Poor Relief
Why Giving People Money Is Not the Answer to Global Poverty
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- $31.99
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- $31.99
Publisher Description
An economist challenges an emerging orthodoxy: the idea that the best way to alleviate poverty is simply to give people money.
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.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Direct cash payments to the poor have been widely lauded as a potential solution for global poverty, but this concise debut study makes a strong case that they don't work. Economist Henderson draws on myriad examples, among them a five-year-old program in India that enabled the needy to buy a kilogram of rice for one rupee; in 2018, it was replaced with a program that deposited cash to recipients' bank accounts. While many applauded greater autonomy for the beneficiaries, the beneficiaries themselves were not happy. Among other problems, the timing of when payments would be deposited was confusing, and the added step of having to withdraw cash led to fewer people benefiting—the elderly and disabled were disproportionately not using the program. Henderson also debunks a study purporting to show that monthly cash payments to low-income mothers positively impacted the brains of their infants, and points to how a direct cash program in Chad led to those not selected for the payments "refus to pay back" money borrowed from program recipients, who were "seen as wealthy." Henderson doesn't claim that direct payments are never the answer; he notes that direct assistance is vital following a natural disaster. But for routine giving, Henderson advocates for "radical decentralization": local decision-making about how resources should be allocated. It's a cogent critique of a trendy philanthropic tool.