Pundita's Macro-Economics of Micro-Entrepreneurship
My fellow blogger Pundita -- mostly on hiatus but
returning to a weekly format in April -- very kindly responded to my query about
fellow blogger Eric Raymond's enthusiasm for micro-infrastructure:Kamen
is taking the next logical step: downsizing and decentralizing the power and
water infrastructure. And look at the way he plans to do it; not by enlisting
governments, but by tapping local entrepreneurialism.
I
asked:Do you think it is
possible for technology + entrepreneurship to (eventually) do an "end-run"
around traditional development organizations (e.g., the World Bank), and
demonstrate the viability of a truly grass-roots approach to social
upliftPundit replied in her usual
fact-filled, foot-noted analysis, but the key points
are:As the Kamen article
notes, those nifty energy generator/water purifier machines have to be mass
produced in order to put their price within the reach of village entrepreneurs.
As soon as you talk about mass production, you're talking about factories and
distribution, and labor unions, and financing. When talking about financing
you're talking about banks, which leads to banking regulations, and -- pretty
soon you are entangled in the very red tape that Kamen wants to
circumvent.Thus:So
that's where we are now. Microenterprise is coming into its own in development
circles. The catch is that microenterprise, with its emphasis on small-scale
entrepreneurs, requires microfinancing and thus, laws that don't mire small
business and creative microfinancing in red tape.
In short, Pundita captures the
point that Libertarians always prefer to ignore: you need a healthy system in
order to enable individual freedom, and you need good,
strong
governance to prevent one group's short-sighted self-interest from ruining the
system.
Posted: Thu - March 30, 2006 at 09:23 AM