|
Back to Index
Even
simple tech helps reduce poverty
IRIN
News
January 13, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=76211
Asia's "green revolution"
is a dramatic example of how even modest technological advances
in developing countries have helped boost incomes and reduce the
number of people living in poverty, according to the World Bank's
Global Economic Prospects 2008 report, subtitled Technology Diffusion
in the Developing World.
The principal technologies
involved in the green revolution, which doubled cereal production
between 1970 and 1995, were pesticides, irrigation and synthetic
nitrogen fertiliser - which had long been available in industrial
countries - along with the development of high-yielding varieties
of maize, wheat and rice.
"Even though the
impact of the green revolution on the poor was initially a source
of controversy, by the late 1990s it was clear that poor people
had reaped substantial benefits from higher incomes, less expensive
food, and increased demand for their labour," said the report.
New technological developments
on a large range of fronts, from agriculture to electronics and
medicine have helped reduce the number of people living in poverty
from 29 percent in 1990 to 18 percent in 2004, but the gap between
rich and poor countries is still huge, and the capacity of the developing
countries remains weak.
"Technological progress
increased 40 to 60 percent faster in developing countries than in
rich countries between the early 1990s and early 2000s," said
Andrew Burns, Lead Economist and main author of the report. "Nevertheless,
developing countries have a long way to go, given that the level
of technology they use is only one-quarter of that employed in high-income
countries."
Innovations now spread
much more quickly between countries: in the early 1900s, new technology
took over 50 years to reach most countries; today it takes about
16 years.
Technology covers a broad
range of interpretations in the report, from using sawmill waste
to produce carbonised briquettes for household cooking, which can
increase access by the poor to fuel while reducing deforestation,
to rainwater collection systems, which can greatly improve access
to clean drinking water and reduce the incidence of diarrhoea, a
major cause of infant mortality.
It also notes the impact
of newer technologies, like mobile phones, which have allowed some
forward-thinking financial institutions in sub-Saharan Africa to
extend cheap financial services to the poor, for example, in South
Africa; the Equity Bank in Kenya has outfitted a series of vans
with laptops and telecommunications facilities to act as mobile
banking units, and has also designed flexible savings mechanisms
with emergency loan facilities.
Migrants
aid tech boom
"Rising trade and
investment contacts with high-income countries, often facilitated
by migrant groups, have been central to technological progress in
developing countries," said Uri Dadush, director of the World
Bank Development Prospects Group.
An émigré
from Bangladesh working in the financial sector in the United States
returned to help create the Grameen Phone network and make mobile
phones available to poor people in remote villages, the report noted.
"Through its successful
Village Phone Programme, the network has provided business opportunities
to some 260,000 village phone operators, mostly poor rural women.
Grameen Phone now has 15 million customers, more than 10 times the
maximum potential client base initially estimated by Bangladesh
Telecom."
Dadush added, "To
continue catching up, countries need to strengthen educational achievement,
governance, basic infrastructures, and links to migrant groups."
Three-quarters of low-income countries have 15 or fewer personal
computers per 1,000 people, and a quarter have fewer than five.
The authors urged governments
to strengthen domestic technology dissemination channels as a high
priority. These include transport infrastructure and the capacity
of applied research and development agencies to orient themselves
to local markets through improved outreach, testing and marketing.
Weak basic infrastructure
systems also limit the range of technologies that can be employed
in many countries. Policies should ensure that critical enabling
services such as roads and electricity are widely available, whether
delivered by the private or public sector. In sub-Saharan Africa,
just 8 percent of the rural population has access to electricity.
Ineffective or uneven
access to quality education also restricts ability to exploit technologies,
and the World Bank report urged countries to invest in education.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|