The Real Game-Changer: Impact Investment and the Blockchain

The Real Game-Changer: Impact Investment and the Blockchain

Last part of my series about how the Blockchain will change Doing Good forever

This is the last in a series of three posts, each of them addressing a different but related categories of opportunities related to blockchain in the development sector, and looking at possible applications in each. You should read the first two parts – part 1 on how the blockchain will change the financial realities in under-served markets and part 2 outlining opportunities that go beyond money and identity, into more sophisticated – and potentially more impactful – business opportunities on these market segments.

However, the most interesting opportunities in my opinion present themselves in the area of impact investment. We are currently dealing with an unfortunate reality: modern markets are saturated and there are diminishing returns for process innovation there. So investors are forced to accept lower and lower returns for their money, which they grudgingly see as a price for an illusion of “safety”. Meanwhile, emerging markets across the global south have the potential to deliver solid, consistent growth/ returns, but are starved of capital. This is mostly because they lack the sort of institutions that investors feel would guarantee their investments and also because investors are not familiar with investment opportunities on these markets. So the main capital that flows towards these markets is donor funding, which mostly doesn’t benefit the markets that dearly need it. In fact, it often undermines the fundamentals there, creating volatility and scaring investors even more, even while it feeds an artificial economy of consultants and middle-men.

Enter the blockchain.

The opportunities here are plenty and we haven’t even started scratching the surface. Here are just two of them – only because these are some of the models that we are trying to articulate and roll out at Triggerise:

Development impact bonds on the blockchain. Current development impact bonds are really hard to scale, mostly because of the difficulty to track progress and/ or to verify that milestones have been met (more on that here). Investors don’t feel comfortable with this level of lack of visibility and they don’t feel comfortable with how expensive verification actually is. The blockchain can change all that. Agree on a real-time output indicator (Triggerise uses Verified Impact Behaviour) and set a smart contract on the block chain that would release a payment when the indicator is registered. Or even better, don’t even call it an impact bond. Simply issue a coin linked to measurable impact. Like so:

Fundraise with Crypto Impact Coins. You could turn traditional impact investment on models in their head, by issuing a blockchain coin to raise money from investors through an initial coin offering (ICO). Link the initial value of the coin to the cost of delivering impact (Triggerise is using the cost of verified impact behavior). Investors can trade the coin on any crypto/ asset exchange or they can hold it (or HODL it, as per the bitcoin meme). Every time a donor funds a specific project, a corresponding amount of coins gets destroyed, which will increase the scarcity of circulating coins, and hence their value. The investor/ donor relationship becomes mutually beneficial and self-enforcing, as investors benefit when donors fund relevant programs (because that reduces total no. of available coins, increasing coin value) and donors benefit from investors purchasing coins, because that leverages private funding (“cost-sharing) to the causes they fund. Everyone wins.

I will stop here. Would love to hear your thoughts on above or any other opportunities you can think of in this space. Obviously, this technology will not solve ALL problems – no technology ever has or ever will – but I am convinced that it will unlock a new era of opportunities that we cannot even conceive right now.

I can’t wait.

Zahra Bolouri

International Relations I Partnerships I Advocacy I Climate Resilient Development

7 年

Iulian! Very cool to read your three part series on blockchain, as I've also been thinking through potential benefits - whilst still trying to understand how exactly it could work.. potential for completely changing the way the industry (or at least some players) do logistics/procurement/financial reporting, particularly in remote locations or through institutions that have wide reach but will never - regardless of how much MYOB training - be able to quickly move cash and report transparently on its use. the shared ledger, potentially removing the need for all the process/middle men. exciting.

Jed Emerson

Chief Impact Officer, AlTi Tiedemann Global

7 年

Thanks for this piece... I've been wondering how these two could be brought together and appreciate your vision of how that might happen... Look forward to more from you on your journey!

回复
Julian Circo

Co-Founder @ Hyfe | AI Powered Cough Monitoring | Pioneering the world's first Digital Therapeutic (DTx) for Cough

7 年

Thanks Chizomam Ezem , MBBS,MPH - i never thought about a webinar. There are also more knowledgeable people out there that can explain the technology better than me. What I am interested in is the potential applications in the development industry.

Chizo Ezem MD, MPH, MBA

Global Health Expert | Strategy Expert | Country Manager | Consultant Sexual & Reproductive Health

7 年

@ Iulian CircoI have read all 3 post and this is a very interesting concept, it is very frustrating sometimes to see how middlemen and well-meaning funding sometimes hinder the process of growth they are trying to improve. I also wondered if you have thought about doing a webinar to explain this(blockchain) is in some more detail? My questions escape me at the moment so I will try and reread the series and come back

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