Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Lessons from Poverty, Inc.
Lessons from Poverty, Inc.
Jan 7, 2026 1:20 PM

“An underlying theme in basic economics says, ‘offering a product for free can destroy the local economy’” writes Luis Miranda. Miranda recently watched Poverty, Inc and since seeing the award winning Acton Institute documentary he has shared some of its lessons in an article at The Indian Economist. He begins by explaining how often times aid can harm its recipient more than help them.

A farmer in Rwanda goes out of business because he pete against an American church sending free eggs to feed starving Rwandans. A rice grower in Haiti stops growing rice because he is unable pete against very cheap ing from rich farmers in the US who receive huge subsidies. A local cobbler goes out of business in Africa when TOMS shoes land up in the village and are distributed for free.

In all these cases, the donors had honest intentions. The American church wanted to feed starving people in Rwanda. The US government wanted to feedthe disaster-strickenHaitians. Blake Mycoskie, the founder of TOMS, genuinely wanted to help Africans who did not have proper footwear.

Miranda continues to share key takeaways from Poverty, Inc. Next he shares how although aid can appear to be effective in the short term, it can create negative effects in the long term.

Another example from Poverty Inc is the interview of Jean-Ronel Noel, Co-Founder of Enersa in Haiti. Noel started a business in his garage to make small solar panels for street lights and be part of ‘something special’. They had created a Haiti-made product. Their business grew gradually and created jobs in a poor neighbourhood; for people who would otherwise be gang members. After the 2010 earthquake, US NGOs raised money to give away solar panels. And panystruggled to stay afloat.

Why would someone buy something if it wasavailable for free? The solution for a more long-term change would be to empower the people whose lives have been devastated. Of course, short-term humanitarian aid is necessary, but that shouldstop as soon as possible to help restart the local economy. Removal of poverty calls for helping local entrepreneurs rebuild their businesses.

Miranda concludes his article by discussing some of the ways that India can improve on the ways it has created dependency.

What does this mean for India? Instead of doling out freebies,we should beencouraging local entrepreneurs and creating institutions that support economic freedom. Micro Finance Institutions(MFIs) have done a lot to help local entrepreneurs, but a better effortcould take them to a larger scale. Instead of dumping rice or eggs, donors should help support domestic producers of rice and eggs. Through schemes like MNREGA, we are creating a new generation of beggars who lose their initiative and depend on the government. We should, instead, be spending that money to help entrepreneursdevelop self-reliance and create jobs that are sustainable.

It finally boils down to the fact that market-based solutions which encourage entrepreneurs to grow are the best ways to create prosperity. No country became a first world country because of aid.

You can read Miranda’s full article at The Indian Economist here.

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
Book Giveaway: Win All 4 Primers on Faith, Work, and Economics!
ThroughChristian’s Library Press, the Acton Institute has publishedfour tradition-specific primers on faith, work, and economics, including Baptist, Wesleyan,Pentecostal,andReformed perspectives. Each offers a distinct contribution to the subject, and when taken together provides a rich and coherent framework forChristian stewardship. The books are part of Acton’s growingOikonomia Series. This week, Acton and CLP will be giving away plete sets of the series (that’s 4 books totalfor each winner!), including Chad Brand’s Flourishing Faith,David Wright’s How God Makes the World a Better...
Book Review: ‘Created for Greatness: The Power of Magnanimity’ by Alexandre Havard
By the end of January, most of us have given up on our New Year’s resolutions. These are goals we enthusiastically set during the silent nights of self-reflection that Christmas affords us. We contemplate our Savior’s magnificent and humble life in contrast with our own feeble and self-seeking, sinful existence. We intensely desire personal renewal to e holier and nobler persons; yet, alas, we lack the will to actualize our true human potential. Many blame the failure mit on laziness...
Mike Rowe on the minimum wage: There’s no such thing as a ‘bad job’
In the latest additiontoMike Rowe’s growing catalogof pointed Facebook responses, the former Dirty Jobs host tackles a question on the minimum wage, answering a man named “Darrell Paul,” who asks: The federal minimum wage is $7.25 and hour. A lot of people think it should be raised to $10.10. Seattle now pays $15 an hour, and the The Freedom Socialist Party is demanding a $20 living wage for every working person. What do you think about the minimum wage? How...
Audio: Jordan Ballor on Honesty in Science
On February 7th, Christopher Booker of Britain’s The Telegraphcaused a stir with his column entitled “The fiddling with temperature data is the biggest science scandal ever.” Booker remarked: When future generations look back on the global-warming scare of the past 30 years, nothing will shock them more than the extent to which the official temperature records – on which the entire panic ultimately rested – were systematically “adjusted” to show the Earth as having warmed much more than the actual...
North Korea: We Don’t Need ‘Flashy Lights’
A NASA image released in February 2014 shows a night view of the Korean Peninsula. Apart from a spot of light in Pyongyang, North Korea is mostly cloaked in darkness, with China (top left) and South Korea (bottom right) on either side. -Reuters North Korea finally decided ment on the most famous image of the nation. Almost exactly one year ago, NASA released several photos of the earth at night, showing many brightly lit nations and a shockingly dark North...
A Price is Signal Wrapped in an Incentive to be Coordinated by God
When Christians think of the majesty of God’s handiwork we tend to think of the visible aspects of nature. We agree with King David that, “The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands” (Psalm 19:1). But there are intricate and beautiful aspects of God’s creative geniusthat we don’t often think about—or don’t think about as being created by God. Take, for instance, the price system. As economist Alex Tabarrok says in the video...
What Happened to the Bill of Rights?
When the Founding Fathers were drafting the U.S. Constitution, they didn’t initially consider adding a Bill of Rights to protect citizens because it was deemed unnecessary. It was only afterthe Constitution’s supporters realized such a bill was essential to getting approved by the states that they proposed enumerating such rights in twelve amendments. (Ten amendments were ratified; two others, dealing with the number of representatives and with pensation of senators and representatives, were not.) The Bill of Rights was included...
Now Available: ‘A Treatise on Money’ by Luis de Molina
CLP Academic has now releasedA Treatise on Money, a newly translated selection from Luis de Molina’s larger work,On Justice and Right (De iustitia et iure). The release is part of the growing series from Acton:Sources in Early Modern Economics, Ethics, and Law. Molina (1535–1600) was one of the most eminent theologians of the Jesuit order in the sixteenth century. Known widely for developing a theory of human freedom of action (and in turn, a new religious doctrine now known as...
Radio Free Acton: Elise Graveline Hilton on Human Trafficking
This week on Radio Free Acton, I spoke with my colleague Elise Graveline Hilton about her new monographA Vulnerable World: The High Price of Human Trafficking. Human trafficking is not a pleasant subject to discuss; it can be hard to believethat in our modern world, people are still enslaved and exploited sexually or for their labor, treated as nothing more modities to be used in the pursuit of illegal profit. And yet the practice is widespread and growing, even in...
How Christianity Gave Us the Modern World
“Christianity undergirded the development of Western liberalism (in the old, good sense of the word),” says Rich Lowry. In fact, without Christianity there would probably not be anything like what we conceive as true liberty: The indispensable role of Christianity in the creation of individual rights and ultimately of secularism itself is the subject of the revelatory new intellectual historyInventing the Individual by Larry Siedentop. Here’s hoping that President Obama gives it a quick skim before he next takes the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved