Friday 2 November 2018

Blending Objectives between Humanitarian Actors and the Private Sector in Refugee Hosting Areas


Over the last thirty years, Kakuma, which hosts one of Africa’s largest refugee camps has grown from a tiny settlement to a medium sized city. But the economy has not had a chance to develop normally. This is because the economy has developed under the umbrella of international aid while trying to satisfy an increasing labour force, growing consumer market and growing productivity. Humanitarian and development agencies have fuelled growth, but at the same time left the market unpredictable and inorganic.

The humanitarian community first came to Kakuma with the sole purpose of protecting the refugees. The mandate of UNHCR, the agency leading and co-ordinating majority of the humanitarian interventions in the region is still primarily considered a protection agency. It is important to note that Kakuma is still rightly considered to be an emergency context and in any such context, there are populations that require protection first before any other form of integrated development.

However, while Kakuma finds itself in an emergency context, it is also now a severely protracted displacement situation. A while ago humanitarian agencies began planning for the people who live in Kakuma to start living lives like everyone else around the world. That is, assuming that if Kakuma is a vibrant town, then the living standards should improve and grow in line with other urban settlements around the world.

In an open market, innovators try to make lives better for everyone through their interventions and investments and generate a range of rewards for themselves at the same time. In the last five years the humanitarian community has begun to sell the idea on a global level that with the right kind of investment, the private sector could improve the living conditions in Kakuma through commercially viable enterprises. The basis for this is that Kakuma and its environs are inhabited by around 300,000 people who are either directly or indirectly engaged in its local economy. Most of the inhabitants have a vested interest in the integrated development of the locality.



Recent studies on economic opportunities available in Kakuma and Kalobeyei say that predictable and organic economic growth in Kakuma will be based on the availability of natural resources in combination with the huge potential in the labour force. Agriculture and high labour intensity industries will leverage off these factors. Successful enterprises will include a combination of both, such as value-adding to agricultural products. Examples of this include tanneries using livestock hides and designing leather products, or tinning locally grown vegetables such as peas and tinned tomatoes. These enterprises will become opportunities for refugees to increase their incomes and eventually become self-reliant and contribute to the host country economy. There are already numerous examples of refugees breaking through economic barriers, supporting themselves and their families with home-grown businesses, and participating in the growth of the local economy.

According to UNHCR and the academic studies, the private sector should be ready and willing to invest in both the consumer market as well as productivity in Kakuma and Kalobeyei. However, so far, the private sector has not really taken up this call and almost no deeply researched investment-ready business plans have been outlined that take into account the distortions and challenges present within Kakuma’s economy as a result of the town and camp’s inorganic, aid-dependent growth.

Kakuma’s story is being played out around the region, such as in Uganda and Rwanda where refugees have freedom of movement, freedom to work and in most cases have been provided with land that offers more in the way of productivity than Kakuma’s. Yet private sector investors have been slow to invest in refugee hosting areas and site numerous barriers to doing business there. Firstly, distorted economies have led to complicated power dynamics, with examples of local actors monopolising services and setting up cartels. Local administrative leaders hold an unusual interest in business going on in refugee settlements because of the power they hold over physical access to the space, both of refugees and investors. Secondly, they site need for large scale investments that will improve ease of doing business in refugee hosting areas. Large scale irrigation schemes, access to power, and improved roads are examples of this. Refugee hosting areas are generally very remote and far from existing import/export hubs or major commercial centres. Connected to this third reason sited is that while refugee hosting areas might be commercially viable, the private sector looks at the most commercially viable location for any given project when making investment decisions. On that basis refugee hosting areas must put forth a comparative advantage over other locations in the region and this is often difficult. A fourth reason is connected with the workforce. After taking into account all of the above, the private sector fear that refugee population does not have the requisite skill levels to engage in business and more alarmingly, that after decades of a dependency culture they will lack the motivation needed for successful enterprise.

To address these barriers the humanitarian sector will continue to play a role, beyond that of providing protection. While the national governments take on more responsibility for refugee hosting areas, there is a need for streamlined lobbying for more transparent power dynamics within refugee hosting areas. The humanitarian community, using organic business growth success stories as examples, will be the key player advocating for these large scale investments. Moreover, the humanitarian community will still be relied on to educate and prepare the population with skills that respond to the demands of the emerging organic economy.

Most importantly, thorough business plans will have to be conducted taking into account these barriers not just focusing on the opportunities. We have found that deeply researched business plans bring out these barriers clearly without providing concrete answers to how to reduce the barriers in the short term. The barriers are complex and so instead these business plans must lay out a range of strategies that may or may not be successful, and an approach of design, iteration and analysis.

In this context any company, implementer or investor going into a refugee hosting area should have a long term view and an eye for blended outcomes between pure market-based opportunities while still learning and playing the role of protecting and building the capacity of the vulnerable population. We have found that investors who support this approach exist, but to bring them in the language has to change from diving straight in with the “commercial viability” narrative. A community of actors who can build the dialogue between the protection focused humanitarian sector and the commercially focused private sector has been the missing piece until now. There is an emerging group of agencies, companies and investors willing to play this role and I believe the time has come to bring them together so that they can greater understand the role they play and path to achieving success. This could possibly take the form of a network or working group, a series of conferences or meet-ups, and alliance of like-minded actors, or even a tightly-knit consortium. Any thoughts welcome.

Thursday 18 January 2018

A Transparent Cryptocurrency for Development / Humanitarian Funding?

2017 was the year in which Bitcoin became mainstream, and my grandmother and delivery man started talking about it. (Not literally – my grandmother turns her TV off at the wall because she’s afraid of the remote control – it’s an English idiom). As a teacher/NGO worker I’m not an expert on cryptocurrency but I watch the Blockchain TED talks and have done my share of guessing who Satoshi Nakamoto might be.

Those of you who know more might be able to help me on an idea I have that could be applied to the non-profit sector, to see if it is in the pipeline already or has serious pitfalls. I know that people in the industry are experimenting with how Ethereum and Bitcoin could be used in humanitarian funding, but I'm not convinced they are the best currencies for it.

There are now literally thousands of cryptocurrencies, each with different attributes. Nearly all are based in some way on the concept of the blockchain ledger. Many have gained market value through selling points such as fast transactions times, anonymity and being under the radar of regulation.  Coins have gained their own value against the dollar and as such have become investment opportunities – for better or worse.

Due to the ledger system everyone using the system would have access to the entire history of that currency if it wasn’t for encryption - but for every coin I have found so far the system has ingenious ways of encrypting this information so that it is hidden and unhackable. This makes sense –for a large crypto currency it would not be beneficial for everyone on the ledger to be able to see the details of every transaction ever made using that currency. We should sometimes be free to make payments without other people knowing. What if we want to give an anonymous donation, tip someone, or buy cream for athlete’s foot?

But is there a currency that can make sections or chains of the ledger completely open and transparent? Let’s call the potential coin altcoin, since there is probably an altcoin that does this, and give a few examples of how this could be beneficial.

·         A small savings group in a community (SACCO) convert their fiat currency into altcoin and all transactions are done on an open ledger, including loans and repayments. Accounting is no longer necessary as every transaction is visible to anyone who wants to look.


·         An agency like Xavier Project wants to raise funds to build a classroom. We launch an appeal requesting altcoin from our donors. The donors donate altcoin into our altcoin wallet and the transactions go onto the ledger. We procure contractors who all demonstrate that they use altcoin in their transactions. We pay the contractors to build the classroom in altcoin and they pay their staff and buy supplies using altcoin. The original donors are able to see every transaction, and really see how much Xavier Project and the contractor are keeping as their cut.


·         Imagine the benefit of this where there are multiple layers of donors, contractors and subcontractors. The cement supplier in the example above gets his funds from the contractor, who gets her funds from Xavier Project, who get their funds from UNHCR, who get their funds from the US Government, who get their funds from US taxpayers. Donors would be able to see where their money is going, and as of now they would be able to see how much gets absorbed (wasted?) by intermediary agencies.


·         Donors could then be better informed as to where they are giving their money and the function of some intermediaries would be questioned. In the short term agencies and contractors offering this level of transparency would gain more support and grow rather than lose significance. In the longer term their role in transferring material value could fade. (XP would love this by the way – we could evolve to disbursing only intellectual value rather than material value, and let the material value flow directly from donor to beneficiary.)


·         Use of cryptocurrency in this value chain could reduce transaction costs to negligible amounts, which would be particularly significant with international transactions – up to 7% of the original donation amount could be saved.  


·         The open ledger system could also cut huge expenses for the agencies as they would need a far reduced finance team. Programme team members would no longer have to worry about getting receipts for every single payment, a job which is even more laborious than it sounds with all the accompanying paperwork that must go with it. Our full-time team spend at least 35% of their time on work surrounding transactions in some way. I would estimate that if we used an open ledger system across the organisation it could cut this down to 10% thus saving 25% of man-hours.


The channels and extent of openness would have to be made clear. The ideal may be to have “giving chains” hosted by an agency which is open to everyone on that giving chain. For example, if UNHCR wants to achieve outcomes of education for refugees, they set up an open giving chain on the ledger whereby everyone who gives or receives on that ledger can see the full ledger. Xavier Project could also host multiple giving chains that can be seen by everyone on that chain. The degree of openness could be a pre-requisite for contracting agencies or suppliers, so they will know how much they will be expected to share before they are selected, as will everyone else on that giving chain – so a level of anonymity or privacy at any stage can be an option as long as it is clear in advance.

One thing most actors on this value chain would fear, from donor, to institutional agency, to NGO to contractor, is the volatility of most crypto currencies at the moment. I don’t see this changing at least in the next decade.  Currently coins can lose or gain 50% of their value in day. Therefore the best altcoin for this concept would be one which is pegged to the US Dollar. There are several  examples of this such as Ziftr, CoinUSD and Nubit, but it seems the most successful one so far has been Tether. Tether has managed to maintain 1:1 USD value pretty much since its launch in 2015.

A pegged cryptocurrency would mean that if a donor buys said altcoin to donate to the chain of giving, it will not lose or gain value before it finally gets to the cement provider or labourer a few months later.

So what we need is a cryptocurrency that is pegged to the dollar and that has a ledger that can be transparent to varying degrees. Does it exist?