Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Development malpractice: When failure in ‘doing good’ is worse than ‘doing nothing’
Development malpractice: When failure in ‘doing good’ is worse than ‘doing nothing’
Apr 27, 2025 11:40 AM

What happens when governments, NGOs, charities, and churches all converge in scurried attempts to alleviate global poverty, whether through wealth transfers or other top-down, systematic solutions?

As films like PovertyCure and Poverty, Inc. aptly demonstrate, the results have been dismal, ranging from minimal, short-term successes to widespread, counterproductive disruption. Surely we can do better, avoiding grand, outside solutions, and ing alongside the poor as partners.

Yet even amid the menu of smaller and more direct or localized “bottom-up” solutions, there is still plenty of room for error. Participants in failed projects will typically respond that “at least we’re doing something.”

But what if failure at “doing good” is actually worse than doing nothing?

In a recent article for the Stanford Social Innovation Review, Kevin Starr prompts us to ask this very question, arguing that when es to economic development and global charity, one significant failure is often enough to doom munity for the foreseeable future. “Once a well is drilled, a clinic built, or a program delivered, an NGO or government official checks a box, and future resources go somewhere else,” he says.”

Starr recounts a recent trip to Ghana, where he observed the work of Saha Global, a non-profit organization that “trains women in munities to solve their village’s need for clean water by providing business opportunities.” Using local entrepreneurs, Saha sets up individual chlorinating businesses with the goal of making clean water affordable. According to Starr, the Saha model is a “great fix,” in large part due to their simple process and technology, their use of the profit motive/mechanism, and the “rigorous, ongoing monitoring” es along with it.

But while Saha has had having great success in certain areas, other areas have been flooded by a range peting solutions. In a village called Kulaa, one Saha entrepreneur was off to a wonderful start until the government began offering ceramic filters for free. “By about six months in, most of the filters had either broken or clogged,” Starr explains. “The filters could be cleaned, but nobody knew how, and of course there was no way to replace ones that broke.”

Then came an American church group, which “blew into town with a truckload of LifeStraw Family gravity filters,” handing out yet another method of (free) filtration, but with no training or ongoing monitoring to ensure the solution was sustainable for the future. Soon enough, those filters faded, too, and even the few that continue to be used are faulty or misapplied, leading to “filtered” water that still tests positive for E. coli and coliforms.

Then came an NGO, with yet another “solution.” Alas, what happened next is rather predictable, involving more free handouts, more faulty products, and the same deficit of hands-on training and monitoring, leading to more contaminated water and more economic disruption for the Saha entrepreneur with a solution that actually worked.

“In sum, this village has seen four water interventions,” Starr writes, in summary. “The last three didn’t work, and each of them managed to screw the one that would have.”

As a takeaway, Starr points us to three lessons learned, which he hopes will serve as “basic principles of development” going forward:

1. There is a huge opportunity cost to failure.When you do something stupid, you either a) wreck something that is working or could have worked, or b) or blow the people’s one chance to get anything ever. Once a well is drilled, a clinic built, or a program delivered, an NGO or government official checks a box, and future resources go somewhere else. Failure is worse than nothing.

2. Most “training” for end users is useless.Some guy came by my house the other day to teach me how to keep the wifi up and running. The next day, I screwed it up. So it is for things like water filters. If a product or technology intended for consumers requires “training,” it’s probably going to fail.

3. It’s all about follow-up.If you can’t provide repair and replacement, if you can’t monitor performance over time, don’t do it. If you can’t make a strong case that, say, two years from now, things will still be working—and in a way that inspires confidence that it will work over the long haul—don’t do it. Stuff breaks in ways you can’t even imagine, people use things pletely unpredictable ways, and unintended consequences rule supreme. The devastation of lake ecosystems in Africa from fishers repurposing fine-mesh mosquito nets is a fine example of the kind of debacle that could be avoided with some decent monitoring over time.

For Starr, this amounts severe “development malpractice,” and it’s the type of thing that happens all over the world in varying degrees. In Ghana as in elsewhere, few are taking responsibility for these failures. Indeed, few are even pausing to consider whether success ever occurred in the first place.

Until we recognize the ripple effects of these sorts of interventions, the path of upward economic development will continue to be defined by frustration, waste, and, yes, actual death and destruction.

Whether the “solution” ing from a government, church, or charity, the same risks apply, and the principles for success remain the same. If a charity-driven solution hopes to succeed, it will require attentive, long-term investment and concern — what Christians might monly refer to as “discipleship.”

We won’t be always able to invest our time, resources, and pletely in this or that country or toward this or that “optimal” solution. But we can start by asking those basic questions about the types of relationships we’re hoping to cultivate and the ripple effects that are likely to occur.

What are the actual fruits or failures of our investments, and who is ultimately responsible? What is the source of our action — economic, social, spiritual, or otherwise — and are we really taking that seriously, as well?

Photo: “Elmina harbor,” Francisco Anzola (CC BY 2.0)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
2019 Calihan Lecture Video: Religion, Society, and the Market
Last month, Prof. Giuseppe Franco received the 2019 Novak Award at the University of San Diego where he delivered the 19th Annual Calihan Lecture on “Religion, Society, and the Market: The Legacy of Wilhelm Röpke.” Watch the video now: TheNovak Awardrecognizes scholars early in their academic career who demonstrate outstanding intellectual merit in advancing the understanding of theology’s connection to human dignity, the importance of the rule of law, limited government, religious liberty, and freedom in economic life. Each Award...
Acton Line podcast: How property rights save the planet
Panic surrounding climate change and the environment is on the rise and doomsday predictions abound. Most headlines about the environment only tell one story: that the environment is on the decline and that this decline is a result of economic development. In March, The Guardian declared that “ending climate change requires the end of capitalism.” But in the midst of calls for the Green New Deal and calls to overhaul our economic system, there’s another story unfolding. Holly Fretwell, Director...
Stephanie Slade on markets, planning, and Catholic social teaching
Stephanie Slade writes in next month’s edition of Reason Magazine about, ‘Regulation and ‘the Right Ordering of Economic Life”according to Catholic social teaching: The Church’s surprising lesson for partisans of big government is that the best tools for correctly ordering economic life are found in the choices of individual market actors. Because those choices are based not only on their preferences but also on their convictions, people’s moral sensibilities—the extent to which they believe they have ethical obligations to each...
Nibbling at Dylan Pahman’s Chick-fil-A argument
As though guided by an invisible hand Dylan Pahman and I – independently and without coordination – each posted an essay about Chick-fil-A’s philanthropic giving within minutes of one another, each with slightly different emphases. Readers may see this as a conflict; however, probing the space between these analyses helps make sense of customer backlash, illustrates why “woke capitalism” of any variety is a miasma, and underlines that charitable decisions are best made by private individuals. Dylan quotes Milton Friedman’s...
The rise of ‘woke’ culture: Lessons on the power of institutions
We continue to see the ill effects of “cancel culture” and safetyism, whether through student-led riots and intimidation efforts at colleges and universities, the garden-variety intolerances of “woke capitalism,” or the self-destructive interventionism of “bulldozer parenting.” As far as how it’s e to be, we have explanations aplenty, from declines in religious life to the fraying of the social fabric to rises in political fragmentation and polarization. In an essay at Heterodox Academy, Musa Al-Gharbi points to yet another: a...
The unfortunate lesson from Chick-fil-A’s surrender
Why do I care about Chick-fil-A’s decision to drop Salvation Army and Fellowship of Christian Athletes as they seek to properly “align their values” and make sure people understand “who they are”? prehend why Chick-fil-A wants to escape the censure of progressive elites. pany is a petitor. In terms of profit per square foot, they are the reigning champion in American fast food. When you have that strength and speed, you want to use it. pany has consistently been known...
Hong Kong demands freedom in landslide election
The citizens of Hong Kong expanded their democratic revolution to the ballot box on Sunday, as pro-democracy parties won control of virtually every local government from pro-Beijing functionaries. Yesterday’s district council elections – the largest in history, with an estimated 71 percent of all registered voters (or 2.94 million of 4.13 million) participating – proved voters’ overwhelming support for the traditional rights enjoyed by the former British protectorate. The South China Morning Post described the landslide election as a “tsunami...
The perfect lap
In this week’s Acton Commentary, I take a look at Ford v Ferrari, the new feature film that captures the story (it’s a true thrill ride) animating the 1966 24 Hours of Le Mans. This is all about the pursuit of excellence, even perfection, by two industrial organizations whose cultures couldn’t be more different, and drivers constantly striving for the “perfect lap” as pete for the checkered flag. Against Ford’s mass scale industrialization and Organization Man culture, Ferrari was about...
Fact check: 5 facts about the fifth Democratic debate of 2019
The Democratic Party narrowed the number of presidential hopefuls to 10 at the fifth debate, held Wednesday in Atlanta. Several of their statements deserve greater scrutiny. 1. Elizabeth Warren: Freeloading billionaires? The 99 percent in America are on track to pay about 7.2 percent of their total wealth in taxes. The top one-tenth of one percent that I want to say, “Pay two cents more,” they’ll pay 3.2 percent in America. I’m tired of freeloading billionaires. I think it’s time...
The social responsibility of Chick-fil-A is to make delicious sandwiches
Chicken giant or giant chicken? That is the question conservative mentators are asking this week as news broke that restaurant chain Chick-fil-A, known for being closed on Sunday due to its owners’ Christian values, announced that it will no longer support the Salvation Army and the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. Both organizations — the former of which, notably, is not simply a charity but a Christian denomination — have been labelled anti-LGBT by activists due to their hiring practices. Chick-fil-A...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved