How to end poverty

How to end poverty

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In a recent National Post column, Andrew Coyne reported on a newly released statistic: Canada’s poverty rate had almost halved in 15 years since 1996.  He suggested that such news should be a cause for celebration. However, this drop in poverty is not good enough for the anti-poverty NGOs. They demand commitment and concrete action by the federal government to end poverty, now, for the four million Canadians who these NGOs claim are afflicted by it.

Without getting into defining the poverty line (there seems to be a whole industry focused on it), let’s ask: how can we end poverty? Not just in Canada, a relatively wealthy industrialized country, but anywhere in the world?

Recognizing that there is no magic wand to wipe out poverty overnight, I argue that it is possible to end poverty and increase prosperity for everyone. It will indeed require commitment by the government—albeit undoubtedly a very different kind from what the anti-poverty activists envision.

To end poverty, we must first ask: what does creating wealth require? Wealth does not grow on trees, nor can governments create it by printing money.

The only way to create wealth—profit—is to produce and trade of goods and services that customers are willing to pay for more than it costs to produce them. In other words, business firms that can provide goods and services that are more valuable to their customers than the price they pay, create wealth. Apple, Samsung, Wal-Mart, Ryanair, Hyundai, as well as millions of less well-known companies are examples.

To end poverty, we must first ask: what does creating wealth require?

The single most important requirement of wealth creation is freedom.

To maximize wealth creation, companies need free markets without government interference. When government imposes a multitude of regulations on businesses—restricting who they can hire, how they can finance themselves, and what, where and when to sell their products and services—and interferes in the economy in other ways, wealth creation is curtailed and poverty perpetuated.

When businesses are free to produce, trade and compete, they develop innovative new products, services and processes (think smart phones, tablets, 3-D printers, life-saving medicines, time-saving software apps, streamlined supply chains, value co-creation with suppliers and customers). Producing such innovations creates wealth for the owners of businesses.

The wealth gets invested, either in growing the business or other businesses, thus creating opportunities for others: jobs, better and cheaper products, start-up capital, etc. Everybody is better off, as these opportunities multiply and the standard of living increases—and poverty decreases. Witness the increasing economic prosperity in the relative free economies in Asia today.

Making wealth creation and poverty reduction possible requires a specific commitment from governments: they must grant individuals and markets freedom. In Canada, like in most welfare states today, this requires concrete action: the dismantling of the elaborate system of business regulations, subsidies, and cronyism.

This is a significant task and has not been pursued by the current government, despite of original election promises. However, it is possible (many of the Nordic countries and New Zealand are positive examples of the right direction), and necessary—if ending poverty is the goal.

In a fully free market, under capitalism, governments would retain one crucial role: the protection of individual rights against the initiation of physical force and fraud. This would allow peaceful, just functioning of markets.

The anti-poverty crusaders would not be satisfied with such a free-market solution to ending poverty. They do not just want to end poverty; they demand income equality. Their preferred solution is to “redistribute” income (by force, through progressive income taxes) from those who create wealth to those who don’t. However, such a method will not end poverty. Why?

People have different levels of ability, intelligence, and most importantly, motivation. They will make different choices. Even if all the currently existing wealth was divided evenly among the people of the world today, it would not remain even for long; some people would soon be wealthier and some poorer.

If we want to end poverty, we must not punish the producers—the wealth creators—through various “redistribution” schemes. Instead, we must encourage them by making them free to produce and trade. A system of freedom, capitalism, will end poverty and benefit everyone, even the least productive.

 Originally posted 1 August 2013

Photo credit: Max Pixel

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2 Responses

  1. Indeed.

    I caution about using ‘Asia’ as an example, since it has oppressive regimes like Communist China which gives the appearance of economic freedom but is achieved by exploiting other people.

    Japan after WW II and South Korea more recently (helped by Japan) are good examples, countries in the area of Thailand may be, none as free as here but are much better than many.

    The documentary Globalization is Good reports on the benefits from a Nike factory, highlighting a woman who left Nike to raise a family then started a business because she could see that Nike workers would want services and had money to pay for them. The documentary also explains how difficult it is to run a business in some parts of Africa, as the book The Third Path did for parts of South America. Both also illustrating how industrious people are, achieving something despite government interference. In a recent book Hernando de Soto explains how property rights are key to poor people being able to advance their lives.

  2. Problem is the widespread belief in Karl Marx’ theories, which deny the human mind. ‘Income inequality’ is based on notions of fixed-pie economics and drive-to-the-bottom ethics. For some psychological reason many people want to believe negativity instead of looking around at what humans achieve. They deny that experiments were done and the results clearly support freedom: https://townhall.com/columnists/davidlegates/2016/09/21/the-experiment–capitalism-versus-socialism-n2221242. Similarly, today there is a stark difference between South and North Korea. Many of the negatives support tyrannical regimes, as noted in http://www.moralindividualism.com/newleft.htm.

    There is a category of ‘poverty’ that results from psychology in a different sense – those who are addicted to intoxicants, as they cannot think well nor earn income so are very poor, often homeless. As Michael Hurd explains at http://www.drhurd.com, they lack sound values for their own life and don’t have good thinking skills. Many of the negative thinkers clamour for free housing for the homeless but obstruct proper running of that housing – they facilitate exploiters, and they encourage consumption.

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Jaana Woiceshyn teaches business ethics and competitive strategy at the Haskayne School of Business, University of Calgary, Canada.

She has lectured and conducted seminars on business ethics to undergraduate, MBA and Executive MBA students, and to various corporate audiences for over 20 years both in Canada and abroad. Before earning her Ph.D. from the Wharton School of Business, University of Pennsylvania, she helped turn around a small business in Finland and worked for a consulting firm in Canada.

Jaana’s research on technological change and innovation, value creation by business, executive decision-making, and business ethics has been published in various academic and professional journals and books. “How to Be Profitable and Moral” is her first solo-authored book.

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