Part I
- The crisis of global poverty has, at long last, been
accorded a high priority on the international agenda. This propitious
development has sparked a flurry of discussion and research concerning
the means for eradicating this debilitating condition from human life.
Yet as renewed pledges for action pour in from governments, as
long-held theories and conventional approaches fail to quell long-held
prejudices, conflicts, and exploitation, a feeling of rudderlessness
looms over the global enterprise of poverty eradication. At the same
time, a palpable optimism emerges from the attention and momentum
generated by the search for solutions to this worldwide challenge.
- The mechanisms of poverty eradication have long been
defined in primarily material terms. Indeed, the central pillar of the
international community’s poverty alleviation efforts has
been the transfer of financial resources. Approximately $2.3 trillion
have been spent on foreign aid over the last five decades.[1]
Tragically, the aid, far from ushering in greater self-sufficiency, has
often had a detrimental effect on recipient communities: increased
dependency on foreign assistance, subservience to externally dictated
priorities, misappropriation of funds and decreased pressure for
governance reform. In a resolute push for change, the United Nations
has sought to expand the mechanisms for assistance and to galvanize
support for poverty alleviation through its Millennium Development
Goals.[2]
- It is now increasingly acknowledged that such conditions as
the marginalization of girls and women,[3]
poor governance,[4]
ethnic and religious antipathy,[5]
environmental degradation[6]
and unemployment[7]
constitute formidable obstacles to the progress and development of
communities. These evidence a deeper crisis—one rooted in the
values and attitudes that shape relationships at all levels of society.
Viewed from this perspective, poverty can be described as the absence
of those ethical, social and material resources needed to develop the
moral, intellectual and social capacities of individuals, communities
and institutions. Moral reasoning, group decision-making and freedom
from racism, for example, are all essential tools for poverty
alleviation. Such capacities must shape individual thinking as well as
institutional arrangements and policy-making. To be clear, the goal at
hand is not only to remove the ills of poverty but to engage the masses
of humanity in the construction of a just global order.
- Individuals and institutions must work in tandem to take up
this task. One of the goals of poverty alleviation, then, centers on
the individual: he must be helped to reclaim his dignity and sense of
self-worth, must be encouraged to gain confidence to improve his
condition and strive to realize his potential. Beyond the achievement
of personal well-being, he must be nurtured to become a source of
social good—of peace, happiness and advantage to those around
him. It is at the level of service to others that our humanity achieves
its highest expression. The second goal centers on institutions: at
every level of society, they must serve as channels through which the
talents and energies of individuals can be harnessed in service to
humanity. Resources that help to develop this individual and
institutional capacity represent a true source of wealth to the
community.
- Much like the physical principles that govern the material
world, the social world, too, is governed by moral principles, which
underlie the functioning of an ordered society. Principles such as
gender equality,[8]
trustworthiness,[9]
access to education, human rights and freedom of religion,[10]
for example, tend to correlate positively with measures of
socioeconomic well-being and stability. The interrelatedness of
challenges stemming from poverty calls for the articulation of
principles capable of guiding analysis, decision-making and the
development of indicators to measure progress. The essential merit of a
principle-based process is that it guides individuals and institutions
away from a focus on isolated, short-term concerns to consider problems
from a systemic and long-term perspective. For any decision to garner
support and deliver results, the decision-making process itself must
have integrity: it must involve those directly affected by the
decisions and it must be governed by transparent, agreed-upon ethical
standards.
- It is in this context that the Bahá'í
International Community would like to offer two principles as guides
for efforts in the realm of poverty eradication: justice and unity.
These principles underlie a vision of development in which material
progress serves as a vehicle for the moral and cultural advancement of
humanity. Justice provides the means capable of harnessing human
potential to eradicate poverty from our midst, through the
implementation of laws, the adjustment of economic systems, the
redistribution of wealth and opportunity, and unfailing adherence to
the highest ethical standards in private and public life. Unity asserts
that progress is systemic and relational, that a concern for the
integrity of the family unit and the local, national, and global
community must guide poverty alleviation efforts.
Part II
Governance
- The question of poverty places particular responsibility on
elected leaders and their governments. While some have argued that
poverty itself leads to poor governance, causality often moves in the
opposite direction: better governance leads to better development
outcomes.[11]
Central to the issue of governance is the inescapable question of
character – the values that a leader brings to his or her
office largely define the direction and fruits of his or her work.
Trustworthiness is foremost among these, as it fosters credibility with
the public and with other leaders, builds support for government
initiatives and engenders stability and security. Effective leaders
must not only exercise an impeccable ethic but also work to strengthen
the character of the nation’s economic, social, legal and
educational institutions, to improve the regulatory framework, and to
manage scarce resources effectively. Where earnings are concerned, they
must be content with a lawful and modest remuneration. As the substance
of politics becomes increasingly global, elected leaders must show the
vision and the courage to gradually align national interests with the
requirements of the evolving global community.
Justice and human rights
- The United Nations’ efforts to link poverty
eradication efforts with international human rights norms is a positive
step in aligning the work of governments with the principles of
justice. Our common heritage of human rights norms, encompassing the
rights of the individual and of the family; the freedom to know and to
believe; the equality of men and women and racial equality; the right
to work and to education, among others, embodies the most significant
moral accomplishments of the human race. Human rights, as endorsed by
most governments of the world, must now enter into the community and
legal culture and be systematically incorporated into domestic
legislation. They must be translated into all languages and made
accessible through media and educational institutions. In this way, the
human rights norms can come to replace broken legal systems
characterized by the oppressive and arbitrary application of laws,
forced on people unaware of their rights and unable to articulate their
needs.
Individual responsibility
- A large share of the responsibility for poverty eradication
rests with the individuals themselves. While poverty is the product of
numerous factors: historic, economic, political and environmental,
there is also a cultural dimension, which manifests itself in
individual values and attitudes. Some of these – such as the
subjugation of girls and women, the lack of value of education or of an
individual’s right to progress – can exacerbate
conditions of poverty. The relevant human qualities such as honesty,
willingness to work, and cooperation can be harnessed to accomplish
enormously demanding goals when members of society trust that they are
protected by standards of justice and assured of benefits that apply
equally to all. The human rights approach, with its emphasis on the
individual’s entitlement to a set of rights, however, may
prove challenging to implement without an accompanying moral influence
necessary to inspire the accompanying changes in attitudes and
behaviors.
Gender
- The issue of gender equality is one such example: over the
last two decades nations have repeatedly come together to acknowledge
the critical role of women in advancing development imperatives. The
natural and social sciences have laid to rest any bases for
discrimination; most countries have enacted laws to afford women the
same opportunities as men; conventions have been signed and ratified;
new measures and social indicators have been put in place. Yet
women’s agency in the arenas of law, politics, science,
commerce and religion, to name a few, is still grossly deficient. In
areas where women have gained access to education, employment, and
ownership opportunities, dramatic effects have been observed at many
levels: at the level of the family, more equitable division of food,
resources, and health care among girls and boys; higher rates of
literacy among children; lower rates of fertility leading to better
economic conditions and maternal health; and the injection of new
concerns into public discourse. Female literacy, alone, has been shown
to play a much more important role in promoting social well-being than
other variables related to the general level of wealth in a society.[12]
Indeed the well-being of the entire family has been dramatically
altered where economic and social circumstances and societal attitudes
have been favorable to women’s advancement. Yet, the gradual
transformation of attitudes has required much more than legal measures,
it has required a fundamental change of belief about roles of men and
women and courage to challenge traditional gender norms.
Economic activity
- Undeniably, poverty is sustained by an interaction of
social and material factors. This interaction determines the societal
benefits of material resources, whether the resources are concentrated
in the hands of a few or are equitably distributed, whether they are
beneficial or harmful to the society at large. Today, much of economic
activity and its institutional context is at odds with environmental
sustainability, the advancement of women, the well-being of the family,
the engagement of young people, the availability of employment, and the
expansion of knowledge. For example, military expenditures exceeding $1
trillion[13]
and global trade in illicit drugs in excess of $300 billion[14]
far exceeds the estimated costs of meeting the United
Nations’ global development goals in areas of education,
health, sustainability, and women’s empowerment.[15]
The economic theories of impersonal markets, promoting self-centered
actions of individuals, have not helped humanity escape the extremes of
poverty on the one hand and over-consumption on the other. New economic
theories for our time must be animated by a motive beyond just profit.
They must be rooted in the very human and relational dimension of all
economic activity, which binds us as families, as communities and as
citizens of one world. They must be animated by
a spirit of innovation rather than blind imitation, ennoblement rather
than exploitation, and the full and confident participation of women.
Extremes of wealth
- Economic considerations underlying poverty alleviation
efforts have generally focused on the creation of wealth but have not
yet fully considered the parallel problem of the over-concentration of
wealth. In an interconnected world, where the wealth of many of the
world’s richest individuals exceeds the Gross Domestic
Product of entire nations, extreme poverty and extreme wealth exist
side by side. While much of the focus of remedial efforts is directed
towards the poorest, it is the concentration of wealth in the hands of
the few that is in urgent need of attention. Indeed, the tremendous
wealth generated by transnational corporations could be an integral
part of the solution to tackle poverty, through strict regulation to
ensure good global citizenship, adherence to human rights norms and the
distribution of wealth for the benefit of the larger society. Where a
nation’s wealth is concerned, the question becomes one of
social value rather than gross dollar measures. The Gross Domestic
Product, for example, aggregates the sum total of all economic activity
– including the production of guns, cigarettes, etc.
– regardless of its social worth or environmental impact. New
measures that account for pollutants and economic ills and add
unmeasured, unremunerated benefits are needed for a more accurate
picture of a nation’s economic health and wealth.[16]
Sustainable development
- It has been widely acknowledged that economic prosperity
has come at a tremendous cost to our natural environment.[17]
In fact, no country has emerged as a major industrial power without a
legacy of significant environmental damage, affecting the security and
well-being of its own populations and, equally significantly, those of
developing nations. The growth-driven economic paradigm rooted in
national interests at the expense of social and environmental variables
and international well-being is under increasing scrutiny. Challenging
ethical questions of resource distribution and responsibility for
damages force governments to develop institutional mechanisms and
implement policies that consider the prosperity and health of the
global community and that of future generations. On an institutional
level, a global entity with a strong scientific advisory capacity is
needed to streamline reporting and decision-making processes, including
the voices of non-state actors. It must coherently link environmental
issues to social and economic priorities, for none of these can advance
in isolation.[18]
At the educational level, curricula must seek to develop a sense of
responsibility towards the natural environment as well as foster a
spirit of inquiry and innovation so that the diversity of human
experience can be brought to bear on the challenge of creating an
environmentally sustainable development pathway.
Agriculture
- A core element of a strategy of sustainable development is
the reform of agricultural policies and processes. Food production and
agriculture is the world’s single largest source of
employment; nearly 70% of the poor in developing countries live in
rural areas and depend on agriculture for their livelihoods.[19]
Although farming has been devalued by manufacturing and a rapidly
expanding urban population, agriculture still represents the
fundamental basis of economic and community life: malnourishment and
food insecurity suffocate all attempts at development and progress.
Despite this pivotal role, poverty is often concentrated in rural
areas. Damage to natural resources, poor information and infrastructure
often result in food insecurity, premature deaths and mass migration to
urban areas in search of a better life. The farmer must be accorded his
or her rightful place in the processes of development and civilization
building: as the villages are reconstructed, the cities will follow.
Employment
- The provision of meaningful work represents an essential
component of poverty alleviation efforts. The meaningful engagement of
young people becomes even more important as urban populations swell
and, with them, the increase of slums, rising crime rates, use of
drugs, unemployment, breakdown of family structures and social
isolation. Today, young people between the ages of 15-29 account for
nearly half of all adults in 100 economically disadvantaged nations.[20]
Lack of meaningful employment only feeds their hopelessness and
frustration. Yet it is not only the quantity but also the quality and
meaning of work that needs to be reconsidered. Whether tilling the soil
or selling goods, one’s work should not be reduced to a means
for acquiring more goods or as an expendable cost of production.
One’s work is the means of developing one’s craft,
of refining one’s character, and contributing to the welfare
and progress of society. Indeed, the fight against underemployment must
begin with the dignity and value of all human labor, even if it is
humble, insecure, unprofitable or unremunerated.
Knowledge
- Underlying the meaningful participation in the advancement
of society and the higher aims of civilization is the bulwark of
education. While many poverty eradication programs have focused on
increasing enrollment in primary and secondary education –
which is the first step – the long-term goal must also be
articulated: namely to create a society in which the production,
diffusion and application of knowledge infuses all facets of human
activity. This requires interventions at all levels including
child-rearing practices that foster questioning; equal educational
opportunities for boys and girls; development of independent media
sources; translation of texts from other cultures and the promotion of
innovation and scientific research. In order to be free to innovate, to
devise solutions to complex problems, the human mind must be free to
know.
Religion
- The concept of knowledge now needed to guide poverty
alleviation efforts must be adequate to address both the poverty of
means and the poverty of spirit. Material resources are essential, to
be sure, yet they alone cannot generate a vision of the full measure of
human prosperity; they cannot provide answers to the deepest questions
about human nature or the purpose of our existence. Most importantly,
the material and technical dimensions alone will not compel the
fundamental changes in human character and belief needed to overcome
the destructive behaviors which have led to present day conditions.
They will not galvanize and sustain the human will to persevere, to
strive for excellence, to humbly serve, to create, to seek knowledge,
to cultivate beauty and to seek the well-being of all humankind. To
encompass the spiritual dimension and its expression in the religions
of the world is not to return to superstition or fanaticism or to
denounce rational inquiry in any way. Rather, it is to build into
poverty alleviation efforts, in an integrated manner, recognition of
all the dimensions of human experience and an understanding of how
poverty manifests in the material and spiritual dimensions of human
life.
- In our efforts to eradicate poverty, we are experiencing no
less than the birth pangs of a truly global civilization: new modes of
thought, new standards and new legal and institutional arrangements are
struggling to take hold. As our understanding of the problems and their
possible solutions expands, an unprecedented global consensus and
accompanying capacity for international cooperation pave the way for an
outcome far greater than any we have been able to achieve. Yet, to
generate the knowledge and commitment needed to overcome poverty, the
full spectrum of human spiritual and intellectual potential will need
to be summoned for the task. And as the fullness of our humanity is
engaged, it will regenerate the fabric of civilization.
[1]
Easterly, William.
The White Man’s
Burden: Why the West’s Efforts to Aid the Rest Have Done So
Much Ill and so
Little Good. The Penguin Press: New York, 2006.
[2]
The
United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals, launched in the
2000, represent
the United Nations’ strategy to halve halve extreme poverty
by 2015. The eight
time-bound targets include: eradication of extreme hunger and poverty;
promotion
of gender equality; reduction of child mortality; improvement of
maternal
health; combating HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases; ensuring
environmental
sustainability; developing a global partnership for development.
[3]
Mason,
Andrew D. and Elizabeth M. King.
Engendering
Development through Gender Equality in Rights, Resources, and Voice. A
World Bank Research Report. World Bank: Washington, DC, 2001;
Towards
Achieving Gender Equality and Empowering Women.
International Center
on Research for Women: Washington, DC, 2005; Chen, M. et al.
Progress
of the World’s Women 2005: Women,
Work & Poverty. United Nations Fund for Women: New
York, 2005.
[4]
Kaufmann, Daniel, Aart Kraay and Massimo Mastruzzi.
Governance
Matters IV: Governance Indicators for 1996 – 2004. World
Bank: Washington, DC, 2005;
Arab Human Development Report
2004: Towards Freedom in the Arab World. United
Nations Development Programme: New York, 2004; On September 17, 2007,
the
United Nations News Centre reported that one quarter of the gross
domestic
product of African States – or $148 billion – is
lost to corruption yearly.
[5]
Human Development Report 2004. Cultural Liberty in
Today’s Diverse
World. United Nations Development Programme: New York, 2004.
[6]
Stern, Nicholas. Stern Review: The Economics of
Climate Change, HM Treasury: London,
2006.
[7]
World Employment Report 2004-2005.
Employment, Productivity and Poverty Reduction. International
Labor
Organization: Geneva,
2004.
[8]
See
note 3.
[9]
See note 4.
[10]
“The
Failed States Index,” Foreign Policy,
July/August 2007, 55-63.
[11]
See note 2 above.
[12]
Sen,
Amartya. Development as Freedom. Anchor:
New York,
2000.
[13]
United Nations Peacekeeping Operations
Background Note. United Nations Department of Public
Information: New York. 30 November
2005. (Dollar amounts in 2005 US dollars.)
[14]
World Drug Report 2007. United Nations
Office on Drugs and Crime: New York,
2007.
[15]
The United Nations Millennium Project estimates that
the costs of meeting the Millennium Development Goals in all countries
are
approximately $121 billion in 2006, rising to $189 billion in 2015. (UN
Millennium
Project 2005. Investing in Development: A
Practical Plan to Achieve the Millennium Development Goals. Overview. United
Nations Development
Programme: New York,
2005.)
[16]
Alternative means for calculating national wealth are
being explored by various scholars. The “Genuine Progress
Indicator” (GPI) is
one such initiative. Unlike the conventional Gross Domestic Product
(GDP)
measure, the GPI attempts to subtract out pollution and economic ills
and adds
previously unmeasured benefits (e.g. household work and parenting) to
calculate
a more accurate measure of a nation’s wealth. For 2002 (the
most recent year
with GPI data), the U.S. non-governmental organization Redefining
Progress
calculated that between 1972 and 2002, while GDP per capita grew by 79
percent,
the GPI grew by just 1 percent (Jason Venetoulis and Cliff Cobb. The
Genuine Progress Indicator 1950-2002
(2004 Update). Redefining Progress: Oakland, CA, 2004.)
[17]
Reports of the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (established in 1988 by the World
Meteorological
Organization and the United Nations Environment Programme) are widely
cited in
climate change debates. The most recent reports under the title, Climate
Change 2007 include: The Physical Science Basis;
Impacts, Adaptation and
Vulnerability; and Mitigation of Climate Change;
and are published
by Cambridge University Press, 2007.
[18]
At
the national level, the voluminous reporting requirements must be
streamlined
and consolidated so as to enable countries to meet their obligations in
an efficient
and coherent manner.
[19]
Dixon,
John, Aidan Gulliver and David Gibbon. Farming
Systems and Poverty: improving farmers' livelihoods in a changing world.
A joint study by the Food
and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations and the World Bank:
Rome and Washington, DC, 2001. URL:
ftp://ftp.fao.org/docrep/fao/003/y1860e/y1860e00.pdf.
[20]
World
Watch Institute, Vital Signs 2007-2008,
p.74.
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