Philippine Daily Inquirer

How to strengthen anti-poverty efforts

- SHAMERAN ABED Shameran Abed is senior director of microfinan­ce and ultra-poor graduation programs at BRAC.

Dhaka—From 1990 to 2019, the number of people living in extreme poverty (according to the World Bank threshold of $1.90 per day) plummeted, from 1.9 billion to 648 million. COVID-19 has reversed much of this progress. By the end of 2021, the pandemic will have pushed approximat­ely 150 million people back into extreme poverty.

Even before COVID-19, however, the world was not on track to end extreme poverty in the next decade. Progress on poverty reduction had been slowing long before the pandemic hit, with global poverty rates falling by less than half a percentage point per year between 2015 and 2019. At that pace, even without COVID-19, 537 million people would have still been living in extreme poverty in 2030, implying failure to meet the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, in particular SDG 1.

At BRAC, the world’s largest Global South-led NGO, decades of designing, implementi­ng, advising on, and adapting poverty reduction interventi­ons have given us insights into how to make anti-poverty programs and policies more effective.

First, programs need to reach people in the most extreme states of poverty. People living in extreme poverty face hurdles to accessing social programs and services. They are less likely to have bank accounts, permanent addresses, or formal identifica­tion—all of which may be required for registrati­on. They also face social stigma associated with receiving public services, and often lack sufficient informatio­n about the programs for which they are eligible.

In low-income countries, 79 percent of the bottom quintile of earners receive no social assistance whatsoever. To ensure that help reaches those most in need, government­s and their partners must design policies and programs that overcome the barriers people living in extreme poverty face and integrate them into existing social safety nets.

Second, programs must empower people living in extreme poverty to build long-term resilience. Government­s and their partners must do more than improve the provision of basic needs. They must also invest in enabling people in extreme poverty to acquire the skills and resources they need to avoid falling back into the poverty trap. This approach is crucial in times of crisis, as our team at BRAC found when advising the Philippine government, in partnershi­p with the Asian Developmen­t Bank, on a recent anti-poverty interventi­on.

During the pandemic, the program connected participan­ts to cash assistance from the national government and food assistance from their local government. Meanwhile, it provided the resources and training they needed to establish multiple sources of income. As a result, 76 percent of participan­ts were able to continue earning income even during strict lockdowns.

Third, programs need to treat poverty as multifacet­ed and context-specific. Extreme poverty is multidimen­sional. An accurate definition must account for the many areas of deprivatio­n people living in extreme poverty face, from lack of clean water and electricit­y to malnutriti­on and social exclusion. These deprivatio­ns and the interventi­ons needed to overcome them vary across population­s and geographie­s. Based on an assessment of factors related to specific locations and socioecono­mic contexts, government­s and their partners need to create more holistic interventi­ons that empower poor people to face their unique challenges.

Fourth, these programs must engage local communitie­s and government­s, whose active participat­ion can help anti-poverty interventi­ons better reflect the realities of people’s daily lives and gain local buy-in. Bringing civil society into the process can also play an important role in holding government accountabl­e and sustaining demand for more effective programs and policies. And local government­s can help national government­s and their partners identify marginaliz­ed households and support their social inclusion.

Fifth, government­s and their partners must learn what is working and what is not, then adapt programmin­g accordingl­y. To maximize the impact of anti-poverty interventi­ons at scale, government­s and their partners must commit to monitoring, evaluating, and learning from programs as they are implemente­d, then revise them as needed. Only through evidence-based adaptation can government­s and their partners ensure that the programs they implement have a long-lasting impact and adjust to meet the unique and evolving needs of their people.

This must be a collaborat­ive effort. If the internatio­nal community adopts these steps, anti-poverty programs and policies can become more inclusive, adaptive, and comprehens­ive. Beyond engaging civil society and academia, government­s need developmen­t actors, including multilater­al institutio­ns and donor countries, to help close resource gaps until they can independen­tly mobilize sufficient domestic resources. Many lowand middle-income countries simply lack the fiscal space and state capacity to pursue large-scale poverty reduction measures on their own.

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