An Effective Solution To World Poverty

There is really only one effective solution to world poverty. It is actually the only solution that has ever worked or I believe will ever work. It is evident from the history of every wealthy nation today all of which had the common consistency of productivity, property, government, and personal moral values. Based on my 20+ years’ experience as a humanitarian and my work in relief and development that provided me the opportunity to serve in four regions and now forty-six countries as well as some personal research in both economics and basic ethics my conclusion is this: poor nations must somehow produce their own prosperity, and I believe it is possible for them to do this. 

As explained in a book I recent read called The Poverty of Nations there were no wealthy nations for most of human history. Then in the late 1700s (the Industrial Revolution) some nations began to produce more, much more. Their factories produced more goods and their farms produced more food. Their per capita income doubled and quadrupled and kept on increasing. Britain was the leader, producing textiles (especially cotton) far faster, cheaper, and better than anyone in the world. Many other manufactured products followed, and soon other nations in Europe and North America also began to produce their own prosperity. 

The same pattern has continued in the modern era. Japan grew from being a poor agricultural economy in the early 1900s to the world’s second-largest economy in the late 20th century by manufacturing cars, computers, TVs, cameras, steel, and ships. South Korea went from being one of the world’s poorest nations in the 1950s to the twelfth richest nation today by manufacturing products like TVs, cars, and microwaves. Chile began to move out of poverty in the 1970s by growing abundant fruits and vegetables for export. India is experiencing rapid growth through information technology, medical technology, and customer services such as telephone help lines. China is growing by producing millions of small manufactured goods. 

Every nation that has escaped poverty has done so by producing its own prosperity. No nation has ever escaped poverty by means of foreign aid. Foreign aid given through the governments of poor countries usually does more harm than good because it entrenches corrupt rulers in power, fattens their personal bank accounts, and foments civil wars over control of the big prize: access to the nation’s treasury and all the aid money. 

Forgiveness of a poor nation’s debts is not the answer either because it is just more foreign aid carried out by a two-step process (first the loan, then its cancellation). Responding to emergencies with the provision of food and medical care are important because they meet urgent needs, but they are addressing the symptoms (hunger and sickness) rather than the cause (the poor nation is not producing enough of its own food and medical care). As we look at sustainability though, these poor nations should not become dependent on donations from other nations year after year. 

Abundant natural resources are not the answer for poor nations today either because many African and Latin American nations have immense resources but they remain poor, while nations such as Switzerland, Japan, Taiwan, and Singapore all lack significant resources but have become wealthy by creating productive economies. They have produced their own prosperity. 

But the key question remains: What must a nation do to become more productive and move from poverty toward increasing prosperity? 1. A nation’s economic system, 2. It’s government and 3. It’s cultural beliefs. The only economic system that has ever produced national prosperity is a free market system, not a welfare state or socialism or communism. However, a free market can only be truly free when it includes widespread access to private ownership of property, effective rule of law, a stable currency, increasing specialization in the workforce, free trade both domestically and internationally, and allowing people to keep most of the fruits of their labor (through low taxes). 

But a free market system alone will not bring prosperity unless a nation also has the right kinds of government and cultural beliefs. A government that leads to prosperity is one in which leaders are not acclimated to systemic corruption but are committed to using their power for the benefit of the people as a whole. The government must also protect citizens against crime and safeguard important human freedoms. At a deeper level, there must be good and wise cultural beliefs. 

To become truly productive, a society must share a widespread belief in not stealing, telling the truth, working productively and diligently, conducting business transactions so as to benefit both parties, using time wisely, and developing the earth’s resources with wisdom, not with superstition or fear. But if we are talking about how to solve world poverty, the solution can only come through increased economic productivity within poor nations themselves. Poverty is a complex problem and any genuine solution must address multiple factors.

Written by Paul Gimson

 
 

About Paul Gimson

Paul has extensive experience in Asia, Southeast Asia, the Middle East and Africa.

Over the past twenty years a major focus has been relief and development where he has directed and involved in emergency response programs as well as developmental programs in over forty-six countries.

 Formerly, Paul served in Africa as a Photojournalist for National Geographic Society, Time Life Magazine and Newsweek.

 Paul has spent a significant amount of time in Africa and South East Asia directing various NGO’s and in country partners.  Paul and his team he have managed up to one hundred and twenty partnerships / projects in over forty-one countries. Many of these partners were in Africa, Middle East, Eastern Europe, Asia and Southeast Asia.

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