Quantcast

America as two countries… literally?

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,030
7,549
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/04/business/economy/productivity-inequality-wages.html?action=click&module=Top Stories&pgtype=Homepage

“Until a few years ago, I didn’t think this was a very complicated subject; The Luddites were wrong and the believers in technology and technological progress were right,” Lawrence Summers, a former Treasury secretary and presidential economic adviser, said in a lecture at the National Bureau of Economic Research five years ago. “I’m not so completely certain now.”
 

Pesqueeb

bicycle in airplane hangar
Feb 2, 2007
40,138
16,537
Riding the baggage carousel.

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,030
7,549

How would you feel if you learned a drug had been found that vastly improves the health and well-being of some of the poorest people in the world? This new treatment, Pecunilam, has startled researchers for its efficacy in treating a whole host of conditions. Today, it is easily the most heavily researched development intervention in the world.

Clinical trials show it increases children’s height-for-age and weight-for-height ratios in South Africa. Just one dose leads to large reductions of HIV infection rates and improves the psychological well-being of children in Malawi. It has even been found to substantially increase schooling and reduce child labor.

A single dose works as a powerful poverty reduction tool, too. In one study in Sri Lanka, men’s annual income had increased substantially five years after treatment. A separate study in Uganda found that four years after receiving a dose, young people earned 41 percent more than those who had not been treated, dipping back down only nine years out.

Here's the thing: Pecunilam is no drug. It’s cash.

Does that change how you feel about it? Should it?

The point of this thought experiment is simple: If tomorrow a drug was developed that transformed the lives of the world’s extreme poor as efficiently as direct cash transfers, it would be considered a revolution in the world of aid. Well, guess what: It already exists.

Study after study shows cash improves the lives of the poorest with next to no negative side effects. A recent review of 19 separate studies shows that, despite early fears, cash transfers very seldom increase spending on temptation goods like alcohol or gambling. Nor do they induce people to work fewer hours.

The mechanisms through which cash achieves these results aren’t clear, but one study in Kenya finds important reductions in the stress hormone cortisol in some groups who receive cash transfers. These are accompanied by large improvements in self-reported psychological well-being, with larger transfers associated with bigger effects. More research is needed, but we can hardly be surprised to suspect there’s a link between sudden cash infusions and newfound peace of mind.

Direct cash aid is also amazingly cost-efficient. A 2016 study by Innovations for Poverty Action looked at 48 separate anti-poverty programs and found that one-time cash transfers have the highest cost-benefit ratio compared to a range of other anti-poverty measures, from popular give-a-farmer-a-cow type programs to complex, integrated programs that seek to address the whole range of community ailments at once.

Yet, despite this mountain of evidence, only about 10 percent of international humanitarian aid budgets worldwide go to direct cash transfers to the poor. The failure to roll out this simple, proven strategy on a wider basis is one of the great underreported scandals of the development world.

So why aren’t cash transfers being used more widely?

Perversely, their own cost effectiveness might be part of the reason. As many as 94 cents of every donor dollar spent on direct transfers to the extreme poor reach them directly, compared to ratios for traditional programs that are often impossible to calculate and might range as low as 60 cents on the dollar. The remainder, of course, funds a sprawling international aid bureaucracy — which, like all bureaucracies — feels threatened by newer, cheaper, more effective ways of delivering its mandate.

But think of it this way. If you had an emergency in your own life, would you want a bureaucrat deciding you’ll get $100 worth of canned goods, or would you rather take a $100 bill? You don’t need a pile of social scientific studies: You know cash is better because cash is what you’d choose for yourself.

Why? Because cash is power. Cash puts you in charge and lets you decide what your priorities are. If your goal is to empower the extreme poor, nothing does that like cash in their pockets.

Direct cash transfers disintermediate aid, cutting out the development middle man and shifting power from aid bureaucrats to the actual people in need. While some charities and aid agencies — such as the U.K.’s Department for International Development and CARE International — have woken up to the potency of cash transfers, too many lag behind.

Giving cash directly to the world’s poorest people is one of those radical ideas that, on second thought, is so obvious it never ought to have seemed radical in the first place. For the last decade, one small aid organization — GiveDirectly — has worked out all the kinks, documented results and proved the idea can work at scale. That is why, full disclosure, I donate to it each month.

Shouldn’t you?
 

Toshi

Harbinger of Doom
Oct 23, 2001
38,030
7,549

Some quotes for the non-subscribers:

By almost any measure, U.S. citizens no longer share a common lived experience. Men age 25 to 54 in Arlington, Va., have a 5 percent chance of being without work. Men in Flint, Mich., have more than 35 percent chance of that. Life expectancies across states differ by more than five years — more than the impact of doubling all cancer rates. Intergenerational mobility differs by a factor of more than two across regions of the country. Areas with high rates of joblessness also have high rates of depression and pessimism about the future, and low rates of confidence in U.S. institutions.
Studies done toward the end of the 20th century often found that city and state unemployment rates were not correlated from one decade to the next. No longer. Recent work suggests that in regions where work was in short supply in 1980, joblessness may have gotten even worse over the subsequent generation. The same is true of all the various indices of social distress.
The areas where distress is greatest and opportunity is least provide disproportionate support for candidates advocating populist nationalist policies that seek to close off the rest of the world, to demonize immigrants and to resist the inclusion of minority groups.
 

SkaredShtles

Michael Bolton
Sep 21, 2003
65,376
12,532
In a van.... down by the river
"Laura Hart says that if she had gotten a five-year loan instead of a seven-year loan, she wouldn't have let the dealer talk her into buying an extended warranty, and maybe she would have bought a less expensive car."

I hate to say it... but Laura, ya done fucked up. :disgust1:

Aw, man... and it just gets worse.

"She decided on a new Jeep"

A fucking 7 year loan on a JEEP?? She's gonna be underwater for at least... well all those 7 years. :D