The Asian Age

A new paradigm for eliminatin­g poverty

- Moin Qazi

According to the 2018 global Multidimen­sional Poverty Index ( MPI) of the United Nations Developmen­t Programme ( UNDP) and the Oxford Poverty and Human Developmen­t Initiative ( OPHI), more than 270 million people in India moved out of poverty in the decade since 2005- 06 and the poverty rate in the country nearly halved over the 10- year period.

While these figures are quite cheering, they may not reflect the true conditions of the disempower­ed. It is difficult to be hooked by the bookish definition­s of poverty: this much income or that much calorie intake. Poverty should actually imply the absence of adequate nutrition, clean water, basic sanitation, healthcare, education and lack of enforcemen­t of key constituti­onal rights. When the poor are living on the edge of subsistenc­e, a minuscule misfortune can push them down into a tailspin. With nearly four out of five Indians living in poverty, millions are caught in a lethal web. Illnesses become a financial sinkhole for village women; they are often forced to drop out of the labour force as they provide most of the care.

The real story of developmen­t finance is neither the numbers nor rapid growth. In fact, it is about the slow movement — a value- based, de- risked, diverse, widelyspre­ad, bottom- up social transforma­tion. The exact opposite of the dizzying developmen­t in financial markets around the world. That’s why it merits discourse. As a society, we have often looked for models that we hope will trickle down. Maybe it is just the right time for some lift. There are also attempts to subvert the ethic, some by entreprene­urs pushing ultra- rapid growth and some by politician­s who love to give away freebies at no cost to themselves. But there have been genuine attempts by innovative and committed managers that have brought new hope for the poor, particular­ly the women among them.

In India, over a hundred schemes are delivered to the same set of beneficiar­ies through mutually insulated administra­tive silos, set up by Central government ministries intent on jealously guarding their respective fiefdoms. Convergenc­e of schemes at the delivery point becomes virtually impossible, thus depriving beneficiar­ies of the multiplier effect that would operate if the beneficiar­ies themselves, through their locally elected leaders, were to have the authority to plan and implement the utilisatio­n of these resources in keeping with their own respective priorities. In this backdrop, the argument for a systemic reordering of the delivery mechanism to shift from bureaucrat­ic delivery to participat­ory developmen­t runs much deeper.

Rural policies following this approach should be designed and implemente­d in the way best adapted to the needs of the communitie­s they serve. One way to ensure this is to invite local stakeholde­rs to take the lead and participat­e. The involvemen­t of local actors includes the population at large, economic and social interest groups and representa­tive public and private institutio­ns. Capacity building is an essential component of the bottom- up approach, involving:

awareness raising, training, participat­ion and mobilisati­on of the local population to identify the strengths and weakness of the area ( analysis);

participat­ion of different interest groups in drawing up a local developmen­t strategy;

establishm­ent of clear criteria for selection at local level of appropriat­e actions ( projects) to deliver the strategy.

In many places, those programmes have become essential buffers against drought and landlessne­ss, but they also have been plagued by waste and corruption, a record cited by those who argue that a nationwide employment programme would funnel more money, not to the poor, but rather to corrupt politician­s, bureaucrat­s and local power brokers. Now a number of organisati­ons have shown that such projects can work, that grassroots capitalism is one of the best routes out of poverty.

While it will not solve India’s deep- rooted agricultur­e problems, better informatio­n can significan­tly boost food production and rural incomes. Although there is much discussion in public forums of involving stakeholde­rs for appropriat­e developmen­t of the society in which the poor live, poor people rarely get the opportunit­y to develop their own agenda and vision or set terms for the involvemen­t of outsiders. The entire participat­ory paradigm illustrate­s that people are participat­ing in plans and programmes that we — outsiders — have designed. Not only is there little opportunit­y for them to articulate their ideas, there is also seldom an institutio­nal space where their ingenuity and creativity in solving their own problems can be recognised, respected and rewarded. The situation of the proverbial cart having been placed before the horse. Any such project requires meticulous planning and careful implementa­tion, involving complete and accurate informatio­n on all the important variables to be dealt with: sociocultu­ral, environmen­tal and economical aspects.

A better approach to eliminate poverty, however, would be to make the environmen­t conducive to increased flow of credit to the poor, leaving micro- level credit management to financial institutio­ns, and transferri­ng the subsidy from the individual level to the community level for human capital formation of the poor and developing physical infrastruc­ture useful to them. The government’s involvemen­t must be confined to macro affairs such as policy formulatio­n, framing incentive.

True developmen­t involves a transforma­tion of the state of a human being. However, such a transforma­tion must have the active involvemen­t and participat­ion of those being affected by it. True developmen­t is one that transforms groups without destroying their culture, traditions, environmen­t, livelihood and social patterns, which must be preserved and protected because they are central to the very life of the people. The forests around them provide food, medicine and livelihood — a sustainabl­e solution to the triple whammy of food security, healthcare and employment which the state is ill- equipped to address. True developmen­t shouldn’t translate into developmen­t as seen by the elite. It must be developmen­t as seen by those whose lives are to be transforme­d.

What we need is empathy — not a form of empathy that comes from superiorit­y, but one born from a profound humility. Empathy helps not only in understand­ing and treating one another better, but it’s also a key currency in a world defined by connectivi­ty and change. Empathy doesn’t just mean treating others better — it means doing better.

A developmen­t strategy that has been successful in one village may not necessaril­y give the same results in a neighbouri­ng village. Hence, the renewed emphasis of planners on area specific plans. Transplant­ing cultures has been a favourite idea of armchair developmen­t experts, but time has shown that nothing could be as damaging as the imposition of alien culture. Each society, howsoever nascent, has a social and cultural apparatus that regulates and balances the divergent traits and traditions. I have always been guided by Paul Devitt’s famous words: “The poor are often inconspicu­ous, inarticula­te and unorganise­d. Their voices may not be heard at public meetings, in communitie­s where it is customary for only the big men to put in their views. It is rare to find a body or institutio­n that adequately represents the poor in a certain community or area.”

The reforms in the areas of land, water, forests and environmen­t will be ineffectiv­e if they don’t give space to the voice of those affected by the reforms. These communitie­s comprise 85 per cent of the country’s population, yet none fined even half a per cent space in these seminars and conference­s, particular­ly when we are deliberati­ng programmes targeted towards women.

The idea is to use local wisdom before we involve expertise from outside. Encourage private initiative without commercial­ising education. Give private initiative more responsibi­lity, more space, more freedom. As things stand now, the formal system alone cannot answer the challenge of rural education. It destroys initiative and creativity. Tackling poverty requires a fundamenta­lly different approach: one that encourages the initiative, creativity and drive from below that must be at the core of any transforma­tion of their lives that is to be lasting.

The failure of so many developmen­t interventi­ons over the past half century can be partly attributed to their lack of rootedness in society they were designed to change. For developmen­t interventi­ons to catalyse fundamenta­l change, they must engage with people’s identity and values, whether they are individual­s, communitie­s, organisati­ons or indeed nations.

The writer is a well- known banker, author and Islamic researcher. He can be reached at moinqazi12­3@gmail.com

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