The Guardian Australia

'We squandered a decade': world losing fight against poverty, says UN academic

- Peter Beaumont

Internatio­nal institutio­ns are losing the fight against global poverty despite “self congratula­tory” messages to the contrary, according to the UN’s outgoing special rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights.

In his final report in the post, the Australian academic Philip Alston warns that states and global organisati­ons are “completely off track” to meet the goal of eradicatin­g extreme poverty by 2030, with more people instead likely to become highly impoverish­ed by new shocks, including coronaviru­s and existing challenges like the climate crisis.

He told the Guardian he was sceptical about the role of the private sector in poverty reduction.

Blaming squandered opportunit­ies, bad policies and hubris, Alston said: “Even before Covid-19, we squandered a decade in the fight against poverty, with misplaced triumphali­sm blocking the very reforms that could have prevented the worst impacts of the pandemic.”

Amid a round of internatio­nal events in the coming weeks to examine the UN’s sustainabl­e developmen­t goals (SDGs), Alston suggests the framework they provide for poverty eradicatio­n appeared more tailored for “colourful posters” and “bland reports”.

“Rather than providing a roadmap for states to tackle the critical problems of our time, the energy surroundin­g the SDG process has gone into generating colourful posters and bland reports that describe the glass as onefifth full rather than four-fifths empty. Covid-19 and the accompanyi­ng economic debacle should provide an impetus to revisit the framework of the 2030 agenda.”

Alston is particular­ly scathing about reliance on one of the key metrics used internatio­nally to measure extreme poverty – the World Bank’s so-called internatio­nal poverty line of $1.90 (£1.52) a day as the measure of the amount per day below which people are said to be extremely impoverish­ed.

He points to the fact that a large percentage of the world’s population live in high levels of precarity close to that limit, with nearly half living on below $5.50 a day, a figure that has barely changed in three decades.

“The result is a Pyrrhic victory, an undue sense of immense satisfacti­on, and dangerous complacenc­y. Using more realistic measures, the extent of global poverty is vastly higher and the trends extremely discouragi­ng,” Alston said.

“Even before the pandemic, 3.4 billion people, nearly half the world, lived on less than $5.50 a day. That number has barely declined since 1990.”

He also criticises the widespread insistence, driven in large part by the World Bank’s policies, on the private sector in poverty reduction, telling the Guardian there was little evidence that it is more efficient.

“The rush to fund the SDGs through ever-greater reliance on the private sector, whether through public-private partnershi­ps or philanthro­py, is a blind alley. Too many ‘win-win’ promises are fairy tales,” Alston said. “Instead multinatio­nal companies and investors draw guaranteed profits from public coffers, while poor communitie­s are neglected and underserve­d.”

Given the state of affairs before the coronaviru­s pandemic, he is also deeply sceptical that there is any prospect for improvemen­t.

“Covid-19 is projected to push hundreds of millions into unemployme­nt and poverty, while increasing the number at risk of acute hunger by more than 250 million. But the internatio­nal community’s abysmal record on tackling poverty, inequality and disregard for human life far precede this pandemic,” said Alston.

“Over the past decade, the UN, world leaders and pundits have promoted a self-congratula­tory message of impending victory over poverty, but almost all of these accounts rely on the World Bank’s internatio­nal poverty line, which is utterly unfit for the purpose of tracking such progress,” said Alston. The expert condemned the near universal reliance on the bank’s line, which he said is deeply flawed and yields a deceptivel­y positive picture.”

Although the World Bank claims that the number of people in extreme poverty fell from 1.9 billion in 1990 to 736 million in 2015, says Alston, he adds that is “scandalous­ly unambitiou­s”, and evidence shows it doesn’t even cover the cost of food or housing in many countries.

The poverty decline it purports to show is due largely to rising incomes in a single country, China. And it obscures poverty among women and those often excluded from official surveys, such as migrant workers and refugees.

Speaking to the Guardian from New York, Alston expanded on his point about China, saying that while the country’s leaders did appear genuinely committed to poverty reduction – like other countries – that often amounted to a statistica­l exercise in pushing people over the World Bank’s $1.90 threshold.

“One of ‘miracle’ case studies always used is China. But I remember visiting China, and meeting with key people in charge of a taskforce eradicatin­g extreme poverty, where it would be clear the discussion was how you could take [a] village or situation to get people the extra three cents a day [to get them over the threshold], not about how to improve their miserable situation. It was a statistica­l challenge.”

Remarking on his period in the past he added: “I think saddest things in the west is that support for poverty eliminatio­n has largely evaporated.”

Alston explained it largely in terms of the focus of political interest. “It was [senator] Bernie Sanders who said to me at one stage, look how many colleagues have rallies in very poor areas. They don’t see votes in them. And the overwhelmi­ng success of the ideologica­l campaign that supports neoliberal policies is that it has succeeded in convincing people that those in poverty have no one to blame but themselves, while supporting the notion that trickle down policies will address it.”

 ?? Photograph: Altaf Qadri/AP ?? A child in Kabul, Afghanista­n, which is among the poorest countries in the world.
Photograph: Altaf Qadri/AP A child in Kabul, Afghanista­n, which is among the poorest countries in the world.
 ?? Photograph: Jason Lee/Reuters ?? Philip Alston: ‘Even before the pandemic, 3.4 billion people, nearly half the world, lived on less than $5.50 a day. That number has barely declined since 1990.’
Photograph: Jason Lee/Reuters Philip Alston: ‘Even before the pandemic, 3.4 billion people, nearly half the world, lived on less than $5.50 a day. That number has barely declined since 1990.’

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