Showing posts with label Economics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Economics. Show all posts

Friday, January 9, 2009

Magic Recipe El Salvador

Many communities in El Salvador are adapting to the realities of climate change and economic change throughout the country.

With Support from Us aid and the UN they are piloting a a interesting project known as micro businesses in communities in El Salvador. to help Sustain growth and the possibility of a future for the rural small impoverished towns.

for those that do not know what a micro business is a micro business is a scaled down version of a regular business that is started with as little capitol as possible and usually has less than 5 employees.

In one city in El Salvador a small community outside san Miguel they are doing just that. With the help of volunteers working with this community there have a plan to address their economic, social, and environmental needs that are present with in this community. This area is home to wet lands beaches and some of the largest area of mangrove trees in the country.
Still this being one of the poorest areas in El Salvador, the region's low elevation and location make it vulnerable to the effects of floods, storms, earthquakes and no sources of fresh water or food when natural disasters hit. Along with the social and economic challenges that they face makes it a good place to start a micro business so that they can help themselves become more self sufficient as a community and as individuals. One of the US aid workers in charge of the project says "There was a lot of humanitarian assistance after Hurricane Mitch, but there was no long-term vision," says Sandra Thomson, one of the Sierra Club's project leaders. "With this project, we're looking at ways to empower communities to help them be more self-sufficient” says Sandra Thompson.

It takes into account the communities current needs and the possible future needs of the community and helps them all work together for a common goal. Money comes from actual lender in small denomination of 100- a few thousand dollars which they are expected to pay back when their business is to a point to be able to do so. The project takes a holistic approach to the region's economic, social, and environmental challenges, which are inextricably linked. There are few jobs for the 8,000 people who live in 25 small communities. They gain their livelihood from the natural resource base, fishing from the Bay, cultivating crops, and cutting down mangrove forests for firewood.

A proposed commercial shrimp operation would provide jobs, but it would also destroy precious mangrove forests—trees that can offer protection from flooding and severe weather. The partners are working with the communities to develop micro businesses that create jobs without damaging the environment. In this way, people can earn a living without making their communities more vulnerable to job loss and the natural deterioration of natural resources. So with a more sustainable income from local jobs that do not depend on dwindling natural resources, communities are also more self-sufficient.

The micro business Idea has taken hold in many nations but so far the ones setup here in el Salvador have proven to be very successful. There are many types of business started for example some woman from the corner street always got together on Saturdays to chat about their days and families all the while knitting shirts and shorts pants and all types of sowing to keep their families in clothes. With a small 500 dollar loan this small band of woman started a fabric making business that now sells clothes worldwide. They started out just themselves added employees and now have more then 1000 and the main job provider in this community. It’s the fact that they wanted to achieve something on their own that would make a difference and the micro business model showed them away.

In all ways this model will help future communities and stabilize local jobs for many years to come and I am proud to have participated in a small way to help. It s not effects you in a outside way but you know it effects you in a personal way as well. Ultimately, it's giving people the opportunity to develop alternative livelihoods that leave the natural environment intact and leave them better able to cope with climate change.

Monday, December 15, 2008

El Salvador Coffee


Its that tme a year again to get our hands on the newest Cofee from the recent harvest in san salvador.. I my self am committed to by at least two bags but only becuase i love to roast my own coffee.. but if you do not like to roast you can also buy pre made cofee from Here or to help support el salvadors coffee market make sure to stop by a local store and purchase a pound it will help with exports that truly need a hand and also you get a great cup of coffee... !!

El Salvadoran coffee exports in November, the second month of the new 2008-09 crop cycle, fell 4.8% to 22,386 bags of 60 kilograms each, the Salvadoran Coffee Council said Thursday.
This compares with total Salvadoran coffee exports of 23,522 bags shipped in November last year during the 2007-08 crop cycle (October-September), the council said in its latest monthly report for the new harvest year.


Total coffee exports from El Salvador from the beginning of the 2008-09 crop year Oct.1 through Nov. 30, meanwhile, declined 17% to 51,386 bags, compared to shipments of 61,833 bags in the first two months of the 2007-08 cycle, the council said.

Physical harvesting of El Salvador's 2008-09 harvest recently started in the medium altitudes, but has yet to start in earnest in most of the country's key producing high-altitude areas later this month.

Coffee from the new harvest, however, normally doesn't start reaching the market until early December and exports shipped in the first few months of the new cycle traditionally consist almost exclusively of old-crop beans.

El Salvadoran coffee exports in the last 2007-08 crop cycle ended at 1,464,288 bags, up 20% from 1,220,137 bags in the 2006-07 cycle and in line with forecasts for exports to reach close to 1.5 million bags, the council said last month.