Thursday, 14 February 2008

end of poverty jeffrey sachs



The End of Poverty (Jeffrey Sachs)

I cannot encourage you enough to read The End of Poverty. Just do it.

Promise yourself that you'll find a way.

The first few chapters relate Sachs's own evolution as a development

economist and advocate--a process that leads him from Harvard

University to countries around the world and eventually to Columbia

University where he helped found The Earth Institute. We follow him

along the journey of gaining insights into the roles that geography,

population growth, and disease play in the poverty trap.

The subsequent chapters describe the needs of the poor, the

misconceptions most of us have regarding what is being done and what

the real problems are, and finally the way forward.

Sachs quantifies, maps, deconstructs, and personalizes the problems.

Thankfully, he does not end there. He also quantifies the needed

response, demonstrates the possibilities we have over the next couple

of decades, and offers policy advice on increasing capacity and

accountability.

For less technical, but more spiritual analyses of the same topics,

see Walking with the Poor (Bryant Myers), Red Letters (Tom Davis) and

Rich Christians in an Age of Hunger (Ron Sider).

Posted by Jeff at 10:33 AM


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