Social Currency

Will a community revitalization strategy centered on the arts awaken us from the economic doldrums?  If the first 34 ArtPlace projects are representative of that approach, then the answer is yes. 

It’s hard not to feel worn down by the news lately.  The statistics are sobering – our unemployment rate is still above 9% and the poverty rate rose to 15.1% - the highest level in almost two decades.  The stock market is down since January of this year, and it’s not clear that President Obama’s jobs bill will make it through Congress successfully.  In our work with nonprofits all around the country, we are seeing this news unfold right in front of our eyes – with continued weakness across the sector.

ArtPlace

But in New York City, an abandoned East Harlem school will soon offer 90 housing units for artists and 13,000 square feet of community space for arts-related non-profits – while simultaneously promoting the neighborhood as a major Latino cultural capital.  In Wilson, North Carolina, an Art Park is taking shape – featuring Vollis Simpson’s enormous whirligig sculptures—and spurring the development of an “industrial artisan district” that will both attract artists and provide skilled workforce training.  And in Detroit – where unemployment well exceeds the national average – the creation of the Sugar Hill Arts District is allowing for a rebirth of Detroit’s cultural identity.  A planned redevelopment of vacant property and an outdoor arts venue will create jobs and increase attraction to the downtown.  Likewise, adjacent to the Watts Towers in Los Angeles, three houses will be rehabilitated to showcase the work of visiting artists and attract new visitors. Projects like these – bubbling up around the nation –further validate the nonprofit (and now the cultural) sector’s role in boosting employment, revitalizing communities and realizing neighborhood change.  

And it’s not just grant money that will drive community and economic development.  As part of the ArtPlace initiative, NFF will also administer a $12 million loan pool available to organizations advancing place-based work.  What we have learned during NFF’s 30 year history as a lender and advisor to cultural organizations is that knowing how and when to use debt is a key component to managing an organization.  The loan pool will provide an opportunity for organizations possibly left out of the credit market to use debt as part of their strategy for growth and development. 

While creative placemaking is not a new vehicle for economic change, ArtPlace takes a novel approach – bringing together an innovative public-private partnership (with NEA and seven other supporting federal agencies), critical grant funds (ten private foundations), and access to credit (six financial institutions) so that a full complement of capital is available in making all of these communities vibrant places to work and live.   

We don’t need a golden ticket to realize successful economic development.  We need more of the innovation and partnership inherent in ArtPlace, and if we can foster more initiatives like this, I’m confident that we will succeed.

Last week, we announced that Antony Bugg-Levine would take over as CEO here at NFF starting October 24th.  This week we’re thrilled to bring you his newest article from the latest issue of the journal Innovations (available here in its entirety as an Amazon Kindle eBook).  The special issue is focused on the Social Capital Markets conference (SOCAP11) starting Tuesday in San Francisco.  Bugg-Levine’s contribution, “Impact Investing: Transforming How We Make Money While Making a Difference,” co-authored with Jed Emerson, looks at the emergence of the terms “impact investing” and “blended value” and offers provisional definitions as practical guidance.  But it is also a broader call--not to say warning--to rethink the “bifurcated world” of investment and philanthropy: 

Impact investors will not long be content to force-fit their aspirations into a set of systems created to support the bifurcated vision. Therefore, these systems will inevitably change under the collective weight of a new generation of investors, entrepreneurs, and government officials coming together in the pursuit of blended value...

You can download the article as a pdf by clicking here, or read it embedded below.  The article is adapted from the first chapter of Bugg-Levine and Emerson’s forthcoming book of the same name, available in print and for Kindle at Amazon.  

NFF staff and Antony Bugg-Levine will be in attendance at SoCap11, and we’ll be covering the conference over at our Social Impact Bond Learning Hub and via our @nff_news Twitter feed.    

Links:
SoCap11/Impact Investing special edition of Innovations at Amazon
Innovations journal homepage at MIT Press
NFF’s Social Impact Bond Learning Hub 
On Twitter:
Innovations Journal @innovationsjrnl
Antony Bugg-Levine: @ABLImpact
Jed Emerson: @BlendedValue

Innovations Journal -- Impact Investing: Transforming How We Make Money While Making a Difference (Bugg-Lev...

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