000 01654nam a2200193Ia 4500
999 _c35359
_d35359
005 20220703212645.0
008 200202s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a887301843
082 _a338.9 STE
100 _aSteidlmeier, Paul.
245 0 _aParadox of poverty
260 _aCambridge
260 _bBallinger
260 _c1987
300 _a318 p.
520 _aFor years the international community has been pushing uphill in the battle against poverty and hunger only to find, as a modern-day Sisyphus, that solutions slip away and that the problem seems to get worse with each succeeding development decade. It is commonplace that growing poverty has gone hand-in-hand with economic growth. It is also paradoxical. The persistence of pov erty amid growth has raised a number of questions about both the quality of social science analysis and the role of markets and public policy processes. Development policy today is shot through with many dilemmas of analysis (what, after all, is the problem?) and policy (what can and should be done and by whom?). The concrete case of hunger clearly symbolizes the quandry. There are few symbols so transcultural and multidimensional as that of sharing a meal, an act of human well-being, fulfillment, and solidar ity. The fact that so many in the world today have little or nothing to eat, while others are exceedingly well off, is a profound indict ment of the world economic system. It is morally outrageous that millions starve while simultaneously many food markets are glutted with surplusses. It is also economically inefficient.
650 _aEconomic development
942 _cB
_2ddc