Boosting Female Entrepreneurship in Rwanda

WOMEN FOR WOMEN RWANDA
Rwanda
Serrah Galos
WOMEN FOR WOMEN RWANDA

Improving the personal and economic well-being of Rwandan women micro-entrepreneurs through comprehensive training and socioeconomically diverse collaborations that create access to start-up capital.

-1.9438946772446, 29.88043595

36% 

of total national income goes to the richest 10% of Rwandans; less than half of this amount goes to the poorest 40%.[2]

55%

of Rwandans live in poverty.[1]

61%

of the Rwandan parliament is composed of women, but they are underrepresented in the formal labour market.[3]

Rwanda must be regarded as a model of how great human trauma can be transformed to commence true reconstruction of people.

Wole Soyinka, Nobel Laureate

Our Commitment

The Julius Baer Foundation's and Women for Women International's joint effort reduces wealth inequality by strengthening the Rwandan female entrepreneurial ecosystem:

  • It connects women micro-entrepreneurs at the bottom of the income ladder with potential partners at the top to share resources and knowledge.
  • It helps micro-entrepreneurs and their mentors develop mutually beneficial business opportunities that grow and leverage entrepreneurial skillsets.
  • It develops women's skills as effective negotiators and influencers.
  • It enables access to markets.
  • It facilitates supportive networks and connections to potential sources of private and public capital via funding competitions with angel investors.

Women for Women International equips marginalised women in conflict-affected countries with skills to build secure futures for themselves, their families, and their societies.

Since 1997, Women for Women has worked with nearly 80,000 Rwandan women in a twelve-month socioeconomic empowerment programme that focuses on:

  • earning and saving 
  • rights and decision-making 
  • health and wellness, and 
  • growing support networks 
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Women for Women Rwanda proud women farmers
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The Julius Baer Foundation has made it possible for 1,440 graduates of Women for Women International’s flagship programme in Rwanda to grow their micro-businesses. Graduates have:

  • completed extensive entrepreneurial training, 
  • joined Village Savings and Loans Associations, and 
  • started micro-businesses independently or collaboratively.
rwanda

Project milestones include enabling:

  • 1,485 seasoned entrepreneurs, private and public market- and finance stakeholders, and new women micro-entrepreneurs to form a collaborative business network in Rwanda.
  • 480 women micro-entrepreneurs to access local and national business opportunities.
  • 200 women micro-entrepreneurs to access financing opportunities and specialised feedback on growing micro-businesses.
  • 20 businesses to attract funding from investors.
  • a policy paper to be written, with recommendations for cultivating a more supportive business environment for women entrepreneurs.

Become a Changemaker

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Rwanda

Some truly meaningful ways that you can support Women for Women International’s work in Rwanda include sponsorships, donations, purchases in their online shop and volunteering. 

[1] Source: World Bank:

https://www.worldbank.org/en/country/rwanda/overview

[2] Source: UNDP (2018). Human Development Indicators - Rwanda.

[3]  Source: Centre for Feminist Foreign Policy