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Showing Original Post only (View all)Why the World Bank has no real intentions of reducing poverty [View all]
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatches/globalpost-blogs/commentary/why-the-world-bank-has-no-real-intentions-reducing-povertyWhy the World Bank has no real intentions of reducing poverty
The World Bank congratulates itself for slashing poverty, while global hunger soars. "It's a massive crime against humanity."
Joel ElliottMarch 22, 2012 06:26
WALTHAM, Massachusetts Its time for the World Bank to stop pretending significant progress is being made in reducing extreme global poverty. The self-congratulatory report it issued recently claimed it had achieved its stated goal of cutting global poverty in half. This was extremely misleading at best, http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTPOVCALNET/Resources/Global_Poverty_Update_2012_02-29-12.pdf
This goal (the first of the eight Millennium Development Goals) was originally announced as being to cut in half the total number of people living in extreme poverty by 2015. When it became obvious that the economic policies of the Bretton Woods Institutions of the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and also the World Trade Organization would never allow for that to happen because they were not intended to reduce global poverty, as will be explained the UN General Assembly redefined the goal as being to cut in half the proportion of the global population of those living in extreme poverty. This redefinition enabled the World Bank to put forth the illusion of progress when none was actually occurring.
Thomas Pogge, Director of the Global Justice Program and a professor of philosophy at Yale University, is deeply skeptical both of the World Banks findings and its methodologies. In his 2010 book, Politics as Usual, Pogge argues that, besides the troubling redefinition of MDG1, the World Banks methods of calculating consumer price indices (CPI) and purchasing power parity (PPP) fail to count many people who actually are experiencing extreme poverty, which is defined as living on less than $1.25 a day.
Its a massive crime against humanity, he said in an interview. How can this be? How can people be less and less poor, and more and more people are hungry?
The number of chronically undernourished as tracked by the United Nations increased from about 800 million in 1992 to 925 million in 2010, according to this UN report, and increasing food prices are likely to have pushed it much higher since.
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i think we should be sceptical of all our institutions whose purpose is said to be
xchrom
Mar 2012
#1
If you look at the governments in Latin America who really have reduced poverty
EFerrari
Mar 2012
#4
When in the history of the world has any bank cared about reducing povery? The bottom line has
demosincebirth
Mar 2012
#2
When FDR started the World Bank (and GATT and the IMF) at the Bretton Woods conference in 1944.
pampango
Mar 2012
#3
My point is that the New World Order problem is not invalidated just because Birchers pointed it out
Zalatix
Mar 2012
#14