IPPRA / Grant Monitor

2026-07-07
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ScaleUp Bolivia

PD-LAPAZ-FY26-02 · U.S. Mission to Bolivia

economic development education workforce international affairs Business and Commerce

Closes
2026-07-15 · 8 d
Award ceiling
$40,000
Award floor
$40,000
Program funding
$40,000
Expected awards
1
Cost sharing
No
Posted
2026-05-13
Instrument
Cooperative Agreement
Characterization · gpt-5.4-mini · 2026-07-07

A cooperative agreement funds a Bolivia-focused entrepreneurship and business formalization program for eligible organizations to train informal micro and small businesses, guide them into legal registration and tax compliance, and connect them with U.S. commercial suppliers and technology providers.

Funds
training education
University
direct
social behavioral
minor
engineering
minor
computational data
minor

RESTRICTED TO: NONPROFITS · STATE LOCAL GOV

⚑ Cooperative agreement with substantial U.S. Embassy involvement in recruitment and key program approvals. · Award ceiling $40,000. · Eligible applicant classes include public and private educational institutions, nonprofits/NGOs, public international organizations, and governmental institutions. · Goal includes formalization, tax compliance, municipal revenue growth, and commercial linkages with U.S. firms; not a research award.

Unit fits — one characterization, each unit's own rules

IPPRA 39 weak outside portfolio topics; signature methods: community engaged, policy analysis; social/behavioral work is minor; funds training education, not research (capped)
Physical Sciences & Engineering (demo) 25 weak technical depth: minor; funds training education (capped)
Tom Love Innovation Hub 5 none no commercialization signal

Description

Project Background, Goals, and Objectives Bolivia has one of the largest informal economies in Latin America, with a significant portion of entrepreneurial activity occurring outside formal business structures. Many entrepreneurs operate small-scale businesses in sectors like retail, food services, construction, and personal services without formal registration, limiting their access to credit, legal protections, and growth opportunities. These informal businesses also face barriers to adopting modern business practices and technologies, including U.S.-based financial management tools and digital solutions that could enhance their competitiveness. By bringing businesses into the formal economy, ScaleUp Bolivia will expand the customer base for U.S. products and services, create more reliable supply chain partners for American companies, and open new markets for American technology providers and suppliers. The program will strengthen the rule of law and economic governance, reduce unfair competition in the marketplace, increase municipal tax revenues that support local development, and generate economic growth that benefits both Bolivian communities and U.S. commercial interests. Additionally, formalized businesses become better positioned to engage in international trade and adopt U.S. business standards, creating a foundation for sustained bilateral economic partnership.

Project Audience(s): Primary beneficiaries should include:

•Informal entrepreneurs currently operating outside the formal economy who are ready to legitimize their businesses.

•Micro and small business owners in sectors such as retail, food services, construction, and personal services lack knowledge of formalization processes.

•Entrepreneurs who face additional barriers to entering the formal market due to limited access to information, capital, and networks.

Project Goal: The project goal is to transition 100 informal Bolivian businesses into the formal economy within 12 months by providing world-class entrepreneurship education, formalization guidance, and U.S. business partnerships, thereby expanding markets for American products and services while strengthening Bolivia's economic governance and creating sustainable commercial ties between Bolivian entrepreneurs and U.S. companies. O

Objective 1: Business Formalization and Education Enroll 100 informal Bolivian entrepreneurs in world-class business education through the Najafi 100 Million Learners Global Initiative and formalize at least 40 businesses within 12 months through guided support on registration, tax compliance, permits, and financial management using U.S.-based tools.

Objective 2: U.S. Commercial Partnerships Establish commercial relationships between at least 20 newly formalized Bolivian businesses and U.S. suppliers or technology providers within 12 months, generating purchases of American products and services and expanding markets for U.S. companies.

Objective 3: Institutional Collaboration and Economic Impact Partner with Bolivia's tax authority, municipal governments, chambers of commerce, and U.S. fintech companies to streamline formalization, increase municipal tax revenue, create 150+ formal jobs, and establish a peer network of 50+ entrepreneurs for sustained growth and U.S. business engagement.

Expected Outcome:

The program should achieve the following outcomes within 12 months: formalize at least 15 businesses per city; connect at least 20 newly formalized businesses with U.S. suppliers or service providers; increase tax revenue for Bolivian municipalities; and create a peer support network of formalized entrepreneurs.

2. Substantial Involvement

This award is expected to be a cooperative agreement because the U.S. Embassy in La Paz anticipates substantial involvement in program implementation.

U.S. Embassy Roles and Responsibilities

The U.S. Embassy may:

•Review and approve the final participant recruitment and selection approach.

•Review and approve key program themes, speakers, and technical framing.

•Provide input on U.S. foreign policy messaging and public diplomacy objectives.

•Review branding, visibility, and outreach materials.

•Coordinate Embassy participation in selected program events.

•Monitor implementation and performance throughout the award period.

Recipient Roles and Responsibilities

The recipient will:

•Design and implement all program activities in accordance with the approved proposal and budget.

•Manage logistics, participant outreach, and event coordination.

•Identify and coordinate qualified trainers, speakers, and partners.

•Ensure program content is technically sound and aligned with the objectives of this NOFO.

•Track participant engagement and program performance.

•Submit all required financial and programmatic reports.

Eligibility

The following organizations are eligible to apply:• Not-for-profit organizations, including think tanks and civil society/non-governmental organizations• Public and private educational institutions• Public International Organizations• Governmental institutions

Apply

View on Grants.gov → CONTACT: Maria T Requena Grantor <LaPazGrants@state.gov>

Proposal brief SEE AN EXAMPLE →

A one-page internal memo: fit assessment, submission requirements, document scaffold, and next steps dated back from the deadline — tailored to your project idea if you add one.

ONE LLM CALL (~1¢) · CACHED · REQUIRES STAFF KEY

Proposal shell · Federal (generic) conventions SEE A FEDERAL EXAMPLE →

Funder-faithful document skeletons — Federal (generic)'s document set with section headings, page limits, reviewer guidance, and writing prompts; add a project idea to get [DRAFT] starter bullets. Download as .md for Word or Overleaf.

ONE LLM CALL (~2-3¢) · CACHED · SCAFFOLDING, NOT GHOSTWRITING