Logotipo librería Marcial Pons
Poor relief

Poor relief
why giving people money is not the answer to global poverty

  • ISBN: 9780674296138
  • Editorial: Harvard University Press
  • Lugar de la edición: Cambridge (MSS). Estados Unidos de Norteamérica
  • Encuadernación: Cartoné
  • Medidas: 22 cm
  • Nº Pág.: 244
  • Idiomas: Inglés

Papel: Cartoné
34,98 € 33,23 €
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Resumen

A simple notion has become increasingly widespread in recent years: to lift people out of poverty, just give them money. Leading international organizations like the World Bank and United Nations endorse the use of cash transfers. So do Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, and everyday philanthropists the charity GiveDirectly has raised more than $800 million to distribute to households in a dozen countries.

Challenging this emergent wisdom, Heath Henderson argues that cash transfers whether one-off grants or a "basic income" provided over a stretch of time are a flawed response to global poverty. They risk displacing interventions that recipients themselves might prefer: if a community lacks access to clean water or high-quality healthcare, for instance, giving cash to households will not address the problem, which can be solved only by putting those funds toward public infrastructure. Cash transfers have also been linked to more direct harms, including increases in domestic violence, child labor, inflation, and even mortality.

The appeal of cash transfers is rooted in the idea that they avoid paternalism, letting the recipients of the money, rather than faraway donors, make choices for themselves. But as Henderson points out, such transfers substitute one form of paternalism for another, by assuming that markets know best. Poor Relief instead proposes looking beyond one-size-fits-all solutions toward a truly bottom-up alternative. Fixing global poverty is not just a matter of giving people money it requires giving communities democratic power.

1 The Rise of Cash Transfers 1
2 Defning Poverty 19
3 What the Evidence Shows 38
4 The Targeting Prob lem 58
5 Inequality within Households 78
6 When Markets Fail 99
7 The Diversity of Need 118
8 Transformative Change 137
9 Paternalism Revisited 157
10 Deliberative Democracy 177
Conclusion 197

Resumen

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