Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures, tables and case studies
- 1 SDG1 and the nature of poverty
- 2 Progress to 2015
- 3 The origins of SDG1
- 4 Progress since 2015
- 5 The impact of Covid-19
- 6 Tackling the root causes of poverty
- 7 Global governance and its limitations
- 8 Relying on “we the people”
- 9 Towards a moral world order
- 10 A postscript
- Glossary
- References
- Index
6 - Tackling the root causes of poverty
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 January 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures, tables and case studies
- 1 SDG1 and the nature of poverty
- 2 Progress to 2015
- 3 The origins of SDG1
- 4 Progress since 2015
- 5 The impact of Covid-19
- 6 Tackling the root causes of poverty
- 7 Global governance and its limitations
- 8 Relying on “we the people”
- 9 Towards a moral world order
- 10 A postscript
- Glossary
- References
- Index
Summary
This chapter marks a turning point. The origins of the Sustainable Development Goals, their form, and the disappointing progress to date have been documented in Chapters 1 to 5. In addition, in Chapter 4 it was established that it is perfectly feasible, in terms of global financial resources, both to eradicate extreme poverty and halve poverty in all its forms – that is to reach Targets 1.1 and 1.2 by 2030. Indeed, it is a humiliating failure of international governance that these targets have yet to be achieved. In this and the remaining chapters, therefore, attention shifts to explore how more rapid progress can be made and whether this is likely. The fundamental causes of global poverty are first considered before discussing the kinds of policies that need to be pursued if poverty is to be eliminated.
6.1 On the causes of inequality and poverty
Poverty, whether conceptualized as being absolute, relative or multidimensional, results from the unfair primary and secondary distribution of resources. The primary distribution is market-driven. It takes place within and between countries through the production and sale of goods at home and/or abroad which generate income in the form of wages and returns on assets and investments.
The secondary distribution is that engineered by governments through taxation and transfers which determine the resources that populations can access and deploy. For the most part, the secondary distribution currently takes place within nation states but does occur between national states in the form of overseas development assistance (ODA), discounted loans made available by the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, and charitable aid dispensed by non-governmental organizations.
The distributions are unfair to the extent that they lead to, or do not prevent, poverty. In a narrow quasilegal sense, this is the case because it has been internationally agreed that poverty should be eliminated or, at least, reduced by half or more. The distributions may be unfair in the wider sense of structuring patterns of well-being that cannot be justified with respect to commonly accepted moral criteria. Given the context, the focus in this chapter is on unfair-ness narrowly defined.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Poverty and the World OrderThe Mirage of SDG 1, pp. 105 - 130Publisher: Agenda PublishingPrint publication year: 2023