If you are interested in social enterprises, impact investing, start-ups, Asia, empowerment, and stories of unreasonable people committed to make the world a better place, then you may decide to read on.


I will explore the intersection of many different worlds that typically don’t intersect. At this intersection where traditional finance meets non-profit, start-up meets government, Silicon Valley meets Dhaka, there is a new type of ecosystem being built. I have found beauty in such contrasts, where in one conference room, the lady to my left may be a Goldman Sachs executive, to my right, an Indian market weaver, across the table, a member of the Singapore ministry.


This all occurs in a city called Singapore, which I have found to be quite a surprising intersection of many different worlds itself. Often referred to as the “benevolent dictatorship”, one might wonder whether Singapore might just be the ideal place to build a “benevolent capital markets”, a capital markets organized for the purpose of doing good.

Friday, June 10, 2011

What’s in a name anyways?


I learned something very interesting this evening at dinner with my two lovely friends from Burma. These women are doctors who are training here in Singapore and then hope to set up private practices to serve their people, who have very limited access to medical care.

What I found so interesting was their practice of naming children, and how that impacts gender equality in their country.

When I asked whether it was considered more delightful to have a daughter or a son, both responded that little girls and boys are met with equal delight. When I inquired further as to why this may be so in a region where little boys tend to reign as the little princes, they said it was perhaps due to the lack of importance of a family name. Actually, children can be named one syllable if the parents desire. There is no family name, and so males do not have the honor and responsibility of passing on the family lineage. I said it was perhaps harder to keep track of families with no common thread, and they said, indeed it was, but that most families keep elaborate family trees.

As we ventured into religion, the topic became more animated, because in Buddhism, men are believed to be superior to women. For instance, my friends told me that they, as women, are forbidden from climbing to the highest steps on the temples. This became quite an interesting discussion...

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