and create jobs.
  3. Globally, caution is required before jumping on an aid-for-global-public-goods- bandwagon. Finance (e.g. beyond-aid) can also contribute, and a priority question is how can a reformed international system (e.g. trade, climate, tax rules) contribute?

The ERD 2014/15 is asking these and other questions and is gathering evidence towards answering them.

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!

Updates

Hello everyone! We are about a month away from releasing the prompt, and a couple months away from the deadline for submissions. So far, we have about 500 registrants and a handful of teams signed up, and we hope more people register as time nears.

If you haven’t already, follow us on Twitter to stay in the know of competition details. We will also release tips and questions that will spark ideas and guide you in structuring your proposals. We want to make #ideasforaction an active topic of discussion. If you’re on Twitter, give us a shout-out, introduce yourselves, introduce your ideas, and engage with us!

Our partner YABT has created a video promoting the competition in Portuguese, Spanish, and English. Watch and share the videos with your Portuguese and Spanish speaking networks:

Spanish: http://youtu.be/Wt5NWNh65uw

Portuguese: http://youtu.be/PrEFvp9kIxk

English: http://youtu.be/3N3ZOh-HZXk

The Stockholm Environment Institute will host an upcoming seminar: What Could the Sustainable Development Goals Mean for Sweden and Europe? This seminar will be held on November 27th with representatives of civil society, the Swedish government, and the European Commission. The event will be livestreamed. Read more about the event here.

In the next couple weeks, we will begin posting information to aid in addressing each of the pillars of the competition. Stay tuned!

We are excited for you all to share your ideas with us. Have a wonderful Thanksgiving and we’ll talk to you soon!

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

Responses to this Week’s Pre-Competition Question on Aid Delivery

Thank you for emailing in your responses to “what aid delivery models do you think are poised to make an outsized impact in the next 5 years”! We’d like to share a couple of them with you to help you think about possible topics to address when the competition question is released next month.
 
Feel free to comment on this post or send in additional thoughts to ideasforaction2015@gmail.com
 
Response from Kat Muller, Monitor Deloitte, New York City (USA)
Outcomes-based aid is somewhat of a hot topic right now, but in my opinion, certainly qualifies as innovative and as having the potential to make an outsized impact in the development space. I suppose it’s more about development financing than aid delivery, but I’m going with it.
Outcomes-based aid is essentially any arrangement where payment is dependent on or linked to the delivery of pre-defined outcomes. The approach is also called “cash on delivery” aid or “payment for success;” social impact bonds are a well-known example. Essentially, this approach is structured to offer several benefits: reducing risk for public funders while increasing accountability; providing further investment opportunities to socially-minded investors; allowing service providers to decide how to seek results (as opposed to traditional aid which is often provided with strict programmatic direction from often far-away donors); and providing incentive and funding for preventive interventions to be implemented, whereas public budgets for preventive interventions might be cut in favor of aid directed at already-ailing populations.
The concept is certainly exciting, and excitement around the concept may just be renewed after the recent (Aug 2014) announcement that the first results of the first-ever social impact bond, directed at reducing recidivism in Peterborough Prison in the UK, imply program success (8.5% reduction in recidivism compared to a control group) and a pending positive return for investors.
Like any approach, outcomes-based aid is not without its challenges. It has seen relatively slow pick-up, for a number of reasons: gathering a group of stakeholders interested in the relatively complex arrangement is difficult; agreeing upon and measuring outcomes, not to mention determining causation of outcomes, is difficult; finding investors willing to take on the risk of such arrangements is difficult; and, as implicitly acknowledged by the purpose of the Ideas for Action competition, the people in charge often like to stick to what they know. That said, I’m hopeful that given the well-documented growing interest in impact investing, the work being done by DFIs and foundations to support the aid ecosystem, and the success of the first social impact bond, that the outcomes-based approach will be highly impactful in the coming decade.
 
Response from Will Docimo, Deloitte, Washington DC (USA)
An issue facing development is the lack of private investment. One potential would be public/private partnerships funded by the Bank. This venture would allow for private companies to train and employ local talent for local needs. With funds from the Bank, investment risk would be diminished and allow for new technologies to be utilized by within the community. An example of this would be mHealth.