Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,153,763 members, 7,820,667 topics. Date: Tuesday, 07 May 2024 at 07:08 PM

U.S Journalist & author,Robert Neuwirth Praises Igbo Business System In TED Talk - Business - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Business / U.S Journalist & author,Robert Neuwirth Praises Igbo Business System In TED Talk (1036 Views)

7 Richest Igbo Business People In Nigeria / Bill Gates Daughter, Phoebe, In Interracial Relationship With Robert Ross / IGBO BUSINESS MEN: Sudden Wealth And Their Money Rituals! (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

U.S Journalist & author,Robert Neuwirth Praises Igbo Business System In TED Talk by Adelaide2: 7:21pm On May 18, 2018
Listen to him say this at time 5.30 to 4.50 (counting down)

'' I can say with all certainty that the Ibo apprenticeship system is the largest business incubation platform in the whole world''

Link:

https://www.ted.com/talks/robert_neuwirth_the_age_old_sharing_economies_of_africa_and_why_we_should_scale_them/discussion?utm_source=newsletter_daily&utm_campaign=daily&utm_medium=email&utm_content=button__2018-05-17#t-205188

1 Like

Re: U.S Journalist & author,Robert Neuwirth Praises Igbo Business System In TED Talk by Adelaide2: 7:21pm On May 18, 2018
About the talk

''From rides to homes and beyond, we're sharing everything these days, with the help of digital tools. But as modern and high-tech as the sharing economy seems, it's been alive in Africa for centuries, according to author Robert Neuwirth. He shares fascinating examples -- like apprenticeships that work like locally generated venture capital and systems for allocating scarce water -- and says that if we can propagate and scale these models, they could help communities thrive from the bottom up.''
Re: U.S Journalist & author,Robert Neuwirth Praises Igbo Business System In TED Talk by Adelaide2: 7:23pm On May 18, 2018
This basically supports what I heard songster Davido proclaiming recently on video: Ibos are the best tongue tongue tongue tongue tongue tongue tongue tongue tongue

1 Like

Re: U.S Journalist & author,Robert Neuwirth Praises Igbo Business System In TED Talk by ChilledPill: 7:24pm On May 18, 2018
Igbo di egwu

1 Like

Re: U.S Journalist & author,Robert Neuwirth Praises Igbo Business System In TED Talk by Adelaide2: 7:30pm On May 18, 2018
ChilledPill:
Igbo di egwu

Igbo di egwu x10

Igbos must give credit to Abiriba/Ohafia/Arochukwu (Abia State) and Anambra people for creating this age-long business model of apprenticeship. Now Oyibo want to copy it. Hope they pay royalty for it grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin

3 Likes

Re: U.S Journalist & author,Robert Neuwirth Praises Igbo Business System In TED Talk by hucienda: 7:34pm On May 18, 2018
Impressive.
Re: U.S Journalist & author,Robert Neuwirth Praises Igbo Business System In TED Talk by Adelaide2: 7:40pm On May 18, 2018
hucienda:
Impressive.
Beyond a doubt!!
Re: U.S Journalist & author,Robert Neuwirth Praises Igbo Business System In TED Talk by ThatIgboBoy: 8:57pm On May 18, 2018
I even had to download it.
that was how we rose from the ashes after the pogrom

this is Thatigboboy reporting live from alaba intl market

1 Like

Re: U.S Journalist & author,Robert Neuwirth Praises Igbo Business System In TED Talk by Nobody: 8:59pm On May 18, 2018
Igbo Amaka Biko! Ahah! Igbo all over Nairaland, Igbo all over Nigeria, Igbo all over the world. This tribe eh. This ethnic group eh. This race eh. World Best 4 sure!

Igbo Di Egwu! Igbo Esika!

1 Like

Re: U.S Journalist & author,Robert Neuwirth Praises Igbo Business System In TED Talk by 6pax: 9:12pm On May 18, 2018
Adelaide2:


Igbo di egwu x10

Igbos must give credit to Abiriba/Ohafia/Arochukwu (Abia State) and Anambra people for creating this age-long business model of apprenticeship. Now Oyibo want to copy it. Hope they pay royalty for it grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin
Shetap their you've come to divide the igbos. That system is practiced all over Igbo land with different trades.....orlu zone in IMO are known for pharmaceutical/medicine/drugs , Nnewi in anambra for spare parts, abriba, Ngwa in Abia for clothes, shoes etc, etc
Re: U.S Journalist & author,Robert Neuwirth Praises Igbo Business System In TED Talk by stanluiz(m): 9:13pm On May 18, 2018
This thread deserves front page.
Re: U.S Journalist & author,Robert Neuwirth Praises Igbo Business System In TED Talk by KratosCorp: 9:22pm On May 18, 2018
For those with little data - Herr you go: tongue

00:12
So what I'm doing is a thought experiment. Now you may know of or have read this book by this guy. It's probably the first and maybe the only bestseller ever written about economics. And you probably know a bit about what it says. It talks about how nations all over the world will prosper through the individual pursuit of individual profit. Individual profit will be the mechanism for the prosperity of the world. But the funny thing about Adam Smith is that he was a stay-at-home kind of guy. He actually never went further from Edinburgh than France and Switzerland. So my thought experiment is to imagine what would have happened if Adam Smith had visited Africa.


01:10
And fortunately, there's actually an easy answer, because the Arab lawyer and traveler Ibn Battuta traveled down the east coast of Africa in the 14th century, and what he found when he got to Mogadishu was a market, and he wrote about it. And basically, merchant ships came to the harbor, and they weren't even allowed to land. They had to drop anchor in the harbor, and boats came out to them, and locals picked them and said, "You are my guest, I am now your broker." And they had to do business through the local broker, and if they went around that and didn't do business through the broker, they could go to court, and the deal would be canceled, and they would be thrown out of town. And through this mechanism, everyone prospered.


02:03
And so if that was Adam Smith, he might look like this guy and say, "Ah! That's a mutual aid society. That's a share-the-wealth free market." And when I put this question to Christian [Benimana], who had the stage at the beginning of this session, he responded that if Adam Smith had come to Africa, there would have been a sharing economy long before Airbnb and Uber. And that's true. So if we put this to work today, it would be very interesting. There would be a lot of money flowing into the countries. These are just figures of 10 percent of exports in these countries.


02:41
So the interesting thing is that this mutual aid economy still exists, and we can find examples of it in the strangest places. So, this is Alaba International Market. It's the largest electronics market in West Africa. It's 10,000 merchants, they do about four billion dollars of turnover every year. And they say they are ardent apostles of Adam Smith: competition is great, we're all in it individually, government doesn't help us. But the interesting reality is that when I asked further, that's not what grew the market at all. There's a behind-the-scenes principle that enables this market to grow. And they do claim -- you know, this is an interesting juxtaposition of the King James Bible and "How To Sell Yourself." That's what they say is their message. But in reality, this market is governed by a sharing principle. Every merchant, when you ask them, "How did you get started in global trade?" they say, "Well, when my master settled me." And when I finally got it into my head to ask, "What is this 'settling?'" it turns out that when you've done your apprenticeship with someone you work for, they are required -- required -- to set you up in business. That means paying your rent for two or three years and giving you a cash infusion so you can go out in the world and start trading. That's locally generated venture capital. Right? And I can say with almost certainty that the Igbo apprenticeship system that governs Alaba International Market is the largest business incubator platform in the world.


04:26
And there are other sharing economies that we look for -- merry-go-rounds, which are found in almost every shantytown. They have different names in other cultures; this is the Kenyan name. It's a way of generating cash. It's a kitty -- people throw money into a pot once a week, and once a week, one member of the group gets the money, and they can spend it on whatever they need to.


04:46
And there's also something called "acequias," and that is a Spanish word, but it comes from the North African Arabic; "saqiya" means "water wheel." And what the acequia is is a sharing system for scarce water. It's migrated from North Africa to Spain, and from Spain to the west of the United States, where it still is used. And it shares water by need rather than by who was there first. And contrary, with all due respect, to what Llew [Claasen] said when he talked about blockchains and cryptocurrencies yesterday, there is no tragedy of the commons. People in acequias have been commonly managing scarce water resources for hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of years.


05:36
So taking this thought experiment, I wanted to go a little bit further and suggest that these things are managed communally, and they are taking care of scarce capital, scarce cash and scarce resources. And it seems to me that we have actually two kinds of capitalism. We have the capitalism of the top up. And these are really interesting statistics, because three one-thousandths of one percent of the Nigerian population controls wealth equal to one-fourth of the GDP of the country. One one-hundredth of one percent of the Kenyan population controls wealth equal to 75 percent of the GDP of the country. That's the capitalism of top up. And everyone else is with this guy, selling board games and bodybuilding equipment in a go-slow on the highway in Lagos. And when you're selling board games and bodybuilding equipment in a go-slow, that traffic jam is really, really, really bad, right?


06:51
Those of us in this sphere of the economy are caught in what I call "the capitalism of decay," because there's no way to rise up and get out of it, because they're lacking the resources that we talked about in those sharing economies. And they're tripped up by the thesis of cassava and capitalism, that cassava has to be processed in order not to be poisonous, and I would argue that, similarly, the market economy needs to be processed in order to be fair to everyone.


07:28
So we have to look at what I call the "bottom down economy." These are these sharing models that exist out there that need to be propagated and used and scaled. OK? And if we propagate these things, we can begin to bring infrastructure to everyone, and that will ensure that communities are leading their own development, which is, I believe, what we need in the world, and, I would suggest, what we need in Africa.


08:01
I wanted to quote Steve Biko, and I thought it was really important to quote Steve Biko, because next month, September 12 to be exact, is the 40th anniversary of his murder by the South African state. And you can read the quote. He basically said that we're not here to compete. And I love this quote: "... to make us a community of brothers and sisters jointly involved in the quest for a composite answer to the varied problems of life." And he also said that "the great powers of the world have done wonders in giving us an industrial and military look, ..." and we don't have to copy that military-industrialist complex, because Africa can do things differently and restore the humanity of the world.


08:51
And so what I want to suggest here is that we have an opportunity, that we are all here in the mutual landscape to be able to do things, and that the journey starts now.


09:09
Thank you very much.


09:10
(Applause)


Well, do not be fooled by the economic and social collectivism of the igbos. That culture is way more complex than you can imagine. Behind that seemingly extraordinray collectivism lies a firecely thriving individualism and a huge sense of personal liberty. Igbos are no socialists/communists. Be guided.
Re: U.S Journalist & author,Robert Neuwirth Praises Igbo Business System In TED Talk by Adelaide2: 4:58pm On May 23, 2018
KratosCorp:
For those with little data - Herr you go: tongue




Well, do not be fooled by the economic and social collectivism of the igbos. That culture is way more complex than you can imagine. Behind that seemingly extraordinray collectivism lies a firecely thriving individualism and a huge sense of personal liberty. Igbos are no socialists/communists. Be guided.

Fierce competition is great as long as it is fair and equitable to all.

1 Like

(1) (Reply)

Looking For Someone Here From These State / Is The Additional 12K Necessary For Registration Of Business Name On CAC? / Try This Method And You Will Never Remain Broke!

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 39
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.