April 10, 2008

Idol Gives Back, We Give Smart

So you may have gotten misty-eyed at Idol Gives Back. It's a great show for a great cause. But we don't want to neglect other good charitable/social entrepreneurship organizations out there because we're momentarily inspired by TV Land. If you're in the giving spirit due to Ryan Seacrest and the gang, here are a few good philanthopies -- ones that focus on more than alms, and are designed to help create sustainable means of subsistence and opportunity (in no particular order):

1. Kiva - Individual to Individual micro-lending.
2. Ashoka - Organization devoted to fostering social entrepreneurship.
3. Omidyar Network - Org devote to investing in social entrepreneurship.
4. Prosper - Domestic micro-lending.
5. Grameen Foundation - Non-prof arm of the original microlender devised by Nobel Prize winner Mohammed Yunus.
6. Open World - Helping people in the third world develop free zones, technology and property rights institutions.
7. Mercy Corps - Helps the very poor while supporting the benefits of trade.
8. Heifer International - Helps people gain property in valuable livestock.
9. Red Cross - New CEO, great brand, good work.
10. City Year - Diverse set of people spend a year mentoring, teaching and giving.

Just think of how much these organizations could grow/do if the government didn't take so much of our money.
-Max Borders

March 28, 2008

Libertarianism for Progressives

Print and read.
-Max Borders

February 05, 2008

Conscious Capitalism a la Bill Gates

This talk isn't perfect, but it articulates three things everyone should remember:

a) Enterprises are the engines of wealth creation;
b) All values - even benevolent values - can figure into the world of value exchange;
c) Social entrepreneurship is possible because of a) and b).

It's long, but check it out. Bill Gates at Davos.
-Max Borders

January 17, 2008

From Leftist to Libertarian?

Interesting interview with John Mackey, CEO of Whole Foods on his evolution from democratic socialist to compassionate free-marketeer. Mackey reminds us that even our most altruistic values are still values and we can create markets in them.
-Max Borders

January 16, 2008

Prosper: So Cool... Microlending in the USA

OK, so I'm probably the last to hear about this, but a friend got me interested in Prosper, a micro-credit organization that facilitates loans between two independent parties.

In other words, you can loan someone $100 to get out of a bind at %15 interest. Someone might come along and offer them the same loan for 14%, so it relies on something of a reverse auction model.

In any case, this is another way that markets and social entrepreneurship are helping people. And don't forget about the fortune at the bottom of the pyramid.
-Max Borders

August 31, 2007

Healthcare: Coletti Spells it Out for the Demogogues

This is an excellent piece on some of the issues in healthcare reform. Those who blindly blame greedy corporations for our healthcare woes never look to the actual source of all the pathologies -- the government.

Coletti doesn't go as far as to accuse the left of trying to destroy healthcare markets with regulation. For the record, I do. Lemme borrow from an upcoming piece I wrote:

I believe the majority party actually knows about these pathologies. In fact, I believe they are making concerted efforts at the state and federal levels to exacerbate these problems in the name of consumer protection and insuring children. Whether through expanding children’s Medicaid into the middle class (which drives up premiums), increasing the number of state mandates (which drives up premiums), or limiting competition through keeping the tax code intact (which drives up premiums), the party in power is using regulation to crank down the government vise in anticipation of a final outcry from Americans who are tired of paying these rates and who have no idea why it’s happening. And with that outcry, they will then be able to sell America a single-payer system like Castro’s.

July 25, 2007

Compassion and Capitalism

Stossel has a column on Brink Lindsay's new book The Age of Abundance: How Prosperity Transformed America's Politics and Culture. To tip off the article, Stossel makes a simple, elegant point that must be repeated time and again:

"In political life today, you are considered compassionate if you demand that government impose your preferences on others. But what's compassionate about that? Compassionate is "live and let live.""

I would add that the so-called compassion of state welfare also strips the most important aspect of our compassion -- the impetus to help others. When government bureaucrats use the coercive state apparatus to help people in the manner they see fit (crowding out private charity, introducing government inefficiency, and social dependence), they invariably make individuals less inclined to direct resources or cares to causes they deem worthy. The onus of charity is removed from the citizen and given to the state. Social entrepreneurship and markets in benevolence suffer.

I'm looking forward to reading Brink's book and hope that the upshot is that we can reconcile personal wealth and our sense of benevolence without government elites and philosopher kings. From Brink's book:

"American capitalism is derided for its superficial banality, yet it has unleashed profound, convulsive social change," he writes. "Condemned as mindless materialism, it has burst loose a flood tide of spiritual yearning. The civil rights movement and the sexual revolution, environmentalism and feminism, the fitness and health-care boom and the opening of the gay closet, the withering of censorship and the rise of a 'creative class' of 'knowledge workers' -- all are the progeny of widespread prosperity." -Max Borders

July 06, 2007

Uncompelled Benevolence

It's refreshing to see an article like this one from the Huffington Post (particularly from the left, with its usual emphasis on top-down redistribution). I've always been a big fan of the social entrepreneurship movement. Usually, one of its features is that you don't forcibly strip resources from people for causes you think are good. Rather, people network to support causes they deem important without the use of force. There is a good way to be good citizens and to show benevolence towards our fellow man: The welfare state ain't it. Foreign aid ain't it. Draconian environmental regs ain't it. Social entrepreneurship would flourish if the government got off of so many of our resources for its pet causes. And we currently waste a lot of money on political activism.

Social Problem? Let us get it done.

Long live Mohammed Yunus, Pierre Omidyar, and Hernando de Soto. We can take a leaf from their playbooks here in NC, for sure. People interested in social entrepreneurship should check out Zaadz.com--a social networking site devoted to volunteerism for social causes. (Warning there are a lot of crusty homeopaths, herbalists and weirdos on the site, but the volunteer network is great.) -MB

May 24, 2007

Conscious Capitalism, Peace and Education Reform

Here's a great Podcast by a radio station in Texas of FLOW's Michael Strong.  Michael gets it in so many ways. I would strongly encourage leftish types to listen to this.