PRESS RELEASE

New Competition Launched to Promote Job Creation in Rural Egypt

November 8, 2012




International, Local Partners Join Forces to Support Innovation in the Agricultural Sector

CAIRO, November 8, 2012 – A World Bank managed funding mechanism launched today will commit $1.4 million to improving the lives of people in rural Egypt. The Egypt Development Marketplace (DM) will award a series of grants and provide technical support to organizations with a demonstrated potential of creating jobs in the agricultural sector.

Our focus this time around is on Upper Egypt,” said Hartwig Schafer, World Bank Country Director for Egypt. “With this open competition we hope to stimulate the rural economy as a way of creating opportunities in remote regions and villages where poverty is most acute.”

The Development Marketplace encourages applications for funding from private companies and civil society organizations with a clear social mission. Applications go through rigorous, merit-based scrutiny by panels of development experts from inside and outside the World Bank. Each DM has a separate theme, with the latest one in Egypt focused on organizations working on food processing, agricultural waste management, handicrafts, and other aspects of the rural economy.

A series of seminars will be held in four governorates in Upper Egypt, Assuit, Qena, Aswan and Menia, to reach out to businesses and civil society organizations and encourage broad-based participation in the competition. 

"The Egypt Development Marketplace is designed to provide financial and capacity building resources for social enterprises as they refine and strengthen their business models,” said Drew von Glahn, Team Leader of the World Bank Institute's Development Marketplace program. “We look for these organizations to increase their ability to scale their operations, access follow-on growth funding and ultimately position themselves to have long-term social impact.” 

Apart from funding, grantees will also be eligible for advisory support in areas ranging from corporate governance to environmental management from the International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group which focuses exclusively on private sector investment in developing countries. Technical support will also be available from Egypt's most prominent companies, foundations, and international organizations. 

The competition was made possible with support from local and international partners including: AlKorra Foundation for Sustainable Development (Egypt), Sawiris Foundation for Social Development, Australian Government Overseas Aid Program (AusAID), Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), Department for International Development for the United Kingdom (DFID). International Labour Organization (ILO), Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Finland, and the Swiss State Secretariat for Economic Affairs (SECO). 

The social enterprises will benefit from technical support from a number of high performing organizations, including; Ashoka, Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), Misr El Kheir Foundation, Nahdet El Mahrousa, Social Contract Center (SCC) as well as corporate-sector partners including Cisco Systems, Inc., Delta Aromatic, Innoventures, Microsoft Corporation and Sobh for Food Industries and Coldstore.

Socially-conscious enterprises can play a powerful role in Egypt’s development, not only by creating jobs, but also by tackling a host of pressing social issues,” said Magdi M. Amin, IFC Manager of the Investment Climate Business Line in the Middle East and North Africa. This competition will help highlight the tremendous work some of these businesses do." 

The DM program, housed in the World Bank and administered by the World Bank Institute, and funded by various partners has, since its inception in 1998, awarded more than US$60 million grants to more than 1,200 innovative projects identified through country, regional, and global DM competitions.

Media Contacts
In Washington
Rachel Winter Jones
Tel : (202) 458-4720
rjones1@worldbank.org
In Cairo
Eman Wahby
Tel : (202) 2574-1670
ewahby@worldbank.org

PRESS RELEASE NO:
2013/141/MENA

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