I was looking at a piece of research that went into countries such as South Sudan, Somalia, and Sierra Leone. They approached all the businesses they could find and asked them where they got their money from, and whom they employ. One of the facts that popped out is that a very large percentage of them were run by people who had come back from the United States, the United Kingdom, France, or Canada. They had come back to their home country and set up a business.
From my understanding of the DFI model, that would be something for a DFI to interact directly with. Maybe there are other parts of the development landscape, such as NGO partners that the DFI could work with, to tap that potential of people who have been in Canada, see an opportunity to go back and set up a business, and need some money to do it. That's just one of the advantages that you have. You have this large community to exploit.