Pascal-Emmanuel Gobry, Columnist

Social Business Isn't an Oxymoron in France

Tech entrepreneurs prove that aiding migrants can be good for business.

Not everyone sees them as a burden.

Photographer: Philippe Huguen/AFP/Getty Images
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Social entrepreneurship is a concept perfectly suited for Emmanuel Macron’s France: It sounds both left-wing and right-wing, speaks of innovation and compassion, and is a little fuzzy.

But while the hype seems deceptive, the numbers tell a good story. According to official figures, employment in social businesses, defined as corporations, for-profit or not, incorporated with “solidarity and social utility” as a key goal and reflecting it in their governance structure, grew by 24 percent between 2000 and 2014, versus 4.5 percent for private-sector employment as a whole.