Bringing Social Entrepreneurship To The MassesEconomics has quite a bit to say about altruistic behavior and in settings that involve virtues. It reminds us that few virtues are absolute: when they get more expensive, harder to do, or less pleasant, people will do less of them.

ByFadi Haddadin

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur Middle East, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

Shutterstock

Why would entrepreneurswastetheir money onsocial causeslike treating Alzheimer's disease, fighting the tsunami of hookah smoking, or supporting food security initiatives? Traditional policy solutions used to involve governments supplying welfare benefits through taxation. In an age of diminishing returns from fossil fuels and the never-ending, ineffective, welfare state, there are millions of Arabs who are in bad need of impact investments- as if they are crying out Sting'sSoul Cake:“一个苹果、一个梨、李子或樱桃;任何好的thing to make us all merry… If you haven't got a penny; a ha'penny will do… If you haven't get a ha'penny; it's God bless you."

Russell Roberts, professor of economics, regards altruism, fellow feeling, and caring for others as an important element of the "human enterprise." Although such motives do not pay a lot, they can be rewarding in other, nonmonetary ways: "the satisfaction and pleasure we get in return make the monetary sacrifice worthwhile."

It could be legitimate to come up with an appropriate institutionalization of entrepreneurialvoluntarism(philanthropy or charity), but the famous American philosopher Robert Nozick had warned us that "no one has an enforceable right," that is, the legal claim to assistance from another. Wendy McElroy of the Independent Institute also regards caring for the needy as both proper and necessary, but "we should hold, on the rights-based grounds, that these decisions are ultimately private and must rest with each individual and his or her conscience."

Related:Social Entrepreneurship Is On The Rise: Soushiant Zanganehpour's Advice for 'Treps Acting As Agents Of Change

Economics has quite a bit to say about altruistic behavior and in settings that involve virtues. It reminds us that few virtues are absolute: when they get more expensive, harder to do, or less pleasant, people will do less of them. Across the Arab world, the global financial crisis has definitely madeentrepreneurs reluctant to pursue social causes. However, we should not negate the fact that voluntarism is essentially "crowded out" by cultural attitudes and the overall attachment to the welfare state. There is also this dimension to restricting reciprocal private philanthropy: it is highly driven by religious institutions rather than mere social causes.

There should be at the very least new schemes to incentivize social entrepreneurs to adopting "new frontiers" in philanthropy. The Johns Hopkins University Professor Lester Salamon, for example, emphasizes on moving beyond "grant-making" into adoptingimpact investmentorientation, focusing more heavily on measurable results, generating a blend of economic, as well as social, returns, and interacting explicitly withsocial venturesthat serve the "bottom of the pyramid," deploying a variety of new instruments (private equity, securitization, social impact bonds, specialized social purpose investment funds, and many more) which can have far more enormous social impact than the investment assets resident in banks, pension funds, insurance companies, mutual funds, orsovereign wealth funds.

Interest group theory tells us that the smaller the size of a group, the better the outcomes (impact) of its activities, whether in terms ofempowering the youth, helping the poor, or supporting arts, museums, universities, medical research, and agribusiness. There should be a reformed path, now before then: moving away from state/religious support into a radical reordering of our human enterprise. As long as governments remain the dominant provider of aid to the poor, charity dollars in the Arab world will remain politically-guided, tax-driven.

It will be necessary for these new concepts to reach a wider spectrum of participants, communicators, and observers. As such, both academic and training institutions should widen their audience to include nonprofit managers, social entrepreneurs, business leaders, and public policy experts. The millions of Arabs in the underground chorus ofSoul Cakeare warning us: "We hope you will prove kind." With a status-quo of hierarchical philanthropy and a rapidly changing political economy, the "lanes will remain very dirty… shoes very thin."

Related:How To Raise Funds Efficiently For A Social Enterprise

Wavy Line
Fadi Haddadin

经济学家和政策安娜lyst

Fadi A. Haddadin is an economist by training and education.

He has worked at the Prime Ministry of Jordan to help in setting up its Mega Projects Administration, the Cato Institute in Washington D.C., the World Bank in Washington D.C., and the Aqaba Special Economic Zone Authority in Aqaba, Jordan. Haddadin was selected by the Heritage Foundation as a leading Public Policy Expert in Washington D.C.

He was a regular commentator for BBC Arabic, Al Jazeera, CNBC Arabic, Al Hurra, and Jordan TV. His op-eds, covering economic and policy topics, frequently appeared on the Financial Times, affluentinvestor.com, alarabiya.net, Al Rai and Al Ghad of Jordan, Al Eqtisadiah of Saudi Arabia, Al Arab of Qatar, Al Wasatnews of Bahrain, Al Ittihad of UAE, Al Watan of Oman, and Al Rai Al Aam of Kuwait.

In addition to his work in the public sector, international organizations, and think tanks, he founded and managed his own private enterprises in the food and beverage sector (Bifröst Co.).

Haddadin got his degrees from the University of Chicago (MPP), the London School of Economics (MSc), and the American University of Beirut (BA), in addition to completing two executive degrees from Harvard University and Princeton University. Haddadin is a Charles G. Koch Fellow (2005).

Related Topics

Growing a Business

Top 5 Must-Attend Events for Startups

Gain actionable insights and network with brilliant minds at these upcoming conferences and summits.

Business News

Netflix is Hiring an AI-Focused Role—and the Starting Salary is up to $900,000

The streaming giant is looking for a leader in its machine learning department.

Business News

Google Engineers Rake in Big Bucks with Base Salaries up to $718,000, According to a New Report

The data comes from an internal spreadsheet shared among Google employees, comprised of information from over 12,000 U.S. workers for 2022.

Entrepreneurs

Infographic: The Top 10 MENA Countries For Tech Startups In 2023

The UAE led the MENA region, with it being home to 339 scaleups, while Egypt and Saudi Arabia follow with 140 and 132 scaleups, respectively.

Marketing

6 Actionable Marketing Lessons from the Early Days of ChatGPT

Don't put your head in the sand and stoke fears about machines taking over the world; learn how to take the reins and make the machines work for you.

Business Ideas

105 Service Businesses to Start Today

With this many ideas to choose from, you have no excuse not to get started today with your own service business.