When connecting ventures to international markets falls short: examining the root mechanisms of perceived inefficacy in marketdriven poverty alleviation efforts Quando a conexão de empreendimentos aos mercados internacionais fica aquém: examinando os mecanismos fundamentais da ineficácia percebida nos esforços de alívio da pobreza impulsionados pelo mercado Cuando la conexión de emprendimientos a mercados internacionales se queda corta: examinando los mecanismos fundamentales de la ineficacia percibida en los esfuerzos de alivio de la pobreza impulsados por el mercado
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Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to study triadic market relations between an international aid agency (IAA), local ventures and the poor communities where they are embedded in order to shift the poverty alleviation discussion to account for the perceptions held by each category of actor, especially those of poor communities. Poverty alleviation is a key commitment of the United Nations, and market-driven approaches are increasingly advocated as a means to reduce poverty, particularly among IAAs. One such strategy is to connect ventures in poor communities with international markets. However, research shows that such approaches have mixed success. Design/methodology/approach: The authors conducted a comparative case study of three ventures embedded in urban and rural poor communities receiving support from an IAA. The authors then analyzed the data to determine the mechanisms that led to discrepancies in the perceptions of poverty alleviation held by each actor involved. Findings: This study suggests three such mechanisms: `decoupling markets from poverty¿, wherein aiding ventures may paradoxically lead to decoupling them from poor communities; `overburden stress¿, in which ventures cannot fulfil a poverty alleviation role through their market activities because the expectation to do so overburdens the venture; and `value divergence¿, in which the actors involved evaluate the impact of these approaches differently. Originality/value: The authors propose that a key aspect of enabling effective poverty alleviation through market-driven approaches in terms of substantial, long-term contributions is to monitor and support the relations between the actors involved ¿ including the poor communities themselves ¿ and explore how each perceives the efficacy of the approach. © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited.
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