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	<title>Prout Journal &#187; Affluence</title>
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		<title>Creating A Poverty-free Future</title>
		<link>http://www.proutjournal.org/2002/06/creating-a-poverty-free-future/</link>
		<comments>http://www.proutjournal.org/2002/06/creating-a-poverty-free-future/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 01 Jun 2002 18:56:11 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ivana Milojevic</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Economy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PROUT JOURNAL Summer 2002 Issue]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Prout]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Affluence]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Globalization]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Inflation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[malnutrition]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Poverty]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Approximately 10 years ago, I was standing with my mother at a food store in Novi Sad, Yugoslavia. We wanted to buy yogurt required by a recipe to finish a dish. It didn’t cross our minds that between her, who worked as a senior manager, and myself, employed as an associate lecturer at the university, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Approximately 10 years ago, I was standing with my mother at a food store in Novi Sad, Yugoslavia. We wanted<br />
to buy yogurt required by a recipe to finish a dish. It didn’t cross our minds that between her, who worked<br />
as a senior manager, and myself, employed as an associate lecturer at the university, we wouldn’t have enough<br />
money to make such a purchase. At that time it was only the cash economy that worked, as personal checks and<br />
credit cards were no longer accepted. The prices of all goods regularly skyrocketed over night as inflation<br />
reached the highest ever-recorded in history. People were going straight from their workplaces &#8211; where<br />
everyone received income as banks collapsed &#8211; directly to the markets. Delaying your visit to the market by a<br />
couple of hours would cost half of your salary. Our family friend, gynecologist and director of a maternity<br />
hospital, was too busy to go for a couple of days. Eventually, for his half-monthly income, he managed to buy<br />
a bar of soap.</p>
<p>The interesting thing is that most people didn’t feel as horrible, depressed or anxious as you would expect.<br />
When we could not afford the yogurt, my mother and myself could not help but laugh. Running to the market<br />
became some sort of national sport. Women “competed” to find out exactly how many liters of juice could be<br />
made from one orange (I still have a recipe which makes four to five). But at that time we could laugh,<br />
because we felt that our poverty was temporary. We still had other assets, apart from our income, that we<br />
could use. We could still envision a better future. And for some reason, we stopped comparing ourselves with<br />
“the West,” as we did in the previous years of relative affluence (a comparison which would give us the sense<br />
of inadequacy, apprehension and inferiority). We looked around us and concluded that most people were in the<br />
same boat, and, compared to many others, we were still quite fortunate.</p>
<p>My first thought in coming to Australia was that this country would collapse under sanctions. At that time,<br />
petrol in Yugoslavia could be found only sporadically but people of Novi Sad could walk to most places,<br />
drive bicycles or easily organise car polling. Other strategies included waiting in queues for days and<br />
taking turns to do so, borrowing cars from family and friends that spend less gas, smuggling petrol over<br />
the border and buying at the black market. The joke at the time was that while a western European earns<br />
3,000 spends 2,500 and saves 500 DEM, the average Yugoslav person earns 30 but spends 3,000 DEM a month.<br />
While probably serving to boost everyone’s morale, this joke, as well as the previous petrol and juice<br />
examples, help make a few important points.</p>
<p>First, it is to move from a situation of relative affluence to a situation of poverty. This has happened<br />
to millions of people in Eastern Europe, over a relatively short period of time. For example, using the<br />
cost of a basket of basic goods as a measure of poverty, the figures show that child poverty in Russia<br />
has now reached 98 per cent (Bradbury and Jantti, 1999)! Throughout history, this has not only happened<br />
to the members of the middle class, like myself, but to the members of the financial and social elite as<br />
well, and not only in Eastern Europe. Empires fell, the economic system collapsed, wars occurred, family,<br />
age and work situations changed, and so on. Because of what I saw in my life and learned from glimpses<br />
into history, I believe that no one is safe from poverty. And, if we factor in environmental degradation<br />
as an indicator of overall quality of life, we all might already be poor, without even knowing it.<br />
Therefore, addressing and resolving poverty is everyone’s business, and should be everyone’s priority.</p>
<p>Second, people who find themselves in situations of poverty use multiple strategies to alleviate their<br />
condition. The poorer they are the more elaborate and ingenious their strategies for survival are. At<br />
the same time, it is often thought that the poor are totally powerless to change their situation and that<br />
their only hope is to be passive recipients of aid. Because of this, strategies that today’s poor use or<br />
have used before to maintain their societies are rarely considered in poverty elevation measures. In<br />
Australia, for example, Aborigines stress the importance of the land at all levels as necessary in<br />
addressing their current disadvantage. However, the government’s reply to Aboriginal poverty is almost<br />
entirely through welfare statemeasures which primarily focus on financial transaction (welfare handouts).<br />
This reply is a product of the Western, materialistic and industrialised society. It fails to address<br />
the issue of importance of traditional natural and cultural assets as well as the importance of spiritual<br />
progress and wellbeing along material welfare. Another example is the 1994 boycott of products produced<br />
by child labour, led mostly by the USA, which resulted in 50,000 Bangladeshi children losing their jobs,<br />
and as a result many of them then turned to begging and prostitution (Bjonnes, 2001). While the boycott<br />
had good intentions it was one more case “of Westerners selectively applying universal principles to a<br />
situation they did not understand” (Marcus quoted in Bjonnes, 2001). It is depressing that more strategies<br />
for alleviation of poverty have failed rather then succeeded. In addition, some have directly contributed<br />
to an increase in poverty. For example, development policies in the Third World have made many people<br />
landless and/or destroyed their environmental assets, as well as their social cohesion and traditional<br />
economy. This has not only contributed to the increase in their poverty but has sometimes been the single<br />
biggest factor that created it in the first place. Still, just because poverty alleviation measures have<br />
not been successful in the past does not mean that the problem of poverty is such that it cannot be<br />
resolved. This, however, requires tapping into the experiences and strategies developed by those who<br />
experience poverty on daily basis.</p>
<p>Third, and related to the previous perception that the poor are powerless, is the conviction that the<br />
poor have no future since their predicament will only get worse (S P Udayakumar,1995:339). For<br />
example, a 1995 study by the International Food Policy Research Institute concluded that poor countries<br />
that now suffer widespread malnutrition and a general lack of food security can look forward to little<br />
improvement in the foreseeable future (Gately, 2001). Another study (Hanmer et al, 2001) concluded<br />
that Sub-Saharan Africa will not be able to meet the international development targets &#8211; halving of the<br />
extreme poverty by 2015- in any likely future scenario. While such forecasting and trend analysis is<br />
powerful and might be accurate, it does little when it comes to envisioning alternative futures and<br />
motivating people to work toward social change.</p>
<p>Fourth, poverty is a complex, multidimensional issue which cannot be understood only in terms of<br />
economic indicators, such as GNP or per capita income. Access to other assets such as community<br />
support, infrastructure and knowledge base play an equally if not a more important role. This is why<br />
poverty alleviation strategies in the future need to be based on the reconceptualized understanding of<br />
poverty, if they are to be successful. This includes understanding that there are poverties not poverty,<br />
that these poverties are processes, not states and that prevention rather then relief is crucial<br />
(Walker and Park, 1998:47).</p>
<p>Fifth, poverty needs to be defined from the perspective of the poor. For example, one study shows that<br />
poor rarely speak of income but rather focus on their ability to manage physical, human, social and<br />
environmental assets (Narayan, 2000:5). This means asking the poor how they define and see their living<br />
and working conditions and which areas do they believe need to be transformed.</p>
<p>Sixth, poverty is a cumulative process. The longer it goes on the more difficult it is to uproot it.<br />
And while the common understanding is that the poor somehow get accustomed to the situation, in fact,<br />
the longer poverty goes on the more difficult it is to bear it. People who find themselves temporarily<br />
poor might respond to that situation with dignity, humour and resourcefulness. But sooner or later<br />
other feelings such as shame, humiliation and despair set in and the opportunities and assets for<br />
ingenuity decrease. That the poor do not get accustomed to the situations of poverty can be easily seen<br />
from the higher level of poor health and illness among poor as well as from their higher mortality rates.<br />
Around 500,000 women die yearly from pregnancy and birth related complications which are usually related<br />
to a lack of proper nutrition and adequate health services. Almost 2 million children will die this year<br />
because of poverty. And it is estimated that around 30 million people die each year from hunger.</p>
<p>These are only some of the important factors that need to be considered if we are to eradicate poverty.<br />
The literature on poverty is huge, including both the economy oriented studies as well as critical and<br />
alternative approaches. In order to summarise what I see to be crucial issues in regard to poverty<br />
eradication, I use the Causal Layered Analysis methodological approach, developed by Inayatullah (1998).<br />
This approach offers deconstruction, reorders the knowledge and seeks to find the root causes of social<br />
diseases (Fricker, 2000). It implies that there are different levels of reality and different ways of<br />
knowing. Consequently this requires different levels of analysis and understanding of various realms for<br />
implementation of social and individual transformations. Causal Layered Analysis has four levels: the<br />
litany, social causes, discourse/worldviews and myths/metaphor. The litany focuses on quantitative trends<br />
and problems which are often exaggerated and used for political purposes. At the level of social causes,<br />
interpretation is given to the quantitative data. The third level is concerned with structure and the<br />
discourse/worldview that supports and legitimates it. At the fourth level analysis looks for the deep<br />
stories, the collective archetypes, subconscious dimension of the issue under inquiry. Causal Layered<br />
Analysis does not privilege a particular level but attempts to integrate discourses, ways of knowing and<br />
worldviews as well as create transformative spaces for the creation of alternative futures<br />
(Inayatullah, 1998:815-829).</p>
<p>Litany<br />
At the litany level poverty is measured only through economic and other quantitative indicators. The<br />
discourse tends to focus on the overwhelming nature of global poverty, for example, estimates that<br />
currently 53% of the world population is classified as poor and that around 3 billion people live on<br />
less then 2US$ a day. The number of people in poverty is represented as a matter of fact and causes<br />
are rarely explored. In the Western media, poverty is usually constructed to be “out there”, among<br />
“the Others” and rarely “here”. The common results of poverty, such as high fertility rates, low literacy<br />
levels, political arrest, organised crime and scarcity of resources are often presented as its main<br />
causes. For example, in the mainstream discourse on poverty there is a huge concern about overpopulation.<br />
It is often stressed that world population is expected to increase from 6 billion, as it is today, to<br />
7.2 billion in 2015, and somewhere between 7.7 and 11.2 billion in year 2050. As 95% of this increase is<br />
projected to occur in the countries with currently have high proportion of the poor, it is implicit that<br />
the poor themselves are “guilty” of creating a future of poverty.</p>
<p>At this level, the strategies for elevation of poverty mostly focus on the poverty relief and aid<br />
packages. The common response among the affluent is either apathy &#8211; the problem of poverty is so huge<br />
that it cannot be resolved; helplessness &#8211; I wish there is something I/we could do; or projected action<br />
- the government, UN or NGO’s should do something!</p>
<p>Sometimes, magical solutions, such as genetically modified rice and other crops, are also discussed.</p>
<p>Social causes<br />
At the level of social causes analysis, economic, cultural, political and historical factors are<br />
discussed. Social causes analysis is most commonly found among policy planners and academics. At this<br />
level, processes such as colonization, modernization, globalization, capitalism, urbanisation, as well<br />
as national and international governance are discussed. Other indicators of poverty, such as access<br />
to education, health care, are included but poverty is still primarily measured through economic<br />
indicators, such as GNP and income per capita.</p>
<p>Strategies usually include suggestions on how to increase economic growth rate or labour productivity<br />
and how to encourage foreign investment. Other suggested strategies include investments in agricultural<br />
research, education, health, creation of welfare safety net and so on.</p>
<p>Worldview/discourse<br />
At the worldview discourse, the main debate is whether economy needs to be regulated. Libertarians and<br />
conservatives argue against any or against any significant interference into the free-market economy,<br />
and maintain that poverty can only be elevated through the free flow of capital and labour. Some also<br />
argue that the widening gap between the rich and the poor is “a natural, necessary and even desirable<br />
component and hallmark of the improvement of the human condition” (<a href="http://www.libertarians.org">www.libertarians.org</a>). That is,<br />
poverty is the normal condition of men and if the rich were not allowed to get ever richer the poor<br />
would never have any chance to improve their conditions at all. This they could do through ever-<br />
increasing access to tools of everincreasing productivity, through acquiring advanced technology and by<br />
“jumping on the bandwagon” of the general development and economic growth that entrepreneurs create<br />
(<a href="http://www.libertarians.org">www.libertarians.org</a>). Left-liberals, environmentalists and socialists argue that the global Casino<br />
capitalism is directly complicit in creation of poverty where previously there was none as well as that<br />
the unregulated, “free” economy/markets is a myth. They stress that poverty is not created through<br />
production (or the lack of it) but because of the way profits are distributed. They argue that although<br />
global economic activity has grown at nearly 3% each year and doubled in size twice over the past<br />
50 years the number of people living in absolute poverty hadn’t been reduced at the same pace. In regard<br />
to the widening gap between rich and poor they argue that this indeed is a problem because in the future<br />
world where “two-thirds are poor and deprived of basics and promise, there will not be any peace and<br />
security” (Udayakumar, 1995:347). Contrary to the focus only on the competitive aspects of the human<br />
nature it is the cooperation that is seen as the only possible way out. The future is seen as a<br />
collaborative enterprise in which “well-being of the poor demands on the cooperation of the rich, and<br />
the safety of the rich relies on justice for the poor” (Udayakumar, 1995:347). Discussions on this level<br />
also allow for an analysis of the ways in which the discourses themselves not only mediate issues but<br />
also constitute them. Or how discourses we use to understand poverty directly influence strategies that<br />
are being put in place. For example, if poverty is understood predominantly in terms of economic<br />
indicators, only economic measures are going to be suggested. The strategies will therefore not include<br />
measures that work against oppressive social structures that are complicit in creation and sustenance<br />
of poverty, such as, patriarchy, for example.</p>
<p>Myth/metaphor<br />
At the myth/metaphor level deeper cultural stories are discussed. For example, in which ways Western<br />
advertisement or other propaganda makes indigenous populations believe that their own culture, dress,<br />
food, or language are inferior as well as how needs for products and lifestyles produced elsewhere<br />
are created (Bjonnes, 2001). Or, through local and global narratives, creating a situation in which<br />
some become easy prey for economic exploitation by others. At this level, we can see how deep beliefs,<br />
such as the belief that humans are inherently competitive and selfish, create a worldview that informs<br />
discussions that formulate policies that determine the actions (or the lack of it). Or how these actions<br />
and policies differ from those that are formed by the worldview that emphasizes the role of<br />
communication, cooperation, altruism, caring and nurturing as the main themes in human evolution.<br />
At this level we can also investigate deep cultural myths and their relevance for poverty creation and<br />
elevation. For example, in the Western history two basic narratives about the relationship between men<br />
and nature exist (Hollis, 1998). One is the myth of “The Land of Cockaygne”, the land of milk and honey,<br />
the “golden age” where the nature provides abundant resources and the magic bowl of porridge never<br />
empties. This is the land of unlimited consumption, limitless choices, and ever increasing growth and<br />
progress. The current version is consumer based global capitalism where new wealth and products are<br />
constantly being created. This is being done both through technological and economic innovations as well<br />
as through the colonisation of nature, lands, peoples, and space. Another myth is that of Arcadia, where<br />
nature is bountiful but humans do not indulge themselves beyond their needs (Hollis, 1998). It is the<br />
idea and the image about the harmony between humanity and nature rather then the image of domination and<br />
control of the nature by humanity so as to produce society and civilisation. Throughout European history,<br />
the Land of Cockaygne was especially popular during medieval ages and among lower classes which sought to<br />
relieve the drudgery of their everyday lives “through the pure satisfaction of sensual pleasures”<br />
(Hollis, 1998:14). Arcadia, on the other hand, originated in ancient Greece and was revived by Renaissance<br />
humanists that were “seeking to restrain the selfish tendencies of the rich and powerful classes”<br />
(Hollis, 1998:14). Its modern version are today’s ecological, New-Age and anti-globalisation movements.</p>
<p>Conclusion<br />
Poverty is not a necessary evil but the result of how we perceive the world and act within it. Poverty is<br />
continuing because the poor are truly silenced, that is, alternatives that incorporate local knowledge,<br />
experiences, desires and worldviews of the poor are invisible in the mainstream discourses. Writing and<br />
reading about poverty is a luxury in itself, a luxury that is beyond the means of the poor. In addition,<br />
the official discourse rarely allows for a discussion about the ways in which we, the affluent of the<br />
world, are complicit in creation and perpetuation of poverty. Or in which ways spiritual poverty -“a<br />
psychological state, generally among the affluent, expressed as a constant hunger for more material things;<br />
a sense of alienation, loneliness, and spiritual emptiness” (Bjoness, 2001) &#8211; is complicit in creating<br />
poverty.</p>
<p>But the main problem with mainstream discourse, as well as both the “left” and the “right” worldviews, is<br />
that poverty is described in terms that it becomes unthinkable to imagine poverty-free futures. Together<br />
with the focus on the overwhelming nature of current poverty this lack of imagination makes us powerless<br />
to act today, one step at the time. But for this to happen, we do not need to travel far and wide, nor do<br />
we need to carry with us the influence of political power and huge wealth. We can address destitution<br />
amongst ourselves, listen to those amongst us who are not allowed to speak, and help them carry their<br />
imagination into a poverty-free future. A future in which every person will have an easy access to at least<br />
one delicious yogurt a day.</p>
<p>Ivana Milojevic is currently completing her doctorate at the School of Education, The University of<br />
Queensland. Born and raised in Novi Sad, Yugoslavia, she now resides in Mooloolaba, Australia. Some of her<br />
other articles are available at <a href="http://www.metafuture.com">www.metafuture.com</a> You can email her at: <a href="mailto:ivanam@mailbox.uq.edu.au">ivanam@mailbox.uq.edu.au</a></p>
<p>71, UNICEF International Child Development Centre, Florence. Fricker, A. (2000).<br />
“Poverty Amidst Plenty: a role for Causal Layered Analysis”, paper presented at DEVNET Conference on<br />
Poverty, Prosperity, Progress, Wellington, New Zealand, November 2000.</p>
<p>Gately, D. (1995). “Comprehensive Projections Model Predicts Future Hunger Hot Spots”<br />
(reports on the study released by the International Food Policy Research Institute on malnutrition<br />
and lack of food security), <a href="http://www.ifpri.cgiar.org">www.ifpri.cgiar.org</a> Hanmer, L. (2000). “Will Growth Halve Global Poverty<br />
by 2015?”, <a href="http://www.odi.org.uk">www.odi.org.uk</a></p>
<p>Hollis, D. W. (1998). The ABC-CLIO World History Companion to Utopian Movements. ABC-CLIO,<br />
Santa Barbara, CA.</p>
<p>Inayatullah, S. (1998). “Causal Layered Analysis.” Futures 30(8): 815-829.<br />
Narayan, D. (2000). Can Anyone Hear Us?, Published by Oxford University Press for the World Bank,<br />
Oxford.</p>
<p>Udayakumar, S.P. (1995). “The futures of the poor.” Futures 27(3): 339-353.<br />
Walker, R. and Park, J.(1998). “Unpicking poverty”, in C. Oppenheim,<br />
An Inclusive Society: Strategies for Tackling Poverty, Institute for Public<br />
Policy, London.</p>
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