https://www.project-syndicate.org
Is Charity for the Poor
Futile?
A group of
leading economists recently criticized aid to the poor for failing to address
poverty's root causes. But while we wait for politicians to act – and it could
be a long wait – it is important to concentrate our spare resources on
effective aid that helps poor people lead the best lives they can.
MELBOURNE – In an
essay published last month in The
Guardian, 15 leading economists – including the Nobel laureates Angus Deaton, James Heckman, and Joseph Stiglitz – criticized what they call “the ‘aid
effectiveness’ craze” on the grounds that it leads us to ignore the root causes
of global poverty.
I advocate assessing the effectiveness of aid and
providing resources for interventions shown to be highly cost-effective. To
that end, I founded The Life You Can Save, an organization that gathers evidence about which
charities give donors the most bang for their buck and encourages people to
donate to them. The Life You Can Save recommends proven interventions because
we think donors are likely to do more good by helping individuals with unmet
needs than by aspiring to eliminate the root causes of poverty without a
realistic strategy for achieving that goal.
Deaton, Heckman, Stiglitz, and their colleagues
begin by telling us that global poverty “remains intractable.” This statement
reflects and reinforces the gloomy view that we are not making any progress in
reducing poverty.
But that is not the case. The World Bank classifies
people as living in “extreme poverty” if they lack the income needed to provide
reliably for sufficient food, shelter, and other basic needs. The Bank’s most
recent estimate is that
there are 768.5 million people, or 10.7% of the world’s population, living in
extreme poverty. In a world that produces more than enough to meet everyone’s
basic needs, that figure provides no grounds for complacency. But in 1990, more than 35% of the world’s people were living
in extreme poverty, and as recently as 2012, the figure was 12.4%. The
long-term trend is clearly positive.
Other indicators of human wellbeing debunk the
gloomy view. For example, the rate of child mortality has fallen from 93 per
1,000 births to close to 40 since
1990.
The economists’ essay then tells us that the
supposed failure to make progress in reducing global poverty comes despite
“hundreds of billions of dollars of aid.” No time period is specified, but many
readers will assume that the world gives “hundreds of billions of dollars” of
aid each year. In 2017, official development assistance (ODA) from all the
world’s advanced economies was $146.6
billion, or less than $1 of every
$300 earned in these countries.
If all of this money went to the 768.5 million
people living in extreme poverty, it would amount to $191 for each of them. In
fact, only 45%
of ODA even goes to the least developed countries. Much of it goes to programs for which there is
little evidence of effectiveness. No wonder that this very modest amount of
often-misdirected assistance has yet to end extreme poverty!
The next target for the 15 economists is the use of
randomized controlled trials to test whether interventions are effective. These
trials, they point out, are expensive. Perhaps, but they are less expensive
than continuing to support projects that do no good. Randomized trials are not
always applicable, and are not the only way to demonstrate effectiveness. But
when they are available, they provide solid evidence that, for example, distributing bed nets to
protect children against malaria-bearing mosquitos does save lives – and at a
modest cost.
As noted, however, the economists’ major objection
to this kind of evidence is that it leads us to focus on “micro-interventions”
that do not tackle the underlying causes of poverty. The power of this
objection depends on the availability of better alternatives.
What do they suggest? They say the poor need
“access to public education and health care” and that there should be
coordinated public policies to prevent climate change. To make real progress in
agriculture, we must end the excessive subsidies paid by rich countries.
Other recommendations include stopping tax
avoidance by multinational companies, regulating tax havens, and developing
labor regulations to stop globalization’s “race to the bottom.” To understand
which policies work best, we are told, we should draw on underused data and
satellite imagery. The ultimate goal is to change the rules of the
international economic system to make it “more ecological and fairer for the
world’s majority.”1
These are laudable aims. But who are the economists
addressing? Individuals who donate to charities? Senior officials in government
departments responsible for allocating aid? Governments? Only the last of these
have the power to make the recommended changes.
If the arguments are addressed to governments,
however, would better data lead to better outcomes? On US agricultural
subsidies, for example, anyone who has taken an impartial look knows that they
harm the global poor and are a huge waste of public funds. Nevertheless,
efforts to eliminate them have failed repeatedly, not because of a lack of
policy analysis, but because of the political power of the rural states.
The Life You Can Save, like GiveWell and similar organizations, seeks to influence
individual donors, encouraging them to think about where they can direct their
donations to do the most good. I hope that they will also be active citizens,
urging their government to bring about a fairer and more sustainable world. But
while we wait for our politicians to tackle the root causes of global poverty –
and it could be a long wait – let’s concentrate our spare resources on
effective aid that helps people in extreme poverty lead the best lives they
can.2
Writing for PS since 2001
161 Commentaries
161 Commentaries
Subscribe
Peter Singer is Professor of Bioethics at Princeton University, Laureate
Professor in the School of Historical and Philosophical Studies at the
University of Melbourne, and founder of the non-profit organization The Life You Can Save. His
books includeAnimal
Liberation, Practical
Ethics, The
Ethics of What We Eat (with Jim
Mason), Rethinking Life and
Death, The Point of View of
the Universe, co-authored with
Katarzyna de Lazari-Radek, The Most Good You Can
Do, Famine,
Affluence, and Morality, One World Now, Ethics in the Real
World, and Utilitarianism:
A Very Short Introduction, also
with Katarzyna de Lazari-Radek. In 2013, he was named the world's third
"most influential contemporary thinker" by the Gottlieb Duttweiler
Institute.
No hay comentarios.:
Publicar un comentario