Creative

Crime and the Private Sector in Central America

Pablo Maldonado (Washington, DC)

INCAE, the famed Central America-based business school, the World Bank and the Wilson Center hosted a gathering on April 19 to discuss the crime epidemic in the region and its impact on the business climate, investment, and perspectives going forward.

Heavyweights–Undersecretary Maria Otero and the Banks’ President Robert Zoellick –were keynote speakers.

Harold  Sibaja, of Creative Associates, was an invited panelist; he presented on USAID’s Youth Alliance Program, a neighborhood-by-neighborhood effort to reduce crime and violence in El Salvador and Central America. (For more information about this project, please click here).

I share a few thoughts about the gathering, which focused principally on the views and perspectives of the private sector on crime and violence:

Milena Grillo, a panelist representing Panama’s Fundacion Paniamor, spoke eloquently about the exacerbating contribution of domestic violence to the grim violence situation in the region.

Colombian consultant Isaac de Leon Beltran presented on the importance of mapping criminal activity at the local level, and on how to tackle crime by elevating the operating costs of organized crime.

It was a pleasure to see World Bank’s Rodrigo Serrano-Berthet and many friends from the INCAE network.

Pablo Maldonado is Chief Operating Officer of Creative Associates International.