Proposed financing model for GiveBack to Algeria (GBTA)
Introduction
GBTA’s financing model is built on a clear, community-driven principle: a small, regular monthly contribution from a large number of Algerians at home and abroad, converted through strict governance and transparency into productive assets, and then into profits that are fully reinvested to create a long-term circular economic loop across all 69 wilayas.
This is not a one-off fundraising campaign. It is a structured development engine designed to endure.
Why this model?
Large-scale development needs:
-
a stable and predictable source of funding
-
a defined timeline for the “build phase”
-
governance that prevents personalisation and misuse
-
a credible pathway from donations to self-financing operations
GBTA prioritises scale, consistency, and public-interest safeguards.
Proposed donation timeframe
The model includes a defined foundational donation window:
-
monthly contributions
-
over 7.5 years, as a build and launch phase
The purpose of a defined timeframe is to fund the creation of income-generating assets, then allow those assets to finance future expansion.
The monthly contribution principle
The concept uses a fixed, affordable monthly amount (a recurring illustrative example in our planning: €25 per month) supported by broad participation (an illustrative mobilisation target: 1.5 million contributors).
These figures are primarily used to explain the mechanism: consistency + scale + governance + reinvestment.
How it works: three clear phases
Phase 1: Build through contributions
During the 7.5-year window:
-
contributions are collected into dedicated accounts under published rules
-
capital is allocated in stages, prioritising high-impact, revenue-generating projects
-
reporting, independent audit pathways, and transparency dashboards are established
Phase 2: Transition to self-financing
Once projects are operational, they fund:
-
operations and maintenance
-
salaries and job creation
-
reserves and risk management
The goal is for the system to continue without permanent reliance on donations.
Phase 3: Permanent reinvestment
GBTA’s core rule:
-
no profit distribution to individuals
-
no private extraction of surplus
-
all surpluses are reinvested into new projects or expansion of existing ones
Where the funds go, and how they are protected
GBTA is designed with a structural separation:
-
a national non-profit association (public-interest ownership, governance, asset lock)
-
an executive commercial arm owned 100 percent by the association, responsible for delivery and operations
This ensures:
-
assets remain protected for public benefit
-
execution is professional and accountable
-
profits flow back into community reinvestment
How profits are used: full reinvestment
Profits are not the end goal. They are the fuel for scale. Surpluses fund:
-
new projects in additional locations
-
expansion of successful operations
-
quality and standards upgrades
-
training, employment, and capability building
-
complementary community infrastructure within the productive ecosystem, such as libraries, swimming pools, cultural spaces, learning and innovation hubs
The circular economic loop
GBTA aims to create a reinforcing national loop:
-
contributions build productive assets
-
assets create jobs and incomes
-
incomes strengthen local purchasing power and local markets
-
local markets support project revenues
-
revenues generate surpluses
-
surpluses are reinvested into further assets
-
the cycle repeats, with balanced reach across 69 wilayas
The historical link and shared meaning
GBTA is rooted in Algeria’s long tradition of solidarity, mutual support, and collective mobilisation. The proposal is to convert that national spirit into an institutional model:
-
regular commitment
-
public transparency
-
measurable outcomes
-
lasting community-owned assets for future generations
#GiveBacktoAlgeria
