Proximity Designs and rural development in Myanmar

A social enterprise works to improve farmers' economic prospects

Debbie Aung Din Taylor (with red hat), co-founder of Proximity Designs, meets with villagers in A Phaung Gyi, in Dedaye township in the Ayeyarwaddy River Delta. Many of the villagers use crop loans provided by Proximity Designs to plant rice. It also provides agricultural advice, and now distributes a line of popular, low-cost solar lights (90 percent of Myanmar's rural households are not on an electrical grid).
Proximity Designs manufactures its pumps, water-storage baskets, and irrigation drip lines in Myanmar; it purchases components locally, from a bustling, if informal, industrial park in northeastern Yangon.
Proximity Designs now sells d.light solar lights—typically, on a multimonth installment plan. The basic light, shown here, has the most basic of uses: enabling reading, or homework, at night, in lieu of candles, which are expensive, a fire hazard in bamboo houses, and unsuitable for use under mosquito netting. (The white paste on the girl’s cheeks is <i>thanaka,</i> a cosmetic paste made from ground bark, which many women and girls in Myanmar apply to guard against sunburn and to protect the skin.)
Manufacturing manager Todd Murphy, an engineer, at Proximity's factory and assembly facility in northeastern Yangon
A rural agency distributes Proximity Designs' equipment, such as the pump being demonstrated here.
Rural agents come to Yangon for product and sales training during the monsoon season. For some of the agents, shown here at the 2013 training session, the visit to Yangon is their first immersion in city life.
U Myat Thein, an entrepreneurial farmer and now a village agent for Proximity Designs, grows corn as a cash crop in Wakouktaw village, Kungyangon township; with his wife, Daw Khin Ohn Myint, and their youngest child, daughter Thin Thin Myat, he welcomes visitors to their home—fans at the ready for the delta's heat and humidity.
Proximity Designs' water basket in farm use: using a treadle pump, farmers can collect and move water and then distribute it by hose or drip irrigation lines—huge improvements in time and labor compared to bearing buckets of water on their shoulders with a wooden yoke.
A Proximity Designs foot-powered pump in use

“Sowing Seeds,” in the January-February 2014 Harvard Magazine, reports on an alumni-founded social enterprise, Proximity Designs, working in Myanmar to boost farmers' incomes with affordable rural technologies. The article also describes the collaboration between Proximity Designs and economic and policy analysts at Harvard who study the country's shattered economy, its prospects for growth, and broad changes needed in governance and civic life to bring about better lives for Myamnar’s largely impoverished people. These images supplement the photographs accompanying the article; they show Proximity Designs' products and services as they are manufactured, distributed, and used in Myanmar today.

You might also like

Why America’s Strategy For Reducing Racial Inequality Failed

Harvard professor Christina Cross debunks the myth of the two-parent Black family.

The Origins of Europe’s Most Mysterious Languages

A small group of Siberian hunter-gatherers changed the way millions of Europeans speak today.

At Harvard, Mike Pence Discusses Democracy and Conservatism

The former vice president denounces political violence, expresses hope for a deal between Trump and the University.

Most popular

Harvard Institute of Politics Director Setti Warren Dies at 55

The former Newton mayor is remembered as “a visionary and tireless leader” by the University community. 

What Trump Means for John Roberts’s Legacy

Executive power is on the docket at the Supreme Court.

Harvard Fiscal Year 2024 Finances

Annual Harvard financial results, and a look at the Faculty of Arts and Sciences’ fisc and professoriate

Explore More From Current Issue

Professor David Liu smiles while sitting at a desk with colorful lanterns and a figurine in the background.

This Harvard Scientist Is Changing the Future of Genetic Diseases

David Liu has pioneered breakthroughs in gene editing, creating new therapies that may lead to cures.

Aerial view of a landscaped area with trees and seating, surrounded by buildings and parking.

Landscape Architect Julie Bargmann Transforming Forgotten Urban Sites

Julie Bargmann and her D.I.R.T. Studio give new life to abandoned mines, car plants, and more.

Illustration of tiny doctors working inside a large nose against a turquoise background.

A Flu Vaccine That Actually Works

Next-gen vaccines delivered directly to the site of infection are far more effective than existing shots.