20th century intelligence - ending poverty of half world without electricity -although Keynes 1936 (last capter general theiry money inetrest emplymen) asked Economists to take hipocrati oath as the profession that ended extreme poverty, most economists did the opposite. Whats not understandable is how educatirs failed to catalogue the lessons of the handful who bottom-up empowered vilages to collaboratively end poverty. There are mainly 2 inteligences to understand- Borlaug on food; fazle abed on everything that raised life expectancy in tropical viage asia from low 40s to 60s (about 7 below norm of living with electricity and telecomes). Between 1972 and 2001, Abed's lessons catalogued in this mooc had largelu built the nation of Bangladesh and been replicated with help of Unicef's James Grant acroo most tropical asian areas. What's exciting is the valley's mr ad mrs steve jobs invted Fazle Abed to share inteligences 2001 at his 65th birthday party. The Jobs and frineds promised to integrate abed's inteligence into neighborhod university stanfrd which in any event wanted Jobs next great leap the iphone. The Valley told abed to start a university so that women graduates from poor and rich nations could blend inteligence as Abed's bottom of the pyramid vilage began their journey of leapfrog modles now that gridd infarstructures were ni longer needed for sdiar and mobile. Abed could also help redesign the millennium goals which were being greenwashed into a shared worldwide system coding frame by 2016. There re at Abed's 80th birtday party , the easy bitwas checking this mooc was uptodate. The hard bit - what did Abed mean by his wish to headhunt a taiwanese american to head the university's 3rd decade starting 2020?

Wednesday, July 31, 2019

1.4 brac bank tara

 bracbank has a special division for women entrepreneurs TARA

example training program

BRAC Bank TARA in partnership with American Babson College and Dutch FMO has successfully completed the first-of-its-kind entrepreneurial skill development training for women business owners.

BRAC Bank TARA organized a gala celebration ceremony to honour the women entrepreneurs as they completed the country's first ever international entrepreneurial development training programme by Babson College, an entrepreneurial powerhouse often ranked as the most prestigious entrepreneurship college in the US, and FMO, a Dutch financial investment firm specializing in financing businesses and projects.

The training is aimed at facilitating women entrepreneurs in developing and enriching entrepreneurial and managerial skills in order to help them expand and sustain their businesses in the long run.

Professor Vincent Chang, Vice Chancellor of BRAC University; attended the gala ceremony as the Chief Guest at LakeShore Hotel on July 9. Ms. Lila Rashid, General Manager, SME & Special Programmes Department, Bangladesh Bank; Professor Patricia G. Greene from Babson College; Mr. Evangelos Alamaniotis, Investment Officer; and Mr. David Hernandez Velazquez, Investment Officer, FMO; Selim R. F. Hussain, Managing Director & CEO; Chowdhury Akhtar Asif, Deputy Managing Director & CRO; and Syed Abdul Momen, Head of SME Banking, and Nazmur Rahim, Head of Retail Banking; BRAC Bank, our valued customers and stakeholders attended the ceremony.

A total of 35 women businesswomen participated in the extensive training during July 3-4 and July 8-9, 2019. Mr. Richard T. Bliss, PhD, Babson College, Professor of Finance and National Academic Director - 10,000 Small Businesses and Professor Patricia G. Greene, Academic Director, Babson College, conducted the training. They also conducted two-day Train The Trainer session to groom in-house trainers during June 30-July 1, 2019.

The exclusive training was a signature initiative of TARA that will help enhance loyalty and establish TARA as the industry's best women's banking proposition. We will continue such local and international partnerships to organize more capacity building programs for our customers.

With its innovation and engagement, TARA will continue to create new economic opportunities for women in Bangladesh.

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