National Alliance for Black Business and MBDA Team Up on Historic Alliance to Develop Black Businesses

National Alliance for Black Business and MBDA Team Up on
Historic Alliance to Develop Black Businesses

Aiming to enlarge business development and global competitiveness for Black businesses, the Minority Business Development Agency (MBDA) and the National Alliance for Black Business (NABB) are uniting on a new alliance to help achieve that effort.

Based on a news release, the U.S. Department of Commerce’s MBDA  and NABB signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on February 22 during the NABB’s first annual National Black Business Policy Conference in Washington, D.C. The NABB was co-founded by the National Business League (NBL) and the National Black Chamber of Commerce (NBCC). They represent a combined 153 years of combined service to Black businesses and are now collaborating to organize a unified national black economic agenda.

“This historic agreement between MBDA and the NABB will strengthen our collective mission to create a strong, equitable economy for all minority businesses and entrepreneurs,” stated Donald R. Cravins, Jr., the MBDA’s under secretary. “Both MBDA and the NABB have uplifted Black businesses in the decades since they were formed. But together under this agreement, we can break down more barriers, open new opportunities, and create greater access for even more minority entrepreneurs and founders to thrive.”

More than 100 distinguished Black business leaders, organizations, and corporate executives gathered with Cravins. Among them were NABB Co-founders Kenneth L. Harris, (NBL) and Charles H. DeBow, III (NBCC); Hon. Johnny Ford, founder and president of the World Conference of Mayors; Helena Hutton, senior director of strategic purchasing, supplier diversity and environmental sustainability, Cummins Inc., and member of the Billion Dollar Roundtable; Jane Reindorf-Attoh, CEO, JT International; and conference keynote speaker Terri L. Batch, Director of the U.S. Global Diversity Export Initiative, part of the U.S. Department of Commerce International Trade Administration.

“The alliance between the NABB and the U.S. Department of Commerce is a powerful collaboration to build Black economic equity through enterprise ownership and development,” stated Charles H. DeBow, III, president and CEO of the NBCC and co-founder of the NABB.

The MOU sets up a framework for the MBDA and the NABB to collaborate on efforts to boost the growth and global scaling of more than 3.2 million Black American businesses, with an estimated $141.1 billion in annual receipts, 1.3 million employees, and about $42.2 billion in annual payroll (2022 U.S. Census).

Part of the alliance calls for the MBDA and the NABB to share information and raise public awareness of each other’s programs and initiatives.

In 1969, the late Berkeley G. Burrell, the NBL’s 10th national president played an instrumental role in the founding and creation of the Office of Minority Business Enterprise (OMBE), today the MBDA. Burrell was vice president of the Advisory Council for Minority Enterprise and under his leadership, the NBL and OMBE initiated decades of Black business
participation in the public and private sectors.

“The MBDA was born out of the civil rights movement, as an intentional solution to curb the economic conditions experienced in the Black community that caused Black resistance, rebellion, and retribution in the streets,” stated Dr. Kenneth L. Harris, the NBL’s president and CEO,  and NABB co-founder. He added, “By continuing the legacy of Booker T. Washington, today we forge partnerships with aligned priorities to broker economic opportunities for Black businesses that are essential in the  global marketplace.”



* This article was originally published here

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