Chapter 20
Poverty, Development and Hunger
By Tony Evans and Caroline
Thomas
Introduction
Poverty
Development
Hunger
Conclusion: looking
to the future-globalization with a human face?
Reader's Guide
This chapter explores
and illustrates the contested nature of a number of important concepts in International Relations. It examines the orthodox mainstream
understanding of poverty, development and hunger, and contrasts this with a
critical alternative approach.
Introduction
Since 1945 we have witnessed nearly
seventy years of unprecedented official development policies and impressive
global economic growth. Yet global polarization continues to increase, with
the economic gap between the richest and poorest states and people growing.
While the richest twenty states increased their GDP per capita by nearly 300
per cent between the early 1960s and 2002, the poorest twenty achieved an
increase of 20 per cent (World Bank 2009). Box
20.1 shows that, as a discipline, International Relations has been slow
to engage with issues of development and poverty.
Poverty, hunger, and disease remain
widespread, and women and girls continue to comprise the majority of the
world’s poorest people. Moreover, this general situation is not confined to
the part of the world that we have traditionally termed the ‘South’ or the Third World. Particularly since the 1980s
and 1990s, the worldwide promotion of neo-liberal economic policies (the
so-called Washington Consensus) by
global governance institutions has
been accompanied by high levels of inequality within and between states. During
this period, many of the Second World, former Eastern bloc countries, were
incorporated into the Third World, as the transition to market economies saw
millions of people previously cushioned by the state thrown into poverty. At
the same time, the post-2008 financial and
economic crisis saw developed countries contributing 19 million to the
global hungry (FAO 2012). In the Third World countries, the adverse impact of globalization was felt acutely (see Ch. 1),
as countries were forced to adopt free market policies as a condition of debt
rescheduling, in the hope of attracting new investment to spur development.
Gendered outcomes of these neo-liberal economic policies have been noted,
although the global picture is very mixed, with other factors such as class,
race, and ethnicity contributing to local outcomes (Buvinic 1997: 39).
The enormity of the challenges was
recognized by the UN in 2000 with the acceptance of the Millennium Development Goals (www.undp.org). These set time- limited, quantifiable targets across eight areas,
ranging from poverty to health, gender (see Chs 10 and 18), education,
environment, and development. The first goal was the eradication of extreme
poverty and hunger, with the target of halving the proportion of people living
on less than a dollar a day by 2015. Table 20.1
shows the continuing incidence of poverty for selected countries.
The attempts of the majority of
governments, intergovernmental
organizations, and non-governmental
organizations since 1945 to address global hunger and poverty can be
categorized into two very broad types,
depending on the explanations they provide
for the existence of these problems and the respective solutions that they
prescribe. These can be identified as the dominant mainstream or orthodox
approach, which provides and values a particular body of developmental
knowledge, and a critical alternative approach, which incorporates other more
marginalized understandings of the development challenge and process. Most of
this chapter will be devoted to an examination of the differences between
these two approaches in relation to the three related topics of poverty, development,
and hunger, with particular emphasis on development. The chapter concludes with
an assessment of whether the desperate conditions in which so many of the
world’s citizens find themselves today are likely to improve. Again, two
contrasting approaches are outlined.
Table 20.1 Percentage of population living in poverty
measured by national standards
Country
|
% of
population
|
Year
|
Central
African Republic
|
62.0
|
2008
|
Mozambique
|
54.7
|
2008
|
Mexico
|
51.3
|
2010
|
South Sudan
|
50.6
|
2009
|
Burkina
Faso
|
46.7
|
2009
|
Tajikistan
|
46.7
|
2009
|
Rwanda
|
44.9
|
2011
|
Cote
d'Ivoire
|
42.7
|
2008
|
Bangladesh
|
31.5
|
2010
|
India
|
29.8
|
2010
|
Nepal
|
25.2
|
2011
|
Georgia
|
24.7
|
2009
|
Uganda
|
24.5
|
2009
|
Source: UNdata
|
Poverty
Different conceptions of poverty underpin
the mainstream and alternative views of development. There is basic agreement
on the material aspects of poverty, such as lack of food, clean water, and
sanitation, but disagreement on the importance of non-material aspects, like
culture and society. Also, key differences emerge in regard to how material
needs should be met, and hence about the goal of development.
Most governments, international
organizations, citizens in the West, and many elsewhere adhere to the orthodox
conception of poverty. This refers to a situation where people do not have the
money to buy adequate food or satisfy other basic needs, and are often
classified as unemployed or underemployed. This mainstream understanding of
poverty, based on money, has arisen as a result of the globalization of Western
culture and the attendant expansion of the market. Thus, a community that
provides for itself outside monetized cash transactions and wage labour, such
as a hunter- gatherer group, is regarded as poor.
Since 1945, this meaning of poverty has
been almost universalized. Poverty is seen as an economic condition dependent
on cash transactions in the market-place for its eradication. These
transactions in turn are dependent on development defined as economic growth.
An
economic yardstick is used to measure and
to judge all societies.
Poverty has been widely regarded as
characterizing the Third World, and it has a gendered face. An approach has
developed whereby it is seen as incumbent upon the developed countries to
‘help’ the Third World eradicate ‘poverty’, and increasingly to address female
poverty (see World Bank, Gender Action Plan, www.worldbank.org).
The solution for overcoming global poverty was greater global economic integration (Thomas
2000), including bringing women into the process (Pearson 2000; Weber 2002).
Increasingly, however, as globalization has intensified, poverty defined in
such economic terms has come to characterize significant sectors of population
in advanced developed countries such as the USA (Pogge 2005).
Critical alternative views of poverty
exist in other cultures where the emphasis is not simply on money but on
spiritual values, community ties, and availability of common resources. In
traditional subsistence economies, a common strategy for survival is provision
for oneself and one’s family via community-regulated access to common water,
land, and fodder. Western values that focus on individualism and consumerism
are seen as destructive of nature and morally inferior. For many people in the
developing world, the ability to provide for oneself and one’s family,
including the autonomy characteristic of traditional ways of life, is highly
valued. Dependence on an unpredictable market and/or an unreliable government
does not, therefore, offer an attractive alternative.
Some global institutions have been
important in promoting a conception of poverty that extends beyond material
indicators. The work of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) since
the early 1990s is significant here for distinguishing between income poverty
(a material condition) and human poverty (encompassing human dignity, agency,
opportunity, and choices).
The issue of poverty and the challenge of
poverty alleviation moved up the global political agenda at the close of the
twentieth century, as evidenced in the UN’s first Millennium Development Goal
(MDG), cited earlier. In 2012, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon announced that
the target to halve, between 1990 and 2015, the proportion of those living on
less than a dollar a day had been achieved three years early (Table 20.2; see
also http:// mdgs.un.org/unsd/mdg/Metadata.aspx?IndicatorId=l). While on the
surface this seems an impressive achievement, understanding the claim is
complex. In particular, the post-2008 economic and financial crisis, shifts in
economic power relations, and population growth, have meant that the number of
those living in poverty remains at just under a billion.
Table 20.2 Number and percentage of undernourished
persons
|
Numbers in millions
|
Percentage of world population
|
2010
|
925
|
14%
|
2006-8
|
850
|
13%
|
2000-2
|
836
|
14%
|
1995-7
|
792
|
14%
|
1990-2
|
848
|
16%
|
1979-81
|
853
|
21%
|
1969-71
|
878
|
26%
|
Source: FAO
|
Having considered the orthodox and
critical alternative views of poverty, we now turn to an examination of the
important topic of development. This examination will be conducted in three
main parts. The first part will examine the orthodox view of development,
before proceeding to an assessment of its effect on post-war development in the
Third World. The second part will examine the critical alternative view of
development and its application to subjects such as empowerment and democracy. In
the third part, consideration will be given to the ways in which the orthodox
approach to development has responded to some of the criticisms made of it by
the critical alternative approach.
Key Points
The monetary-based conception of poverty
has been almost universalized among governments and international organizations
since 1945.
Poverty is interpreted as a condition
suffered by people-the majority of whom are female-who do not earn enough money
to satisfy their basic material requirements in the market-place.
Developed countries have regarded poverty
as being something external to them and a defining feature of the Third World.
This view has provided justification for the former to help 'develop' the
latter by promoting further integration into the global market.
However, such poverty is increasingly
endured by significan: sectors of the population in the North, hence rendering
traditional categories less useful.
A critical alternative view of poverty
places more emphasis on lack of access to community-regulated common resources,
community ties, and spiritual values.
Poverty moved up the global political
agenda at the start of the twenty-first century, but the post-2008 economic and
financial crisis may threaten further progress.
Development
When we
consider the topic of development, it is important to realize that all
conceptions of development necessarily reflect a particular set of social and political
values. Indeed, we can say that ‘Development can be conceived only within an
ideological framework’ (Roberts 1984: 7).
Since the Second World War the dominant
view, favoured by the majority of governments and multilateral agencies, has seen
development as synonymous with economic growth in the context of a free market
international economy. Economic growth is identified as necessary for
combating poverty, defined as the inability of people to meet their basic
material needs through cash transactions. This is seen in the influential
reports of the World Bank, where countries are categorized according to their
income. Those countries that have the lower national incomes per head of
population are regarded as being less developed than those with higher incomes,
and they are perceived as being in need of increased integration into the
global market-place.
An alternative view of development has,
however, emerged from a few governments, UN agencies, grassroots movements,
NGOs, and some academics. Their concerns have centred broadly on entitlement
and distribution, often expressed in the language of human rights (see Ch. 24). Poverty
is identified as the inability to provide for one’s own and one’s family’s
material needs by subsistence or cash transactions, and by the absence of an
environment conducive to human wellbeing, broadly conceived in spiritual and
community terms. These voices of opposition are growing significantly louder,
as ideas polarize following the apparent universal triumph of economic liberalism. The
language of opposition is changing to incorporate matters of
democracy such as political empowerment, participation, meaningful self-determination for
the majority, protection of the commons, and an emphasis on pro-poor growth.
The fundamental differences between the orthodox and the alternative views of
development are summarized in Box 20.2, and supplemented by Case Study 1, illustrating
alternative ideas for development that take account of social and cultural
values. We shall now move on to examine how the orthodox view of development
has been applied at a global level and assess what measure of success it has
achieved.
Economic liberalism and the post-1945
international economic order: seven decades of orthodox development
During the Second World War there was a
strong belief among the Allied powers that the protectionist trade policies of
the 1930s had contributed significantly to the outbreak of the war. Plans were
drawn up by the USA and the UK for the creation of a stable post-war
international order with the United Nations (UN), its affiliates the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank Group, plus
the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) providing the institutional spine. The latter
three provided the foundations of a liberal international economic order based
on the pursuit of free trade, but allowing an appropriate role for state
intervention in the market in support of national security and national and
global stability (Rapley 1996). This has been called embedded liberalism. The
decision-making procedures of these international economic institutions
favoured a small group of developed Western states. Their relationship with the
UN, which in the General Assembly has more democratic procedures, has not
always been an easy one.
In the immediate post-war years, attention
focused on reconstructing Western Europe through the Marshall plan. As the cold war emerged, and both East
and West sought to gain allies in the less developed and recently decolonized
states, both sides offered economic support for development. The USA believed
that the path of liberal economic growth would result in development, and that
development would result in hostility to socialist ideals. The USSR, by
contrast, attempted to sell its economic system as the most rapid means for the
newly independent states to achieve industrialization and development. The
process of industrialization underpinned conceptions of development in both
East and West, but whereas in the capitalist sphere the market was seen as the
engine of growth, in the socialist sphere central planning by the state was
the preferred method.
In the early post-war and postcolonial
decades, all states—whether in the West, East, or Third World — favoured an important
role for the state in development. Many Third World countries pursued a
strategy of import substitution industrialization in order to try to break out
of their dependent position in the world economy as peripheral producers of
primary commodities for the core developed countries.
This approach, which recognized the
important role of the state in development, suffered a major setback in the
early 1980s. The developing countries had borrowed heavily in the 1970s in
response to the rise in oil prices. The rich countries’ strategy for dealing
with the second oil price hike in 1979 resulted in massive rises in interest
rates and steep falls in commodity prices in the early 1980s. As a result, the
developing countries were unable to repay spiralling debts. Mexico threatened
to default in 1982. The Group of Seven (G7) leading developed Western
countries decided to deal with the debt problem on a country-by-country basis,
with the goal of avoiding the collapse of the international banking system by
ensuring continued repayment of debt. In this regard, the IMF and the World
Bank pursued a vigorous policy of structural adjustment lending throughout
the developing world. In applying this policy, the Fund and the Bank worked
together in an unprecedented fashion to encourage developing countries to
pursue market-oriented strategies based on rolling back the power of the state
and opening Third World economies to foreign investment. Exports were promoted
so that these countries would earn the foreign exchange necessary to keep up
with their debt repayments.
With the end of the cold war and the
collapse of the Eastern bloc after 1989, this neo-liberal economic and
political philosophy came to dominate development thinking across the globe.
The championing of unadulterated liberal economic values played an important
role in accelerating the globalization process. This represented an important
ideological shift. The ‘embedded liberalism’ of the early post-war decades gave
way to the unadulterated neoclassical economic policies that favoured a
minimalist state and an enhanced role for the market: the so-called Washington
Consensus. The belief was that global welfare would be maximized by the liberalization of
trade, finance, and investment, and by the restructuring of national economies
to provide an enabling environment for capital. Such policies would also ensure
the repayment of debt. The former Eastern bloc countries were now seen as being
in transition from centrally planned to market economies. Throughout the Third
World the state was rolled back and the market given the role of major engine
of growth and associated development, an approach that informed the strategies
of the IMF, the World Bank, and, through the Uruguay Round of trade discussions
carried out under the auspices of GATT, the World Trade Organization (WTO).
By the end of the 1990s the G7 (later the
G8) and associated international financial institutions were championing a
slightly modified version of the neo-liberal economic orthodoxy, labelled the
post-Washington Consensus, which stressed pro-poor growth and poverty reduction
based on continued domestic policy reform and growth through trade
liberalization. Henceforth, locally owned national poverty reduction strategy
(PRS) papers would be the focus for funding (Cammack 2002). These papers
quickly became the litmus test for funding from an increasingly integrated
line-up of global financial institutions and donors.
The development achievement of the
post-war international economic order: orthodox and alternative evaluations
There have been some gains for developing
countries during the post-war period, as measured by the orthodox criteria for
economic growth, GDP per capita, and industrialization. Between 1990 and 2012,
the proportion of people living on less than $1.25 a day declined from 43.1 per
cent to 22.2 per cent of global population (World Bank 2012a). However, these
gains have not been uniformly spread across all developing countries, with much
of the reduction attributable to economic gains in China and India (see Fig. 20.1 and Fig. 20.2). Sub-Saharan Africa, East Asia, and some parts of Latin
America continue to record high levels of poverty, although some small gains
have been achieved (see Fig.
20.3 and Table 20.3). It
is estimated that the global economic crisis dating from 2008 will reverse some
of these gains (United Nations 2009b).
The orthodox liberal assessment of
development suggests that states that have integrated most deeply into the
global economy through trade liberalization have grown the fastest, and it
praises these ‘new globalizes’. It acknowledges that neo-liberal economic
policy has resulted in greater inequalities within and between states, but
regards inequality positively as a spur to competition and the entrepreneurial
spirit.
It was clear at least from the late 1970s
that ‘trickle- down’ (the idea that overall economic growth as measured by
increases in GDP would automatically bring benefits for the poorer classes) had
not worked. Despite impressive rates of growth in GDP per capita enjoyed by
developing countries, this success was not reflected in their societies at
large, and while a minority became substantially wealthier, the mass of the
population saw little significant change. The even greater polarization in
wealth evident in recent decades is not regarded as a problem, so long as the
social and political discontent that inequality foments is not so extensive as
to derail implementation of the liberalization project itself. According to the
orthodox view, discontent can be mitigated by offering what Cox has termed
‘famine relief’ through aid and poverty reduction schemes. ‘Riot control’, the
use of the police and the military, remains a second option when ‘famine
relief’ fails to quell the threat of social unrest (Cox 1997).
Advocates of a critical alternative
approach emphasize the pattern of distribution of gains in global society and in
individual states, rather than growth. They believe that the economic
liberalism that underpins the process of globalization has resulted, and
continues to result, in increasing economic differentiation between and within
countries, and that this is problematic. Moreover, they note that this trend
has been evident over the very period when key global actors have been
committed to promoting development worldwide, and indeed during periods of
continuous world economic growth and positive rates of GDP per capita (Brown
and Kane 1995). But, as Glyn Roberts notes, ‘GNP growth statistics might mean a
good deal to an economist or to a maharajah, but
they do not tell us a thing about the quality of life in a Third World fishing
village’ (Roberts 1984: 6).
Table 20.3 Goal 1 of the Millennium Development Goals: progress
|
North
Africa
|
Sub-
Saharan
Africa
|
East Asia
|
South East Asia
|
South
Asia
|
West Asia
|
Oceania
|
Latin
America
and
Caribbean
|
Caucasus
and
Central
Asia
|
Reduce
|
Low
|
Very high
|
Moderate
|
High
|
Very high
|
Low
|
Very high
|
Moderate
|
Low
|
extreme
|
poverty
|
poverty
|
poverty
|
poverty
|
poverty
|
poverty
|
poverty
|
poverty
|
poverty
|
poverty by half
Work
|
Large
|
Very large
|
Large
|
Large
|
Very large
|
Large
|
Very large
|
Moderate
|
Moderate
|
|
deficit in
|
deficit in
|
deficit in
|
deficit in
|
deficit in
|
deficit in
|
deficit in
|
deficit in
|
deficit in
|
|
decent
|
decent
|
decent
|
decent
|
decent
|
decent
|
decent
|
decent
|
decent
|
|
work
|
work
|
work
|
work
|
work
|
work
|
work
|
work
|
work
|
Reduce
|
Low
|
Very high
|
Moderate
|
Moderate
|
High
|
Moderate
|
Moderate
|
Moderate
|
Moderate
|
hunger by
half
|
hunger
|
hunger
|
hunger
|
hunger
|
hunger
|
hunger
|
hunger
|
hunger
|
hunger
|
Source: UNDP 2012
A critical alternative view of development
Since the early 1970s, there have been
numerous efforts to stimulate debate about development and to highlight its
contested nature. Critical alternative ideas have been put forward that we can
synthesize into an alternative approach. These have originated with various
NGOs, grass-roots development organizations, individuals, UN organizations, and
private foundations. Disparate social
movements not directly related to the development
agenda have contributed to the flourishing of the alternative viewpoints: for
example, the women’s movement, the peace movement, movements for democracy,
and green movements (Thomas 2000). Noteworthy was the publication in 1975 by
the Dag Hammarskjold Foundation of What Now? Another Development?
This alternative conception of development (see Ekins 1992: 99) argued that the
process of development should be (1) need-oriented (material and non-material),
(2) endogenous (coming from within a society), (3) self-reliant (in terms of
human, natural, and cultural resources), (4) ecologically sound, and (5) based
on structural transformations (of economy, society, gender, power relations).
Since then, various NGOs, such as the
World Development Movement, have campaigned for a form of development that
takes aspects of this alternative approach on board. Grass-roots movements have
often grown up around specific issues, such as dams (Narmada in India) or
access to common resources (the rubber tappers of the Brazilian Amazon). Such
campaigns received a great impetus in the 1980s with the growth of the green
movement worldwide. The two-year preparatory process before the UN Conference
on Environment and Development (UNCED) in Rio in June 1992 gave indigenous
groups, women, children, and other previously voiceless groups a chance to express
their views. This momentum marks the beginning of a norm to hold alternative
NGO forums, parallel to all major UN conferences—the 2012 Rio+20 being a
recent example.
Resistance, empowerment, and development
Democracy is at the heart of the alternative
conception of development. Grass-roots movements are
playing an important role in challenging
entrenches structures of power in formal democratic societies. In the face of
increasing globalization, with the further erosion of local community control
over daily life and the further extension of the power of the market and transnational corporations, people express their resistance through the language
of human rights (Evans 2005: Stammers 2009). They are making a case for local
control and local empowerment as the heart of development. They are protecting
what they identify as the immediate source of their survival—water, forest,
and land. They are rejecting the dominant agenda of private and public
(government- controlled) spheres and setting an alternative one Well-known
examples include the Chiapas’ uprising in Mexico and protests at the annual
meetings of the WTO. More recently, the ‘Occupy movement- begun to highlight
the social and economic unfairness of power relations in society, has achieved
a global reach, with protests in nearly 100 major cities located in every
continent (Wolff and Barsamian 2012). Discontent over inequality also inspired
the Arab Spring’ which has swept across North Africa and parts of the Middle
East (Dabashi 2012). Rather than accepting the Western model of development and
its associated values placidly, these protests symbolize the struggle for
substantive democracy that communities across the world crave. This alternative
conception of development therefore values diversity above universality, and is
based on a different conception of rights (Evans 2011).
The Alternative Declaration produced by
the NGO Forum at the Copenhagen Summit enshrines principles of community
participation, empowerment, equity, self-reliance, and sustainability. The role
of women and youth was singled out. The Declaration rejects the economic
liberalism accepted by governments of North and South, seeing it as a path to
aggravation rather than alleviation of the global social crisis. It calls for
the immediate cancellation of all debt, improved terms of trade, transparency
and accountability of the IMF and World Bank, and the regulation of multinationals.
An alternative view of democracy was central to its conception of development.
Similar ideas continue to emanate from all parallel NGO forums that accompany
UN global conferences.
Now that we have looked at the critical
alternative view of development, we shall look at the way in which the orthodox
view has attempted to respond to the criticisms of the alternative view.
The orthodoxy incorporates criticisms
In the mainstream debate, the focus has
shifted from growth to sustainable
development. The concept was
championed in the late 1980s by the influential Brundtland Commission (World
Commission on Environment and Development—see Brundtland et al. 1987), and
continues to provide a focus for UN development conferences, Rio+20 for
example. Central to the concept of sustainable development is the idea that the
pursuit of development by the present generation should not be at the expense
of future generations. In other words, it stressed intergenerational equity as
well as intragenerational equity. The importance of maintaining the
environmental resource base was highlighted, and with this comes the idea that
there are natural limits to growth. The Brundtland Report made clear, however,
that further growth was essential; but it needed to be made
environment-friendly. The Report did not address the belief, widespread among a
sector of the NGO community, that the emphasis on growth had caused the
environmental crisis in the first place. The World Bank accepted the concerns
of the Report to some degree. When faced with an NGO spotlight on the adverse
environmental implications of its projects, the Bank moved to introduce more
rigorous environmental assessments of its funding activities. Similarly, concerning
gender, when faced with critical NGO voices, the World Bank eventually came up
with its Operational Policy 4.20 on gender (1994). The latter aimed to reduce
gender disparities and enhance women particularly in the economic development
of their countries by integrating gender considerations in its country
assistance programmes’ (www.worldbank.org) (see Ch. 18).
With the United Nations Conference on the
Environment and Development (UNCED) in June 1992, the idea that the environment
and development were inextricably interlinked was taken further. However, what
came out of the official inter-state process was legitimation of market-based
development policies to further sustainable development, with selfregulation
for transnational corporations. Official output from Rio, such as Agenda
21, however, recognized the huge importance of the sub-state level for
addressing sustainability issues, and supported the involvement of
marginalized groups.
The process of incorporation has continued
ever since (Sheppard and Leitner 2010). This has been seen most recently in the
language of poverty reduction being incorporated into World Bank and IMF
policies: ‘participation’ and ‘empowerment’ are the buzzwords (Cornwall and
Brock 2005). Yet underlying macro- economic policy remains unchanged. An
examination of the contribution of the development orthodoxy to increasing
global inequality is not on the agenda. The gendered outcomes of macroeconomic
policies are largely ignored. Despite promises of new funding at the UN
Monterrey Conference on Financing for Development in 2002, new transfers of
finance from developed to developing countries have been slow in coming. The
promises made at the G8 summit of 2006 are expressed as a percentage of the
donor’s GDP, which, following the global downturn of 2009, will be substantially
less than expected (see Fig.
20.4). In addition to new finance, that Summit
saw commitments to write off $40 billion of debt owed by the Heavily Indebted
Poor Countries (HIPCs). However, the commitment was not implemented with
immediate effect, didn’t cover all needy countries, and received a lukewarm
reception in some G8 countries.
Despite the aim of Rio+20 to continue the
struggle to reduce poverty without causing further environmental degradation,
critics argued that the strategy had been drained of ambition by national
interests. Friends of the Earth argued that the ‘only people dancing in Rio
tonight will be those who continue to benefit from a broken economic model
that puts profit ahead of people and the planet’ (Agence France-Presse: http://www.afp.com/en).
For NGOs, the only outcome was justifiable anger that the scale of the problem
remained unacknowledged, a failure that was made more urgent in the context of
the post-2008 global economic downturn.
An appraisal of the responses of the
orthodox approach to its critics
The central tool in international
programmes for reducing global poverty remains the large UN conference. These
are often followed by ‘+5’ mini-conferences intended to assess current progress
and to further promote and refine agreements made earlier. Whether these
conferences provide a genuine opportunity for progress is, however, often
questioned. The 2009 Copenhagen conference on climate change, for example,
ended in disarray, producing only the weakest of accords as a political ‘fix’
rather than achieving the aim of a legally binding treaty. The World Bank has
taken some steps to integrate women into the prevailing economic order
following the fourth conference on women, held in Beijing during 1995. Two
central planks in this programme are to improve access to economic
opportunities for women and increase women’s voice and agency in the household
and society. The Bank accepts that improvements in the lives of women are
patchy. Most importantly, to achieve such goals within the existing economic order
would require systematically mainstreaming gender in all development projects,
rather than regarding it as an ‘add-on’, which critics argue has not been
achieved.
Voices of criticism are growing in number
and range, even among supporters of the mainstream approach. This disquiet
focuses on the maldistribution of the benefits of economic liberalism, which
is increasingly seen as a threat to local, national, regional, and even global
order. Moreover, the social protest that accompanies economic globalization is
regarded by some as a potential threat to the neo-liberal project. Thus,
supporters of globalization are keen to temper its most unpopular effects by
modification of neo-liberal policies. Small but nevertheless important changes
are taking place. For example, the World Bank has guidelines on the treatment
of indigenous peoples, resettlement, the environmental impact of its projects,
gender, and on disclosure of information. It is implementing social safety nets
when pursuing structural adjustment policies, and it is promoting microcredit
as a way to empower women. With the IMF, it developed a Heavily Indebted Poor
Country (HIPC) Initiative to reduce the debt burden of the poorest states.
Whether these guidelines and concerns really inform policy, and whether these
new policies and facilities result in practical outcomes that impact on the
fundamental causes of poverty, particularly in the wake of the post-2008
global economic crisis, remains unclear, however. (See Case Study 2.)
There is a tremendously long way to go in
terms of gaining credence for the core values of the alternative model of
development in the corridors of power, nationally and internationally.
Nevertheless, the alternative view, marginal though it is, has had some
noteworthy successes in modifying orthodox development. These may not be
insignificant for those whose destinies have up till now been largely
determined by the attempted universal application of a selective set of local,
essentially Western, values.
Key Points
Development is a contested concept. The
orthodox or mainstream approach and the alternative approach reflect different
values.
Development policies over the last sixty
years have been dominated by the mainstream approach-embedded liberalism and,
more recently, neo-liberalism-with a focus on growth.
The last two decades of the twentieth
century saw the flourishing of alternative conceptions of development based on
equity, participation, empowerment, sustainability, etc., with input especially
from NGOs and grass-roots movements, and some parts of the UN.
The mainstream approach has been modified
slightly and has incorporated the language of its critics (e.g. pro-poor
growth).
Gains made during the last two decades may
be reversed as the full consequences of the post-2008 global economic and
financial crisis emerge.
Hunger
Although ‘the production of food to meet
the needs of a burgeoning population has been one of the outstanding global
achievements of the post-war period’ (ICPF 1994: 104, 106), the UN Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) estimates that nearly 1 billion people remained hungry in
2010 (http://www.fao.org). The current depth of hunger across different world
regions is shown in Fig. 20.5. While famines may be exceptional phenomena, hunger is
on-going. Why is this so?
Broadly speaking, there are two schools of
thought with regard to hunger: the orthodox, nature-focused approach, which
identifies the problem largely as one of overpopulation, and the entitlement, society-focused
approach, which sees the problem more in terms of distribution. Let us
consider each of these two approaches in turn.
The orthodox, nature-focused explanation
of hunger
The orthodox explanation of hunger, first
mapped out by Thomas Robert Malthus in his Essay on the Principle of
Population in 1798, focuses on the relationship between human
population growth and the food supply. It asserts that population growth naturally
outstrips the growth in food production, so that a decrease in the per capita
availability of food is inevitable, until eventually a point is reached at
which starvation, or some other disaster, drastically reduces the human
population to a level that can be sustained by the available food supply. This
approach therefore places great stress on human overpopulation as the cause of
the problem, and seeks ways to reduce the fertility of the human race—or
rather, that part of the human race that seems to breed faster than the rest,
the poor of the ‘Third World’. Supporters of this approach argue that there are
natural limits to population growth—principally that of the carrying capacity
of the land—and that when these limits are exceeded disaster is inevitable.
The available data on the growth of the
global human population indicate that it has quintupled since the early 1800s,
was nearly 7 billion in 2011, and is projected to reach 10 billion in 2100.
While most countries are expected to achieve a population increase, the
greatest increase is expected in just a few countries: Congo, India, Tanzania,
Philippines, and Nigeria, for example. However, although China is projected a
30 per cent decrease in its population by 2100 from 2011 numbers, this conceals
an increase to 1.5 billion by 2050, before falling back. Table 20.4 shows
estimates for the most populated countries for 2011, and projected population
for 2100. Table 20.5 shows figures for 2011 and 2100 by region. It is
figures such as these that have convinced many adherents of the orthodox
approach to hunger that it is essential that Third World countries adhere to
strict family- planning policies that one way or another limit their population
growth rates.
Table 20.4 Estimated population of top ten countries for 2011 and
projected top ten for 2100
Rank 2011
|
Country
|
Population
(millions)
|
Rank 2100
|
Country
|
Population
(millions)
|
% change 2011-2100
|
1
|
China
|
1,347,565
|
1
|
India
|
1,550,899
|
24.92
|
2
|
India
|
1,241,492
|
2
|
China
|
941,042
|
-30.17
|
3
|
USA
|
313,085
|
3
|
Nigeria
|
729,885
|
349.24
|
4
|
Indonesia
|
242,326
|
4
|
USA
|
478,026
|
52.68
|
5
|
Brazil
|
196,655
|
5
|
Tanzania
|
316,338
|
584.44
|
6
|
Pakistan
|
176,745
|
6
|
Pakistan
|
261,271
|
47.82
|
7
|
Nigeria
|
162,471
|
7
|
Indonesia
|
254,178
|
4.89
|
8
|
Bangladesh
|
150,494
|
8
|
Congo
|
212,113
|
213.05
|
9
|
Russia
|
142,836
|
9
|
Philippines
|
177,803
|
87.45
|
19
|
Japan
|
126,497
|
10
|
Brazil
|
177,349
|
-9.82
|
Source: United Nations Department of Economic and
Social Affairs, Population Division
Table 20.5 Estimated population by region for 2011 and projected
for 2100
Region Population 2011
(millions) Population 2100
(millions) %change
Africa
|
1,045,923
|
3,574,141
|
241.72
|
Asia
|
4,207,448
|
4,596,224
|
9.24
|
Europe
|
739,299
|
674,796
|
-8.72
|
Latin America and Caribbean
|
596,629
|
687,517
|
15.23
|
North America
|
347,563
|
526,428
|
51.46
|
Oceania
|
37,175
|
65,819
|
77.05
|
World
|
6,974,037
|
10,124,925
|
45.18
|
Source: United Nations Department of Economic and
Social Affairs, Population Division
The entitlement, society-focused
explanation of hunger
Critics of the orthodox approach to hunger
argue that it is too simplistic in its analysis and ignores the vital factor of
food distribution. They point out that it fails to account for the paradox we
observed at the beginning of this discussion on hunger: that despite the
enormous increase in food production per capita that has occurred over the
post-war period (largely due to the development of high-yielding seeds and
industrial agricultural techniques), the number of those experiencing chronic
hunger remains unacceptably high (see Table
20.4). For example, the UN Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) estimates that although there is enough grain alone to
provide everyone in the world with 3,600 calories a day, even taking account
of increases in population growth (i.e. 1,200 more than the UN’s recommended
minimum daily intake), the number of people living in hunger persists.
Furthermore, critics note that the Third
World, where the majority of malnourished people live, produces much of the
world’s food, while those who consume most of it are located in the Western
world. Meat consumption tends to rise with household wealth, and a third of
the world’s grain is used to fatten animals. This trend is seen in countries
that have experienced rapid economic growth during the last two decades, most
notably China and India. A further recent trend is the switch in land use from
food production to crops for the biofuel industry (see UNCTAD 2009). The effect
of this is to reduce surpluses produced by developed countries that can be
sold on global markets, and to take fertile land out of food production for
local markets. Such evidence leads opponents of the orthodox approach to argue
that we need to look much more closely at the social, political, and economic
factors that determine how food is distributed and why access to it is achieved
by some and denied to others.
A convincing alternative to the orthodox
explanation of hunger was put forward in Amartya Sen’s pioneering book, Poverty
and Famines: An Essay on Entitlement and Deprivation, which was first
published in 1981 (Sen 1981, 1983). He argues that famines have often
occurred when there has been no significant reduction in the level of per
capita food availability and, furthermore, that some famines have occurred
during years of peak food availability. Thus hunger is due to people not having
enough to eat, rather than there not being enough to eat. Put another way,
whether a person starves or eats depends not so much on the amount of food
available, but whether or not they can establish an entitlement to that food.
If there is plenty of food available in the shops, but a family does not have
the money to purchase that food, and does not have the means of growing their
own food, then they are likely to starve. For example, while in many parts of
sub-Saharan Africa agricultural
land was traditionally used to provide
food for local markets, the creation of global markets has meant that more and
more land is devoted to export crops to feed wealthy nations. With access to
land for local production limited, little opportunity to find alternative
work, and weak social security arrangements in place following the austerity
policies imposed by the World Bank and IMF of the 1980s (SAPs), landless rural
labourers and pastoralists could not assert their entitlement to food, even as
global production increased. In short, the conditions for hunger prevail, even
in a world of plenty.
Globalization and hunger
It is possible to explain the contemporary
occurrence of hunger by reference to the process of globalization.
Globalization means that events occurring in one part of the globe can affect,
and be affected by, events occurring in other, distant parts of the globe.
Often, as individuals, we remain unaware of our role in this process and its
ramifications. When we in the developed countries drink a cup of tea or
coffee, or eat imported fruit and vegetables, we tend not to reflect on the
changes experienced at the site of production of these cash crops in the
developing world. However, it is possible to look at the effect of the
establishment of a global, as opposed to a local, national, or regional, system
of food production. This has been done by David Goodman and Michael Redclift in
their book, Refashioning Nature: Food, Ecology and Culture
(1991).
Goodman and Redclift argue that we are witnessing
an increasingly global organization of food provision and access to food, with
transnational corporations playing the major role. This has been based on the
incorporation of local systems of food production into a global system of food
production. In other words, local subsistence producers, who have traditionally
produced to meet the needs of their family and community, may now be involved
in cash-crop production for distant markets. Alternatively, they may have left
the land and become involved in the process of industrialization, making them
net consumers rather than producers of food in the move to urbanization.
The most important actor in the
development and expansion of this global food regime has been the USA, which,
at the end of the Second World War, was producing large food surpluses. These
surpluses were welcomed by many developing countries, for the orthodox model of
development depended on the creation of a pool of cheap wage labour to serve
the industrialization process. Hence, in order to encourage people off the
land and away from subsistence production, the incentive to produce for
oneself and one’s family had to be removed. Cheap imported food provided this
incentive, while the resulting low prices paid for domestic subsistence crops
made them unattractive to grow; indeed, for those who continued to produce for
the local market, such as in Sudan, the consequence has been the production of
food at a loss (Bennett and George 1987: 78).
Not surprisingly, therefore, the
production of subsistence crops for local consumption in the developing world
has drastically declined in the post-war period. Domestic production of food
staples in developing countries has declined, consumer tastes have been
altered by the availability of cheap imports, and the introduction of
agricultural technology has displaced millions of peasants from traditional
lands. Furthermore, the creation of global agri-businesses has encouraged
speculative investments, adding further to price volatility. For critics, the
global organization of food production has turned the South into a ‘world farm’
to satisfy consumers in developed regions, at
the expense of scarcity and permanent
hunger in less- developed regions.
The increasing number of people who suffer
food insecurity is often recognized by the leaders of wealthy states. It is
these same leaders who also promote free market principles that create the
contemporary context for hunger. However, as the 2009 World Summon Food
Security demonstrated, concern does not necessarily turn into action (http://www.fao.org/wsfs world-summit/en).
Key Points
In recent decades global food production
has burgeoned, but, paradoxically, hunger and malnourishment remain widespread.
The orthodox explanation for the continued
existence of hunger is that population growth outstrips food production.
An alternative explanation for the
continuation of hunger focuses on lack of access or entitlement to available
food. Access and entitlement are affected by factors such as the North-South
global divide, particular national policies, rural-urban divides, class,
gender, and race.
Globalization can simultaneously
contribute to increased food production and increased hunger.
Conclusion:
looking to the future-globalization with a human face?
It is clear when we consider the competing
conceptions of poverty, development, and hunger explored in this chapter that
there is no consensus on definitions, causes, or solutions.
We are faced with an awesome development
challenge. Although the UN has claimed that the Millennium Development Goals on
poverty and hunger have been achieved, the global population increase means
that the number of those suffering poverty has declined very little, and the
number suffering from hunger has not declined at all. The consequences of the
post-2008 economic and financial crisis have not yet impacted fully, but with a
deepening global recession, rising unemployment, and volatile commodity prices,
past progress on poverty reduction may be reversed, ‘throwing millions into
extreme poverty’ (http:// www.worldbank.org/). Recognizing this prospect, UN Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon, writing in the 2012 MDG Report, argued that the ‘developing world must
not be allowed to decelerate or reverse the progress that has been made’ in
spite of the current economic crisis (UN 2012).
The orthodox model of development is being
held up for closer scrutiny as we become more aware of the risks as well as the
opportunities that globalization and the Washington Consensus bring in their
wake. The key question is: can globalization develop a human face?
The current development orthodoxy is
following the reformist pathway. History will reveal whether this pathway bears
the seeds of its own destruction by delivering too little, too late, to too
few people. As students of International Relations, we must bring these issues
in from the margins of our discipline and pursue them as central to our study.
Box 20.1
International Relations theory and the marginalization of
priority
Traditionally, the discipline
focused on issues relating to interstate conflict, and regarded human security
and development as separate areas.
Mainstream realist and liberal
scholars neglected the challenges presented to human well-being by the
existence of global underdevelopment.
Dependency theorists were interested
in persistent and deepening inequality and relations between North and South,
but they received little attention in the discipline.
During the 1990s debate flourished,
and several subfields developed or emerged that touched on matters of poverty,
development, and hunger, albeit tangentially (e.g. global environmental
politics, gender, international political economy).
More significant in the 1990s, in
raising within the discipline the concerns of the majority of humanity and
states, were the contributions from postcolonial theorists, Marxist theorists
(Hardt and Negri), scholars adopting a human security approach (Nef, Thomas),
and the few concerned directly w r development (Saurin, Weber).
Interest in poverty, development,
and hunger has increased with the advent of globalization.
Most recently, social unrest in many parts of the world and the
fear of terrorism have acted as a spur for greater diplomatic activity.
Box
20.2
Development: a contested concept
The orthodox view
Poverty: a situation suffered by people who do not have the money to buy food and
satisfy other basic material needs.
Solution: transformation of traditional subsistence economies defined as
'backward' into industrial, commodified economies defined as 'modern'.
Production for profit. Individuals sell their labour for money, rather than
producing to meet their family's needs.
Core ideas and assumptions: the possibility of unlimited economic growth in a free market system.
Economies eventually become self-sustaining ('take-off' point). Wealth is said
to trickle down to those at the bottom. All layers of society benefit through a
'trickle-down' mechanism when the superior'Western' model is adopted.
Measurement: economic growth; Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita: industrialization,
including agriculture.
Process: top-down; reliance on external 'expert knowledge', usually Western.
Large capital investments in large projects; advanced technology; expansion of
the private sphere.
The alternative view
Poverty: a situation suffered by people who are not able to meet their material
and non-material needs through their own effort.
Solution: creation of human well-being through sustainable societies in social,
cultural, political, and economic terms.
Core ideas and assumptions: sufficiency. The inherent value of nature, cultural diversity, and the
community- controlled commons (water, land, air, forest). Human activity in
balance with nature. Self-reliance and local control through democratic
inclusion, participation, and giving a voice to marginalized groups, such as
women, indigenous groups.
Measurement: fulfilment of basic material and non-material human needs of everyone;
condition of the natural environment. Political empowerment of marginalized.
Process: bottom-up; participatory; reliance on appropriate (often local)
knowledge and technology; small investments in small-scale projects; protection
of the commons.
Case
Study 1
Taking jobs to Bangladesh's poor
The
case of Hathay Bunano Proshikhan Society (HBPS) offers a good example of an
alternative development model. For most Bangladeshi women living in rural
districts the opportunity to give their families a bit of extra money in the
struggle against rural poverty means moving to large cities, leaving their
children and families for many months. The move from rural to city life strains
traditional social relations and places women in a urban environment that is
unfamiliar and threatening.
In 2004
the founders of HBPS asked themselves several questions: (1) how do you create
sustainable employment free of debt, (2) without changes in the lifestyle of
rural women, and (3) while generating returns comparable with the enterprises
modelled on mainstream economic lines? The answer was to create flexible
employment opportunities for women in rural Bangladesh through a social
business model producing knitted and crocheted children's toys.
Although
working conditions are simple, work is undertaken in a social setting alongside
friends and neighbours. Women often bring their children to the workplace to be
cared for during the day. Newly recruited workers are given training in core
skills as well as basic mathematics and life skills. In this way women workers
can contribute to the family economy without breaking family and village ties.
Today,
HBPS employs over 5,000 artisans at fifty-four sites in rural locations,
producing items that are exported to developed countries in the USA, Europe,
Asia and Australasia. HBPS is anon- profit organization, marketing its products
through Pebblechild Bangladesh, a for profit organization. Bringing work to the
village also means that earnings are spent within the village economy rather
than in distant cities, bringing benefits to the wider village community. (www.hathaybunano.com)
Case
Study 2:
Famine in the Sahel region of West Africa
More than 17 million people are
facing starvation in West Africa's Sahel region. The reasons for this are many
and varied. Conflicts in Mali and Niger have seen over 300,000 refugees seek
safety in neighbouring countries, putting even more strain on an already
difficult situation. These conflicts have cut off traditional grazing routes
and disrupted local markets, making it difficult even for those who can afford
food. Rising global prices for many staple foods have made matters worse.
Changing climate conditions also affect prospects for local food supplies. On
top of all these difficulties, poor rainfall since 2011 has brought failed
harvests and threatened the survival of livestock. Mauritania, Niger, Mali,
Chad, Burkina Faso, and Somalia are experiencing the worst of the crisis.
Although
many agencies and NGOs are working to alleviate the situation, including the
World Bank, Save the Children, and Oxfam, 'a culture of risk aversion caused a
six-month delay in the large-scale aid effort because ... many donors wanted
proof of humanitarian catastrophe before acting to prevent one'. (Hiller and Dempsey 2012)
Questions
What does poverty mean?
Explain the orthodox approach to development
and outline the criteria by which it measures development.
Assess the critical alternative model of
development.
How effectively has the orthodox model of
development neutralized the critical alternative view?
Compare and contrast the orthodox and alternative
explanations of hunger.
What are the pros and cons of the global
food regime established since the Second World War?
Critically explore the gendered nature of
poverty.
Is the recent World Bank focus on poverty
reduction evidence of a change of direction by the Bank?
Why has the discipline of International
Relations been slow to engage with issues of poverty and development?
10 Given the post-2008 global economic
crisis, together with continued increases in the global population, can the
Millennium Development Goal to reduce poverty and hunger be sustained?
Further Reading
General
Collier, P. (2007), The Bottom Billion: Why the Poorest Countries are Failing and
What Can Be Done About It (Oxford: Oxford University Press). Collier
asks why, when many are reaping the benefits of globalization, there remains a
billion who remain in poverty. He identifies four issues that prevent the move
to development: civil war, unstable economies that rely on natural resources,
being landlocked, and ineffective governance.
Kiely, R. (2006), The New Political Economy of Development: Globalization,
Imperialism and Hegemony (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan). An
important text that examines development in a historic and political-economic
context. This is a book for ambitious students who want to take their
understanding of development to a deeper level.
Rapley.J. (1996), Understanding Development (Boulder, CO: Lynne Rienner).
Analyses the theory and practice of development in the Third World since the
Second World War in a straightforward, succinct manner. It provides the reader
with a firm grasp of changing development policies at the international level
and their take-up over time in different states.
Thomas, C. (2000), Global Governance, Development and Human Security (London:
Pluto). Examines the global development policies pursued by global governance
institutions, especially the IMF and the World Bank, in the 1980s and 1990s. It
assesses the impact of these policies on human security, and analyses different
paths towards the achievement of human security for the twenty-first century.
Development
Rahnema, M., with Bawtree, V. (eds) (1997), The Post Development Reader (Dhaka:
University Press, and London: Zed). Challenges the reader to think critically
about the nature of development and assumptions about meanings. This is an
extremely stimulating interdisciplinary reader.
Sen, A. (1999), Development as Freedom (Oxford: Oxford University
Press). Sen asks why, in a world that has seen spectacular growth, many in the
less-developed countries remain unfree.
Dreze, J., Sen, A., and Hussain, A. (eds) (1995), The Political Economy of Hunger (Oxford:
Clarendon Press). An excellent collection on the political economy of hunger.
Sen, A. (1981), Poverty and Famines (Oxford: Clarendon Press).
Provides a ground-breaking analysis of the causes of hunger that incorporates
detailed studies of a number of famines and convincingly challenges the
orthodox view of the causes of hunger.
Yohannes, Y., et al. (2010), Global Hunger Index 2010: The Challenge of Hunger: Focus on
the Crisis of Child Undernutrition (Washington, DC: IFPRI). This
edition of the Global Hunger Index (GHI) focuses on child malnutrition. The GHI
is published by the International Food Policy Research Institute, and was first
published in 2006 to increase attention on the hunger problem and to mobilize
the political will to address it.
Visit the Online Resource Centre that
accompanies this book to access more learning resources on this chapter topic
at www.oxfordtextbooks.co.uk/orc/baylis6exe/
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