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Solutions to Help Millions of People Escape Poverty

Paul Polak's Out of Poverty Talk
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Paul Polak, founder of International Development Enterprises (IDE) and author of Out of Poverty, spoke at the University of Waterloo on Thursday night where he discussed solutions to help millions of people escape poverty.

Paul, along with Gerry Dyck, IDE's first staff member, told the story of the organization, that has grown over the course of 28 years, to impact the lives of over 17 million people who live on less than a dollar a day.  IDE was founded as a non profit organization, on the premise that the world's poor were customers and needed to be treated as such:

From a BusinessWeek article on Paul Polak and IDE:

Founded by Polak in 1981, IDE is based on the belief that there are simple solutions to the seemingly complex problem of poverty, and that those solutions are based on enabling the entrepreneurial spirit of the poor. The logic of IDE's approach is so simple it seems ridiculously obvious: Poor people are poor because they don't have enough money; 800 million of the world's poorest earn their living from one-acre farms; those people could earn more if they knew how to grow high-value crops; to do that, the poor need access to very cheap tools—seeds, fertilizer, irrigation—and to markets where they can sell their goods. 

Given this, IDE's focused mission has been to develop radically low-cost tools that will help subsistence farmers become small-scale commercial farmers. For instance, IDE's $25 treadle pump (a foot-powered suction pump) enables a family working two to six hours a day to irrigate a half-acre of vegetables during the dry season and earn an average of at least $100 a year after expenses. Other products include a $40 water storage tank and a drip irrigation system that costs roughly $200 an acre, four-fifths the cost of a conventional system. 

IDE therefore operates much like a business, a 'multinational for international development' as Paul put it on Thursday night. On top of IDE, Paul is keeping himself busy with two relatively new organizations: D-REV, a non-profit fostering a revolution in design for the other 90%, as well as Windhorse International, a for-profit company fostering a revolution in how big business designs, prices and markets its products.

What really speaks to the power of the untapped market place of 1.1 billion people who live on less than a dollar a day (with the next billion living on less than two dollars a day), are the metrics of success that IDE has been able to achieve since its founding in 1981:

Impacting the lives of 17 million people, or the equivalent of 3.5 million families thus far, IDE has been able to achieve:

Total of $78 million in grants and research funding received from foundations and government agencies

Total of $139 million invested in their products by people living on less than a dollar a day

Total of $288 million increase in Net Annual Income for Dollar-A-Day farmers

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One of the major takeaways that I took from the lecture has to do with the opportunities that exist in the global marketplace: how we know everything there is to know about targeting affluent customers in the developed world, and yet, know nothing of how to target the other 90% of customers in the rest of the world.  

Paul made it clear that there are certainly opportunities that exist out there, and you can find them if you go out there with an open mind and an interest in seeking out them out. As with any entrepreneurial venture, it takes courage and guts as well. More importantly, it takes knowing your customers well, and this takes a commitment to go where the action is, and to talk to people and listen to them, learning about their lives, seeing and observing.

If you are interested in learning more about market-based solutions to the challenges of global poverty, I would recommend reading Emerging Markets, Emerging Models published by the Monitor Group in March 2009.

 

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Moment of Profound Social Change

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Photo courtesy of Toshio on Flickr - The Dance

I had the sincere pleasure of spending the day with Ben Ramsden, UK-based social entrepreneur and CEO of Pants to Poverty, yesterday as he came to visit Waterloo to meet with SiG, as well as a number of other social innovators and entrepreneurs based in the Waterloo Region. Ben also spoke with a group of students at the University of Waterloo later in the evening, at an event co-hosted with Engineers Without Borders Waterloo, discussing Pants to Poverty, fairtrade and ethical consumer purchases, as well as the rising tide of social enterprise and social entrepreneurs around the world. 

As the day progressed, him and I had a number of interesting discussions on the topics of social innovation, young people being drawn to social change-type activities, as well as the realities faced by the poor in developing countries around the world. 

However, one comment that Ben made certainly stuck with me, helping to paint a vivid picture of the world we currently live in and the realities we face with increasingly complex social and environmental issues.

"We are currently in a moment of profound social change. 

Imagine the world being a dance floor and there you are dancing to a song. The song is coming to an end, and as it fades out, you can hear the very faint beat of the next song. You adjust your dancing slightly, in anticipation of the new song. And as you look around at the crowd, some people are still dancing to the same old beat completely oblivious, while others, are getting ready just as you are for the new song to kick in.

This is the moment we are living in today."

Right on.

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A video of the lecture will be posted on the SiG@Waterloo website within a couple of days.

Edit: October 20, 2009

The video of Ben's talk on fairtrade, Pants to Poverty and social entrepreneurship, is now online.

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Compexity in Social Problems: Poverty & Homelessness

Vision

When tackling the issues of poverty and homelessness, one begins to recognize immediately that the solutions to these problems are not always cut and dry.

An example of a simple approach would be to throw more funds/resources towards homeless shelters or similar-type organizations without really attempting to address the complexities surrounding the question:

"Why do we even have homeless shelters in the first place?"

This question extends far beyond the problem of a lack of housing for youth and people on the streets, and goes into questions regarding employment and job training programs, education, healthcare, family, mental health, drugs and crime to name a few.

Taken from this perspective and recognizing that a complex solution is certainly required to address a complex problem, the Hamilton Roundtable for Poverty Reduction aims to tackle the issue of poverty reduction by "making Hamilton the best place to raise a child."

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Think about it.

Instead of tackling the issues of poverty and homelessness in silos, individuals and organizations in Hamilton are working in a multi-collaborative approach (community, business, voluntary sector, government, education, health, etc.) in order to make Hamilton the best place in Canada to raise a child.

In other words, they are creating a movement towards reducing poverty within their city by working together and recognizing that each individual/organization has a role to play in creating change - they currently have more than 300 people on their leadership team and are working with more than 900 organizations and individuals on community solutions to reducing poverty.

More from the HRPR's report to the community, dated June 5, 2008:

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Action

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So what can you do within your community?

A great example of 'action' to raise awareness and empathy (in order to move towards reflective dialogue) that can easily be done at other schools and university campuses is Out in the Cold, an event held last Friday, November 21 2008, at the University of Waterloo campus for the third year in a row.

From the Waterloo Chronicle:

Now in its third year, the program hopes by simulating the conditions that the homeless face on the streets that more people will work to end poverty.

“The main part of the event is for people to stay outside overnight to experience what it might be like to be homeless during the cold winter months,” said the recent UW grad [Nick Petten]. “Of course, it doesn’t come close to it but people will understand how hard it is, and how cold it is.

“You can multiply that by 10 or 100 and that’s what it’s actually like. It’s a very sobering experience.” Petten said he started the Out in the Cold fundraiser to get students to understand issues surrounding homelessness and raise funds to tackle the growing problem. Students aren’t immune to homelessness either as there are various levels of it out there, including people who have to couch surf just to get by with rising tuition costs.

(News coverage on Out in the Cold from last year)

This year, funds raised went to ROOF which stands for Reaching our Outdoor Friends, a non-profit organization "committed to providing for the safety, support and overall well-being of homeless youth and youth-at-risk, age 12-25, in the Waterloo Region."

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Voice

Matt Levicki from Elite Life Media, produced a short video on Out in the Cold, highlighting the event as well as ROOF.

Video after the jump.

(Note: I have a cameo in the video, thanking the Federation of Students for their support)

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