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About Community Economic Development
   
Man standing outside his shopTwenty NeighborWorks network organizations are actively involved in non-housing community economic development, and the subject is taught at the NeighborWorks Training Institute. For community development practitioners, community economic development (CED) represents a set of diverse strategies used to improve the economic well-being of residents of low- and moderate-income communities. These strategies include:
 
  • Loans, training, and technical assistance to small and microenterprise businesses, including business incubators.
  • Workforce development so residents can increase their employment skills and find livable-wage jobs.
  • The development of services designed to reduce the cost of goods and services, such as food cooperatives, healthcare and childcare centers.
  • Commercial development, such as business districts or neighborhood grocery stores where residents can purchase more goods and services within their communities.

CED activities are supported by an assortment of federal programs: Community Development Block Grants, Rural Business Enterprise Grants, and the Community Development Financial Institution Fund, to name a few. The CDFI Fund administers the New Markets Tax Credit which encourages private sector investments in communities with persistent poverty. Some private foundations also offer CED grants for nonprofit organizations.

 

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