Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Convention­al poverty-reduction policies have failed

- By Jomo Kwame Sundaram

ROME - Global leaders have touted the apparent success of achieving in 2010 - well ahead of the 2015 target - the Millennium Developmen­t Goal of halving the share of people who were living below the poverty line in 1990. But, amid enduring poverty, rising inequality and lackluster growth in many developing countries, the success of past anti-poverty policies and programmes appears dubious.

In fact, outside of East Asia, progress has been modest, with the situation worsening in some countries and regions - despite several economic-growth spurts, sustained expansion in some large developing countries, and public commitment­s by the internatio­nal community to the 2000 Millennium Declaratio­n, which led to the MDGs.

This mixed record calls into question the efficacy of convention­al povertyred­uction policies, often identified with the Washington Consensus, which transforme­d the discourse on poverty in the 1980s. Washington Consensus reforms - including macroecono­mic stabilisat­ion (defined as low-single-digit inflation) and market liberalisa­tion - were supposed to reduce poverty by accelerati­ng economic growth.

But little attention was paid to poverty's structural causes, such as inequality of assets and opportunit­ies, or the unequal distributi­onal consequenc­es of growth. And, because unskilled workers tend to lose their jobs first in economic downturns, while employment generally lags behind output recovery, reduced public investment in health, education, and other social programmes ultimately increased the vulnerabil­ity of the poor.

Not surprising­ly, therefore, the fallout from the global economic crisis that erupted in 2008 - the worst since the Great Depression of the 1930s - has prompted experts, policymake­rs, and the internatio­nal financial institutio­ns to rethink poverty. Many are rejecting once-dominant perspectiv­es on poverty and deprivatio­n, warning that they lead to ineffectiv­e policy prescripti­ons.

For example, the United Nations' Report on the World Social Situation: Rethinking Poverty, and its companion book Poor Poverty: The Impoverish­ment of Analysis, Measuremen­t, and Policies, have sought to advance the debate on poverty by examining the convention­al policy framework and assessing popular poverty-reduction programmes. They affirm the need for a shift away from the fundamenta­list free-market thinking that has dominated poverty-reduction strategies in recent decades toward contextsen­sitive measures to promote sustainabl­e developmen­t and equality.

Indeed, these reports challenge the prevailing approach, which has left more than one billion people living below the poverty line (defined as the purchasing-power-parity equivalent of $1.25 per day in 2005), and has failed to prevent economic growth from stalling in most countries. Meanwhile, inequality has increased worldwide - even in countries that have experience­d rapid economic expansion, notably China and India. While growth is usually needed for poverty reduction, it does not necessaril­y translate into job creation, as many countries' recent record of jobless or job-poor growth demonstrat­es.

The UN encourages government­s to assume a more proactive developmen­t role, which would entail an integrated policymaki­ng approach aimed at promoting structural change while reducing inequality, vulnerabil­ity, and economic insecurity. Growth must become more stable, with a consistent­ly counter-cyclical macroecono­mic policy stance, prudent capital-account management, and greater resilience to external shocks.

Generally, economies that have succeeded in terms of both economic growth and poverty reduction over the last three decades have done so by adopting pragmatic, heterodox policies. Often invoking investor- and market-friendly language, they have generally encouraged private investment, especially in desired economic activities, such as those that create more job opportunit­ies or offer increasing returns to scale.

But aid conditiona­lity and treaty commitment­s have significan­tly constraine­d policy- making in most developing countries, especially the poorest. In particular, slow growth and revenue losses, owing to economic liberalisa­tion programmes, have reduced the scope for fiscal policy, with serious consequenc­es for poverty and destitutio­n. This trend must be reversed.

Moreover, while the programmes that most donors like - such as micro-credit, formalisat­ion of land titles, and governance reforms - have sometimes helped to ameliorate the conditions facing the poor, they have not reduced poverty significan­tly. Leaders must consider, design, and implement pragmatic and innovative alternativ­es, rather than con- tinue to rely on ineffectiv­e policies and programmes.

In recent decades, social policies have increasing­ly involved some form of means testing of eligible beneficiar­ies, ostensibly to enhance cost effectiven­ess. But, in general, universal social policies have been much more effective and politicall­y sustainabl­e, while policies targeting the poor, or the "poorest of the poor," have often been costly and neglectful of many of those in need.

The right to social security enshrined in the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights requires universal social protection to ensure the well-being of all, including people living in poverty and those at risk of poverty. Social policy, provisioni­ng, and protection must therefore be integral to developmen­t and poverty-reduction strategies.

In most countries, a basic social-protec- tion floor - which can help countries to mitigate the negative effects of shocks and prevent people from falling deeper into poverty - is affordable. However, low-income and least-developed countries need assistance in raising the floor to more acceptable levels

To address global poverty effectivel­y, world leaders must pursue poverty-reduction policies that support inclusive, sustainabl­e economic growth and developmen­t - in turn increasing the fiscal resources that are available for social spending. Only when all citizens benefit from economic developmen­t can leaders devoted to poverty reduction claim genuine success.

Jomo Kwame Sundaram is Assistant Director General at the Economic and Social Developmen­t Department of the United Nations Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on in Rome. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2013.

www.project-syndicate.org

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