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Turning the development paradigm upside down

Prostitution and human trafficking thrives in Indonesia, principally because of poverty. Government estimates in 2004 put the number of children trafficked for prostitution at 21,000 for Java and 70,000 for the whole of Indonesia. A. Mirza/ILO

Wahenga.net (concerned with food security, social protection and hunger vulnerability in southern Africa) is advocating a major change in how we view the poor.

“The orthodox development paradigm of the past three decades has manifestly failed… what is needed now is to turn the traditional development paradigm on its head. Rather than seeing the residual poor as the problem to be overcome, development should see the poor as the solution, and as the best focus for development funding,” it says.

“Empowering the poor, enabling them to invest and allowing them the confidence to take risks will itself foster economic growth. This in turn will reduce poverty and the long-term cost of providing social protection; it will lessen the need for emergency assistance and will free up donor resources to contribute to the reduction of chronic poverty rather than to unproductive disaster response.”

To read the article - entitled Shifting the Development Paradigm: The Poor are the Solution, not the Problem - go to Wahenga.net.

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This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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