Bangkok Post

Empowermen­t key to ending poverty pandemic

- LINDSAY COATES JOHN FLORETTA Lindsay Coates is managing director of BRAC’s Ultra-Poor Graduation Initiative. John Floretta is global deputy executive director of MIT’s Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL).

Globally, extreme poverty is increasing for the first time in 20 years. Although some poor countries are now receiving Covid-19 vaccines, the pandemic is set to push about 150 million people into extreme poverty by year’s end, reversing decades of progress.

But the world has a huge opportunit­y to help prevent this outcome, and not only through more generous aid and vaccine distributi­on. Lower-income countries also need assistance in adapting and scaling more robust social protection and livelihood programmes. Such initiative­s build resilience, enabling people to weather future economic crises. And collaborat­ions between enterprisi­ng non-profits and researcher­s can help guide the way.

Careful, high-quality research to evaluate the effectiven­ess of specific social policies and programmes in different contexts has increased markedly in the past two decades. A particular­ly rigorous approach known as randomised evaluation employs a methodolog­y similar to that of medical trials to assess the real-life effects of promising innovation­s.

This research has identified a range of effective measures to reduce extreme poverty, including schemes to enroll more girls in school, help the unemployed find jobs, and support voters in making more informed election choices. The tremendous value of this research was recognised in 2019 when the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences was awarded to three of its pioneers, Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo of MIT and Michael Kremer of Harvard.

A vivid example of how social policy research-and-developmen­t collaborat­ions can make a real difference to those whose livelihood­s have been upended by the pandemic is the Graduation Approach, whose effectiven­ess Mr Banerjee and Ms Duflo have studied. Establishe­d and led by BRAC, the largest NGO based in the Global South, the Graduation Approach involves a holistic sequence of interventi­ons that are evidence-based, highly adaptable to local contexts, and designed to meet the multidimen­sional needs of people in extreme poverty.

Graduation participan­ts are provided with an income-generating asset such as a cow, a sewing machine, or a cash transfer. In addition, they receive wraparound support for the following 18-36 months, including training on how to generate income from the asset, life skills coaching, consumptio­n support, access to a savings account, and links to government assistance.

BRAC previously collaborat­ed with a team of economists from the London School of Economics on a randomised evaluation to study the Graduation programme’s impact on poverty in rural Bangladesh. The results were impressive: the move to self-employment increased the poorest participan­ts’ earnings by an average of 37% over four years. But could the approach be effective and scaled in other contexts?

To answer this question, nonprofits working in seven countries, from Pakistan to Peru, were trained to run the programme while rigorous evaluation continued. Researcher­s from MIT’s Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL) and Innovation­s for Poverty Action conducted six concurrent randomised evaluation­s in each country. These coordinate­d studies found the Graduation Approach to be one of the most effective of the evaluated programmes for helping people propel themselves out of extreme poverty.

In nearly every country, Graduation programme participan­ts improved their economic outcomes. They successful­ly launched small businesses, and their increased income led them to explore other ways to make money. Participan­ts also reported improved psychologi­cal well-being, including an increased sense of hope. A follow-up study published in November last year found that these positive effects persisted for up to 10 years after the programme ended.

To date, BRAC has reached more than 2.1 million households in Bangladesh, where the programme originated, with a “graduation” rate of 95%. As of 2018, more than 100 organisati­ons in nearly 50 countries have piloted or implemente­d Graduation programmes.

The Graduation Approach’s worldwide expansion and proven ability to break the cycle of extreme poverty shows that designing innovative programmes, collaborat­ing with researcher­s to test them rigorously, and establishi­ng trusted partnershi­ps with government­s can result in great strides toward scaling up the most effective schemes. High-quality research demonstrat­ing the Graduation Approach’s effectiven­ess across contexts helped BRAC, J-PAL, and other partners convince donors and government­s that the model can help vulnerable people create sustainabl­e livelihood­s and make social protection policies more inclusive and effective.

As BRAC scales Graduation globally through direct implementa­tion and with partners, it has identified important lessons that can inform similar efforts. Above all, adherence to the key principles driving a programme’s impact is essential, while also adapting the model to each context. An ethos of learning and critical self-evaluation is central to the programme’s success, as Graduation’s 20-year evolution in Bangladesh has shown. And by examining a programme’s effects on different population groups and continuing to tweak and test its components, like the size and type of livelihood packages provided, we can continue to leverage research to empower people in extreme poverty.

The scale of the Graduation Approach after years of iteration and evaluation points to areas where philanthro­py and aid can be especially useful. These include investment in social policy innovation­s, rigorous evaluation of whether and how they work, and partnershi­ps with government­s to apply globally sourced knowledge to their own programmes.

Our experience shows that innovative and evidence-based approaches, when executed well, can dent poverty. With the pandemic threatenin­g to reverse hard-won global gains, the need for policy-relevant research, and for scaling effective solutions, has never been more urgent.

‘‘ Innovative and evidence-based approaches, when executed well, can dent poverty.

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