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Microsoft is working on new
partnerships to help create economic and educational opportunities for Latin
America by collaborating with the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and the
Organization of American States (OAS) on the Partnership in Opportunities for Employment
through Technology in the Americas (POETA).
Bill Gates, chairman of
Microsoft, said at the Government Leaders Forum – Americas in Miami: “At
Microsoft, we’re committed to helping transform education worldwide in order to
bring social and economic opportunity to underserved communities around the
world. Local and regional collaboration are a key part of our approach to
achieving the scalability necessary to make real progress towards these goals.”
Through the POETA program, launched
by Microsoft and OAS in 2004, people in 18 countries were given the chance to
improve their skills and were offered access to technology. Microsoft and the
Multilateral Investment Fund (MIF) will grant POETA a $4 million joint fund to
create job opportunities for people with disabilities in poor countries of
Latin America.
“Promoting growth and reducing
poverty are at the core of our mission in Latin America and the Caribbean,” said
Luis Alberto Moreno, IDB president, in a statement. “By participating in the
expansion of the POETA program, we hope to encourage many more companies to
open up jobs for people from traditionally disadvantaged groups in our region.”
At the second day of the annual
Government Leaders Forum – Americas in Miami, Gates highlighted the importance
of providing communication technology to the educational system in Latin
America.
“While software and technology can play a
vitally important role in increasing access to quality education, it takes more
than a single organization or company to provide all the resources necessary to
make a real difference,” said Gates.
Together with the Telefónica
Foundation, the agreement signed by Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates and Telefónica
Chairman Cesar Alierta aims at helping communities with their social and
economic development, as Alierta said in a statement, and bringing innovation to
the educational system is essential.
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