Why Community Development Investment Capital?

Community Development Investment Capital (CDIC) has emerged in recent years to fill a critical gap between mainstream financial services/lending and traditional philanthropy. Many business owners in rural and impoverished areas in New Mexico face tough challenges when seeking equity or debt capital to finance their entrepreneurial activities.

CDIC's achieve job creation at a much lower cost than other community development mechanisms. In addition, these jobs tend to be at higher wages with better benefits.

Resources

Click on the title to open a PDF Document.

Rural Entrepreneurs Need More Than Good Advice

Jarratt Applewhite - Community Development Investment Review, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, 2006
Article discusses the challenges facing rural entrepreneurs and a unique delivery model for services to help businesses grow.

Beyond Paycheck-To-Paycheck: Wealth-Building Strategies for Venture Capial Funds to Use with Portfolio Companies and their Employees

Anne Claire Broughton - SJF Advisory Services, 2004

Enterprising Organizations: New Asset-Based and Other Innovative Approaches to Solving Social and Economic Problems

The Aspen Institute, October 2005

Compounding Impact: Mission Investing by US Foundations

Sarah Cooch & Mark Kramer - FSG Social Impact Advisors, March 2007

National Dialogue on Entrepreneurship

Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, 2007

Development Investment Capital: Three Steps to Establishing an Asset Class for Investing in Underserved Markets

Penelope Douglas, Beth Sirull, Pete November - Pacific Community Ventures, May 2006

Gauging a Region's Entrepreneurial Potential

Sara Low, Jason Henderson, and Stephan Weiler - Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Economic Review, Q3 2005
Report discusses entrepreneurship as emerging as a particularly promising new engine for regional growth. It states that the relation between long-term regional employment growth and entrepreneurship is strong. Not only do entrepreneurs create new local jobs, but they also generate new wealth and new growth.

Kauffman Index of Entrepreneurial Activity

Robert W. Fairlie - Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, 2005
Report on the findings from the Kauffman Index of Entrepreneurial Activity: a new measure of entrepreneurship, which uses matched data from the 1996-2004 Current Population Surveys.

Mapping Rural Entrepreneurship

W.K. Kellogg Foundation - Corporation for Enterprise Development, August 2003
A study to gather information on institutions, programs and activities that support entrepreneurship in rural America: to assess the distribution and scale of entrepreneurial activity and to identify potentially influential contextual factors.

National Policy Brief - Energizing an Entrepreneurial Economy

Center for Rural Entrepreneurship, May 2005
This brief explores the role that our nation does and can play in entrepreneurial development in Rural America.

Nurturing Entrepreneurial Growth in State Economies

Thom Rubel and Scott Palladino - National Governors' Association, 2000
Report discusses ways to improve a state's economic competitiveness through developing and streamlining policies that nurture entrepreneurs which includes improving access to capital, providing technical assistance, etc.