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Poverty not inevitable
By MIKE MOORE
BEING a congenital
do-gooder and know-all, I spend a third of my time on good causes, serving
on various commissions and on advisory groups on economic and development
issues.
Every now and again a serious report emerges that nails the issues and its
ideas are put centre stage, and success is when they become clichés.
A report generated by German Social Democratic leader Willy Brandt, invented
the words, “North/South”, and put the idea of 1% aid as an obligation of
rich countries to poor countries on every nation’s agenda.
Norwegian leader Bro Bundland’s report on the environment put the phrase,
“sustainable development”, into popular usage.
Now every conference and political manifesto feels obliged to put the word
“sustainable” before every resolution and policy statement.
Reports matter, they are easy to dismiss and mock because so often they
disappear and impress only the authors.
I am the least distinguished member of a high-level UN Commission on the
Legal Empowerment of the Poor, chaired by former US secretary of state,
Madeleine Albright, and Peruvian economist Hernando DeSoto, and includes
outstanding individuals such as former US treasury secretary Larry Summers,
and Supreme Court judge Justice Kennedy.
The commission’s report, due out later this year, will be profound and may
change the thinking on how we alleviate poverty.
Why is it that countries that should be wealthy, that have resources, have
continued to under-perform?
Poverty is a man-made thing so we can fix it.
What is the common denominator in success and failure?
Open economies always do better. Trade and competition drive up better
results and are powerful weapons to drive out corruption, as well as
allocate resources more efficiently.
Private ownership, spread through society, works.
The tragedy of large-scale privatisation in countries such as Russia was the
brutal insider wealth grabs.
A free market without solid, trusted institutions, property rights,
independent courts, a professional public service and democracy is not a
free market but a black market.
Firm, predictable civil institutions create a vital factor to promote
success – trust.
Trust in the courts, in contracts, is a serious issue.
Good governance is fundamental.
This commission is mainly focusing on the legal rights of the poor. Without
secure, property rights, poverty will endure, corruption remain endemic and
investment wither.
People without property rights cannot realise on their assets.
The informal capital in Peru is estimated to be worth US$74 billion, Egypt
US$248 billion, Tanzania US$29 billion, Albania US$16 billion, and Mexico
US$310 billion.
About 80% of all real estate in Latin America is held outside the law.
The poor are not without assets; in Egypt the assets of the poor are 50
times greater than all foreign investment ever recorded.
But in Egypt it can take 77 bureaucratic steps at 31 public and private
agencies to register a “lot” on state-owned desert land. This can take five
to 14 years.
It takes 45 steps to establish a barber shop. This explains why millions
build their homes and business illegally.
Bring people out of the shadows formalises what they already own and
safeguards them from predatory bureaucrats and local mafia.
It widens the tax base which in turn makes people want to hold their
politicians accountable for expenditures not favours.
People are driven underground because they do not trust their institutions,
which is why 40% of the economies of developing countries is in the informal
economy.
Why register a company if it costs so much?
This relegates local businesses to the back streets.
Secure property rights boosts investment.
Evidence abounds that when trust emerges, investment increases.
When China established de facto securitisation of property and liberalised
agriculture, productivity jumped some 42% between 1978 and 1984. Her more
open economy has lifted hundreds of millions out of extreme poverty.
Access to justice, getting your case heard is important. India has only 11
judges for every million people, and some civil cases can take 20 years to
reach court.
Around a million cases are pending in Kenya, the average judge in the
Philippines has a backlog of nearly 1,500 cases.
In New Delhi, there is an estimated 500,000 bicycle rickshaws driven but
only 99,000 licences allowed for legal drivers.
Same story for street hawkers who are kept in limbo and pay up to a third of
their incomes to stay in business.
Licensing and restrictions create opportunities for the bureaucrats to take
bribes and steal.
We can establish property rights which will encourage people into the formal
economy where they are protected by the courts, can borrow formally against
their assets and live better.
This is not rocket science, the pattern is clear.
Those countries that are doing better are those that are adopting these
principles of good governance.
*** We
invite anyone who has an issue to discuss, or an opinion to share, to
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mysay@thenational.com.pg.
We reserve the right to edit for brevity. ***
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