Search Books
Entrepreneurship as Experie… Research Handbook on the Ec…

MicroFranchising: Creating Wealth at the Bottom of the Pyramid

Author Jason S. Fairbourne, Stephen W. Gibson, W. Gibb Dyer
Publisher Edward Elgar Pub
Category Business & Economics
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
40.00 47.00 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $14.21

✓ Usually ships in 24 hours

Share:
Book Details
ISBN / ASIN1848440537
ISBN-139781848440531
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank1,730,923
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

'Microfranchising has clues and cautions to help create wealth and lift humanity from poverty by energizing communities, families and individuals to profit-making productivity in cooperation with guidance, education, and other resources from established businesses, financial institutions and philanthropists. Anyone interested in shrinking the bottom of the world's income and wealth pyramid to create real widespread sustainability and all the consequent social and health benefits should read this book.'
- Joseph H. Astrachan, Kennesaw State University, US

'What do buying honey, renting mobile phones and fitting prescription glasses have in common? Answer: they are all activities that have expanded in low-income countries through microfranchising. This book brings together the ideas of researchers and social entrepreneurs at the heart of a movement to turn microfranchising into a mechanism for sustainable poverty reduction on a scale to match microfinance. A seductive mix of advocacy and realism, analysis and case-study provides readers with the ingredients to make up their own mind about the potential of microfranchising as a development tool.'
- James G. Copestake, University of Bath, UK

Poverty remains one of the most intractable problems in the developing world. Microfranchising offers great promise in alleviating poverty by aiding in the foundation of locally owned businesses. Microfranchising is defined as small businesses whose start-up costs are minimal and whose concepts and operations are easily replicated. It involves the systematizing of microenterprises to create and replicate turnkey businesses for the poor. With the awarding of the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize, attention has increased on this remarkable concept.

This unique book provides an overview of the need to alleviate poverty and what methods have been used in the past to do so (e.g. microcredit). It then introduces the concept of the microfranchise and discusses how this business model can be used in poverty alleviation. Different models of microfranchising are reviewed and specific case studies highlighted to show how it has worked in different parts of the world. This book concludes with a discussion of the advantages as well as the potential problems and pitfalls that accompany microfranchising.

This book is a must read for business scholars and economists, practitioners and lenders, members of NGOs dedicated to poverty alleviation and anyone else who is interested in learning about an innovative, business focused tool to alleviate poverty.

Contributors: N. Blumenthal, L.J. Christensen, W.G. Dyer, Jr., J.S. Fairbourne, N. Felder-Kuzu, M. Fertig, S.W. Gibson, J. Hatch, M. Henriques, M. Herr, M. Hoyt, E. Jamison, F. Jiwa, J. Kassalow, G. Macmillan, K. Magleby, H. Tzaras, J. Van Kirk, B. Wood, W. Woodworth

Towers of gold, feet of clay: The Canadian banks
View
The Twelve Organizational Capabilities
View
The Looting Machine: Warlords, Tycoons, Smugglers and …
View
The Real-Life MBA: The No-Nonsense Guide to Winning th…
View
Collins Cape Revision Guide - Management of Business (…
View
Glencoe Mathematics for Business and Personal Finance,…
View
Economics: Ap Edition (A/P Economics)
View
Money, Banking and Financial Markets
View
Money, Banking, and Financial Markets
View