Development has alleviated poverty in many countries during the
50 years since the end of War World II, yet half of mankind remains
poor; a fifth are very poor. Poverty is not a state of nature, but,
as Stepanek shows, can be ascribed to manmade institutions that
reflect self-serving and self-indulgent ideologies, poorly tested
theories and policies, weak governments, and poverty alleviation
programs that are questionably designed and poorly administered.
Dr. Stepanek asserts that poverty cannot be alleviated without
challenging all of its root causes, and he shows that well-designed
development strategies and foreign assistance programs can create
growth and reduce poverty. Western governments, international
banks, and donor agencies must reexamine how they design and
administer foreign aid if they are to be successful. Stepanek
explains foreign aid in general and in specific, in history and
theory, and in its present and practical forms.
General
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