Social Impact Bonds: The Secret To Boost Development & Job Creation In South Africa [UCT Report]

From Ideate Fri Apr 4 2014, 09:11:50

Social Impact Bonds (SIBs) hold tremendous potential for government to increase effective support for struggling entrepreneurs in South Africa, according to a new report presented to the National Treasury, the Jobs Fund, and the dti today. The report, a policy paper entitled Exploration of Social Impact Bonds for SME Development, was put together by the [...] Related posts:

South Africa Announces Its First Collaborative Hub To Support Innovation And Enterprise Development In Africa

Report: Business Opportunities And Franchising In South Africa

EUR 100m Boost For Green Electricity In South Africa

[view whole blog post ]
 See More    |     Report Abuse


You might also be interested in the following news stories:

South Africa:  Search Continues for Missing 6-Year-Old Joshlin Smith - South African News Briefs - April 19, 2024 (news)
allAfrica.com
19 April 2024

  No Sign of Missing 6-Year-Old Joshlin Smith Despite Search Efforts Western Cape police have dispelled fresh rumors about the sighting of missing six-year-old Joshlin Smith in the Saldanha Bay ... [read more]

South Africa:  Power Outage Sparks Days of Protest in Joburg (news)
GroundUp
19 April 2024

Protests started on Tuesday, culminating with major roads to Orlando East, Pennyville, and Noordgesig being blocked on Thursday On Tuesday residents in Noordgesig started to protest about a prolonged ... [read more]

South Africa:  Corruption Accused Edwin Sodi's Company Still Not Blacklisted By Treasury (news)
GroundUp
19 April 2024

City of Tshwane asked for Blackhead Consulting to be put on the list of restricted suppliers more than two months ago Blackhead Consulting is being probed by the Special Investigating Unit over ... [read more]



blogAfrica is allAfrica.com's platform to help you keep an ear on the African blogosphere. We draw diverse voices from around the world who post regularly and insightfully about African issues. Bloggers, submit your blog's rss-feed!