ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 12月7日 23時58分
This is the idea behind Inyenyeri, a business built by an American entrepreneur in Rwanda: It’s betting that it can give away stoves and make money by charging people for fuel. The forests would be spared. Customers would gain a reprieve from ailments. And Rwandans in rural areas would be freed from the time-sucking drudgery of having to look for wood. Inyenyeri is the latest in a long line of companies that have tried to address economic development through profit-making businesses, arguing that they are best positioned to deliver critically needed services to the world’s poorest communities — all through the incentives of capitalism. Most of those companies have failed. Even Inyenyeri’s chief operating officer wonders how the story will end. So far, the business has a little more than 5,000 customers and needs perhaps 100,000 to break even. @dianazeynebalhindawi took this photo of a woman cooking indoors with charcoal. Visit the link in our profile to see more.
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