Key points are not available for this paper at this time.
Jeffrey D. Sachs is the Director of The Earth Institute, Quetelet Professor of Sustainable Development, and Professor of Health Policy and Management at Columbia University. He is also Special Advisor to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. From 2002 to 2006, he was Director of the UN Millennium Project and Special Advisor to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan on the Millennium Development Goals, the internationally agreed goals to reduce extreme poverty, disease and hunger by the year 2015. Sachs is also President and Co-Founder of Millennium Promise Alliance, a non-profit organization aimed at ending extreme global poverty. He is widely considered to be the leading international economic advisor of his generation. For more than 20 years Professor Sachs has been in the forefront of the challenges of economic development, poverty alleviation and enlightened globalization, promoting policies to help all parts of the world to benefit from expanding economic opportunities and wellbeing. He is also one of the leading voices for combining economic development with environmental sustainability, and as Director of the Earth Institute leads large-scale efforts to promote the mitigation of human-induced climate change. In 2004 and 2005, he was named among the 100 most influential leaders in the world by Time magazine. He was awarded the Padma Bhushan, a high civilian honour bestowed by the Indian Government, in 2007. Sachs lectures constantly around the world and was the 2007 BBC Reith Lecturer. He is author of hundreds of scholarly articles and many books, including New York Times bestseller The End of Poverty (Penguin, 2005). Sachs is a member of the Institute of Medicine and is a Research Associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research. Prior to joining Columbia, he spent over 20 years at Harvard University, most recently as Director of the Center for International Development. A native of Detroit, Michigan, Sachs received his BA, MA and PhD degrees at Harvard University. He has been conferred with honorary doctorates from universities around the world for his extraordinary contributions in global economics, including one conferred by his close colleague Chancellor Mary Robinson from the University of Dublin, Trinity College. Jeffery Sach’s presentation on his book An End to Poverty to his colleagues in Columbia University was relayed as a keynote video presentation to set the context for the Global Congress and the 14 working groups. Only some of the moving images he presented are included in his keynote address. See: http: //www. columbia. edu/cu/news/media/05/349ₜheₑndₒfₚoverty/. Poverty will not be ended by sheer will power alone. It will not even be ended by ethical commitment alone, though ethical commitment is essential. It will be ended by bringing the best of our thinking and the best of our science, together with ethical commitment to attend to the very great problems of the world. It will require the thinking of scholars and scientists and committed practitioners from across the range of human knowledge. The Earth Institute is a unique place in the world; it brings together scientists, engineers, public health specialists and even a few economists to think, with the knowledge that they have the support and confidence of this university community. So I want to say how grateful and pleased I am to have this forum to introduce these ideas. I think we can do something marvellous in our generation. I think we can do something that no other generation in history could even contemplate. Not only do I think that we can do this marvellous thing, I think we must do it. This wonderful thing that I think we can do is to bring an end to extreme poverty on the planet and it can be accomplished by the year 2025. I would like to explain this first by introducing you to some of the people that I have been privileged to meet. I will show you some of the haunting images that I have experienced in many years of work in very poor places. This is the face of extreme poverty. We have to understand it. Before I saw these people and their circumstances, I could not have imagined it. Still, after 20 years working with these villages in all parts of the world, I continue to experience dreadful conditions I could not have imagined before. Nevertheless, horrific as the problems are, solutions are also at hand. The solutions can be found by a proper diagnosis of the causes of such poverty and suffering, and a proper understanding of the forces at play that have led to the fact that five-sixths of the world has escaped from extreme poverty. All of the world was once in extreme poverty. Not so long ago, perhaps less than 200 years ago, there were only a few dukes, duchesses, kings and queens that were beyond extreme poverty. The rest of our forebears were fighting for survival every day. We have had a scientific and industrial revolution. We have had two centuries of economic development (albeit at times violent and frighteningly unfair, and sometimes grotesquely exploitative), which were successful in raising living standards, in raising life expectancy, and in cutting sharply mortality and illness from infectious disease. But although that progress has reached a substantial number of people, it has not reached all on the planet. The success of global economic development in most of the world makes it possible for us to think of the one billion people who have not been part of that success. One-sixth of humanity continues to struggle daily for survival. Their extreme poverty is so forceful that it literally kills. It continues to kill by the millions each year because extreme poverty deprives people of access to the most basic tools for staying alive: safe drinking water, basic sanitation, a bed net to fight against malaria, a doctor in the case of a dreaded illness that is otherwise treatable, seeds, so that crops can be grown and hunger alleviated. This deprivation is extreme poverty and a billion people on the planet are still struggling with it. Meet some of them. In our travels we saw what our fellow human beings had to endure. There were regions where crops failed due to long dry seasons and erratic rainy seasons, and this was a year when the rains failed. One poignant example was a grandmother and her extended family of grandchildren but not her own children. They had had died of AIDS and left her many grandchildren without parents. In that village we saw very few mothers and fathers of working age; a community of grandmothers and orphaned grandchildren with a missing generation. They are hungry and they are fighting every day, at risk of malaria, a killer disease. Malaria will claim between 1 and 3 million lives this year, even though it is 100% treatable if you get the medicine in time. Moreover, it is largely preventable, if you sleep under a bed net treated with insecticide. These children do not sleep under such a bed net; as they cannot afford it. A bed net costs 5, it lasts 5 years, two children sleep under it. It therefore costs a mere 50 cents per child per year, and still the poorest cannot afford it. They have no money whatsoever. They grow crops but not enough even to feed themselves. This is in essence a non-cash economy for hundreds of millions of people. Carol Bellamy, the Head of UNICEF, called the situation in Malawi, ‘the Perfect Storm’: AIDS, endemic malaria, drought – a triple catastrophe. We saw this child (Fig. 1) in a subdistrict hospital in Western Kenya just 3 weeks ago. There is a tongue depressor in the mouth so that the child would not bite his tongue off. The child, most likely, had been given medication that does not work any longer due to the development of widespread drug resistance. These former first-line drugs are now often useless. You have children brought in a state of coma as this young boy was. We do not know whether he survived. We do not know whether he will live with lifetime impairment if he did survive. Child suffering from cerebral malarial, in seizure, admitted to hospital. When we turned the corner in this subdistrict hospital, we saw the paediatric unit – six people sleeping to a bed: three children and their three mothers. This is considered normal in Western Kenya. The burden of illness is so great that the hospitals are overflowing. Malaria, killer diarrhoeal disease, acute respiratory infection, paediatric AIDS are all rampant there. There is one nurse for every 70 patients. Think about that. It is about 5 min per patient for a nurse during a day shift. And these are not patients with mild problems. This is a system completely overwhelmed. Figure 2 shows an adult ward on a not so busy day. There were, after all, only two patients to a bed. How would you like to go into the hospital with malaria and be put on a bed shared with someone with tuberculosis? Not a very good idea. In a proper hospital, the TB Ward would be separated physically. You would not be sharing a room, or hallway, much less a bed! You would be in a different part of the hospital protected by ultra-violet lights. There would be another thing that you would expect: that the doctor would wash his hands between patients. You might expect running water in the hospital. In this hospital there is no running water. They cannot afford it. Only now, are they beginning to put it in. Two patients to a bed in a crowded hospital; one of them is suffering from malaria; the second is infected with active tuberculosis. The image in Fig. 3 is, of course, one of the picturesque sights you see anywhere in Africa, with this woman carrying water on her head - except when you stop to ponder the extreme poverty. Talk to the woman. You will find out that she might spend 6 h a day simply collecting water – not safe water, mind you, but water. An hour there, an hour back, three times a day. That is extreme poverty; a rite of continuing physical burden just to stay alive. Then we hear of their work ethic and such comments as, ‘they do not work hard enough’, when in fact they work to fight for their very survival and also the survival of their children day in and day out. A woman bears a water vessel for her family which may require her to walk for several hours; repeated two or three times every day of her life. Unfortunately this water is often contaminated. That is a good picture of a bad situation. That is a woman in a hut with particles in her lungs from a typical three stone cooking stove. This is what the air is like inside the hut at cooking time. This is why millions of children get acute respiratory infection and a vast number die each year, because the air inside is too noxious for the lungs; even in their own homes they are at serious risk every day from contaminants. Figure 4 belongs to the category –‘I cannot believe what I just saw!’ Even after 20 years of thinking that you have seen everything something even more appalling turns up. This was just 2 weeks ago. This is a picture of a group of men in a village in Tigray Province, Ethiopia, digging in the middle of a dry river to find the water which is about 5 feet under the surface of the river bed. This is what the village calls, their ‘perennial river’, in other words the year-round flowing river. The only problem is that it has stopped being a river. The water table is now beneath the river bed, partly because the rains have failed consistently in recent years. The short-season rains have now failed 5 years in a row. There are 11 000 people at this bend of the river where we were. They are fighting for their very survival. Their children are chronically undernourished, and it is a struggle to stay alive, to the point of digging for water in the dry river bed. This is extreme poverty – almost unimaginable until one sees it, and so horrific that one may be led to the false conclusion, as many are, that this suffering is now inevitable: a Malthusian catastrophe as human population has simply outstripped the carrying capacity of the land. Villagers dig to find water which is fundamental to the survival of their community. What can one possibly do? The fact of the matter is that everything that we have seen has practical, do-able, known proven solutions. We just do not apply those solutions, at least not anywhere close to the scale that is needed. The point of my book, The End to Poverty, is to explain that as horrific and shocking as it is that nearly 10 million people will die this year of diseases and health conditions and the chronic under-nutrition of extreme poverty, these problems have practical solutions. I believe the Earth Institute and the UN Millennium Project have played a vital role in creating awareness and showing a way forward. What do we know? Let us start with what we think we know, as it happens to be wrong. We think we know that there is a one-word explanation for this problem. If you ask virtually anyone in Washington what is going on in these horrific scenes, they will tell you it is easy, it is corruption. This is the very convenient and typical way in which rich people talk about poor people. Such comments emanate from people who have not, even once in their lives, visited an African village. They sit in all those buildings in Washington making stereotypical judgments and decisions. Something else is very important, and more to the point. The poorest of the poor live in the most marginalized physical environments on the planet. There are objective reasons that help to account for why they have not escaped from poverty while others have. There are three underlying risk factors. Why is Africa hungry and Asia not? First, Africa, unlike Asia, did not have a Green Revolution. There are many reasons. One of the reasons is that Asia has its great rivers, including the Ganges, the Indus, the Brahmaputra, the Mekong and the Yangtze, which serve to irrigate tens of millions of farms. Unfortunately Africa depends instead on rain-fed agriculture, without the vast river systems to provide irrigation. An astonishing 96% of the Africa’s cropland is rain fed. This results in extremely fragile farm systems which make it financially hazardous for the poorest farmers to purchase fertilizers and high-yield seeds. Their extreme poverty also prevents them from getting credits to buy inputs even when they would like to do so. The results are catastrophic. Without fertilizers, high-yield seeds and irrigation, the result is low and unreliable crop yields, and the depletion of soil nutrients which are not replaced by chemical fertilizers. So now, hundreds of millions of peoples in tens of millions of farm households are dependent on farming on soils that are biophysically deficient and cannot produce enough food to keep those families alive, much less to earn a market income. However, knowing these facts also helps us to find a solution. Fertilizer and small-scale irrigation techniques (many of which rely on harvesting rainwater, and then using the rainwater for supplemental irrigation) can change the face of Africa, as improved farm inputs have changed the face of Asia. A Green Revolution is now possible in Africa as it was in Asia. However, as happened in Asia, such a revolution has to be fostered; it will not just happen by itself. The study underpinning the UN Millennium Project has shown that Africa not only has a harder time growing food, it also faces a disease burden vastly greater than other parts of the world, malaria being the most notable. There are many ecological reasons for this, such as the kind of mosquitoes that thrive in such a climate, as well as the high temperatures which result in a higher intensity of disease transmission. Moreover there are also severe transportation problems. The distances of populations from ports and navigable rivers are far greater in Africa than in most other parts of the world. What, then, are the lessons to be derived from the challenges of food production, disease control and transport? The key point is that there are identifiable explanations for why the poorest of the poor are caught in a trap of extreme poverty, infectious diseases, hunger, low food yields and economic isolation. Each one of them has a ready list of practicable solutions which can overcome the challenge. Malaria can be controlled, indeed completely treated. Yet it has trapped the poorest of the poor because they are too poor, in fact, to finance the steps needed to control the disease. People far from the coasts are poor because they cannot trade; and because they are poor they cannot finance road construction to facilitate the access necessary for international trade. Farmers are impoverished because their soils are depleted of nutrients and the rains are unstable and unpredictable, yet the farmers lack the creditworthiness to invest in better seeds, fertilizers, irrigation pumps and the like. I propose there is a way out of the poverty trap. I learned the approach from my wife, an excellent clinician who was wise enough not to go into economics! She went into paediatrics and I have watched for >20 years how she skilfully performs a differential diagnosis. When a patient calls with a fever she does not say, ‘well you were corrupt. ’ does she say, have an A good doctor there are 50 or more reasons for fever and that the key is to out which of these to a patient at a time. the time to to the to the and to out a differential diagnosis to find the underlying causes of the The first is because if it is the underlying might be and the patient must get to the the second If the doctor can out then the is to keep out other until an diagnosis can be We have to do better in We have to do better in the of economic We have to put development on a scientific We economic development specialists also to to be good We do not a us that all is due to corruption. We one for one for rain-fed agriculture, one for depleted soil nutrients and one for malaria When you at the 10 000 International the was if the development are not yet serious So how can we do serious You must like a by a of the village. You a by to very yet impoverished people, who are completely of their situation and who will you in in to out of their poverty. In Ethiopia, of people to us to talk with us about the challenges of extreme poverty in one of the most poor, but also one of the most and on the planet. We the and the who make decisions. When you do you can together of practical solutions. This is a picture of our wonderful who has one problem after another water and many other practical that to be and you will many solutions, for rainwater safe and and much Such and tools as a have contributions in when the water table is high But they cannot afford it on their We have been by the many of of the soils with chemical and in some using We have been shown that can be when the soil nutrients are and water control and techniques can be very Such for example using to rain water, can soil from when the water from the can make a The community us for some to keep the in place so that the do not get by the The they needed is not that but they were to afford it because of its can as as In one community in Western the was the in the in the were and the The is now in the and the you feed they can they can and they to food, we will to help this community the number of children in the This is something that be in of villages around the world. wonderful in of better and higher and One very and is to to against the of the disease. which are with that will for or years without the for The number of from malaria could be by a million the 2 or 3 years by a of bed and by access to The of in many subdistrict hospitals has been very a patients will not be in their but will get medicine and be and to their It costs about cents a day now to AIDS with an and every infected to be getting We years too It is been a of a It is that we are not the fight against AIDS even more than we Figure 5 shows a under construction and is a marvellous of what a community can We to the in that we would provide a doctor and They they also a and in 5 weeks the community put the The Millennium Project the and the and the community the the village has a and a doctor and an to the children and the in this village. This is a picture of the community health when we them can we help want you to us so that we can be proper community health And they are now working hard and their They want to stay and they want to keep the village children alive. of a hospital what can be What are the The is we must understand that we are with other human we must understand that we are with people fighting for their we must understand that we are with people first objective is not to our money but to keep their children and alive. We must understand that we are with people who know and understand their situation and who have and We are with people who in the of an AIDS and chronic hunger, can put all of their recent success in the these people are fighting for their children and their They do not book shows of what would be needed to the basic of the poorest of the poor, and to do so in a way that helps them to get on the of economic We can help a situation where these can grow enough food to feed and bring a crop to we can help these to some to We can also help to introduce other of such as food and and many other that would put these on to the first of the development The of these solutions turns out to be so that it is almost For years, the rich world has that it would of our to help the poorest of the That we have that we would 70 cents out of every for development only 70 cents out of think we do 20 times They do not know that we only cents out of every This year, the will spend billion on the and only billion for all of The rich world is so to honour its own and it is so its efforts to than development, that the world is more more unstable and more The to make efforts to 70 cents out of in The that we any but we in the agreed in at a in by President of the that that have not to make efforts the of of the National in development If the the and other rich would simply on our commitment we could the of global poverty. generation can the to our children and to our that we can the end of poverty in our time.
Jeffrey Sachs (Fri,) studied this question.