Poor People or Poverty: Charity or Government
Nonprofits must find new ways to improve and defend government programs while popularizing a sense of public responsibility.
Nonprofits must find new ways to improve and defend government programs while popularizing a sense of public responsibility.
Why the U.S. and Europe have such different social spending policies.
Why a promising social franchise collapsed.
How one nonprofit uses an NFL team’s celebrity to improve poor children’s eyesight - and life chances.
Converting corporate waste into classroom tools.
By working closely with the clients and consumers, design thinking allows high-impact solutions to social problems to bubble up from below rather than being imposed from the top.
Fair Trade-certified coffee is growing in sales, but strict certification requirements are resulting in uneven economic advantages for coffee growers and lower quality coffee for consumers.
Despite the hoopla over microfinance, it doesn't cure poverty. But stable jobs do. If societies are serious about helping the poorest of the poor, they should stop investing in microfinance and start supporting large, labor-intensive industries.
Few microfinance institutions articulate what, exactly, their ultimate goals are and how to achieve them. If the goal of microfinance is to alleviate poverty, the authors say, then MFIs should focus on helping their clients build successful enterprises, rather than on making more and bigger loans.
Market solutions to poverty, which include services and products targeting consumers at the “bottom of the pyramid,” portray poor people as creative entrepreneurs and discerning consumers. Yet this rosy view of poverty-stricken people is not only wrong, but also harmful.