Poverty
has a variety of causes
War and armed conflict has numerous effects from displacing populations
to destroying crops and removing people from their land. There
are millions of internal and international refugees throughout
Africa due to armed conflicts. These people remain at the fringes
of society and most often live in abject poverty.
Some refugees have been living
in refugee camps for decades with no change in sight. With some
conflicts continuing for 20 or 30 years; it makes it very difficult
for those surviving such conditions to make long-term plans which
could help them find their way out of poverty.
Another major cause of poverty
in Africa is land rights and ownership problems. Due to the history
of one-crop production and the legacies it has left on the continent,
many of the crops grown are not those which are able to feed a
nation. They are instead crops which are intended for a “dessert
economy” meaning that they are non-essential crops which
are destined for consumption for pleasure in the West, (tobacco,
sugar, coffee, tea, etc).
The major issue is not only that
the countries cannot feed their own populations with what they
are producing but that in the trade cycle African nations have little
or no power. Since there are many countries selling, but only
a few buying, the buyers can strictly control the prices. Since
the poor countries have to sell to repay loans, etc they are trapped
into going along even when they are convinced that the prices
are not fair.
With large industrial farming taking
the most fertile land from those who could otherwise be using
the land for subsistence farming; it prevents the average citizen
from meeting his families needs during hard times such as unemployment.
Considering some African nations unemployment rates are over 70%,
it isn’t very complicated to understand how so many people
live on less than $1 per day!
As with many causes of poverty,
the lack of education goes in both directions: without education,
Africans are more likely to be poor and due to poverty, they are
unable to have equal access to education.
In many African countries children
are still required to pay to rent their own benches and desks
because the schools are so poor. That does not take into account
the cost of the most basic school supplies such as paper, pencils,
books chalk and small chalkboards. So it is easy to understand
why so many families are forced to choose which child or children
will have access to education in their family; while the others
remain at home to help either in the house or in the fields.
Additionally, children are often kept home so that they can care
for the sick members of their family. Many preventable diseases
are ravaging Africa due to the lack of investment in vaccines
which are able to prevent the diseases, often at just pennies
per person!
There is a symbiotic relationship between AIDS and poverty. Poverty
often increases the chances of being exposed to the AIDS virus
(caring for the ill with no sanitation, no education, no medication,
etc). Thus, one can say that being poor can increase the chance
of getting AIDS.
For many families, poverty is caused
or exacerbated by the loss of income from those who die of AIDS.
Many families are not just dealing with the extra costs and hardships
that having a family member with AIDS brings; but are forced to
deal with the loss of an income when the family member becomes
too ill to work or loses his/her job due to people finding out
that they are living with the disease. In many cases, the infected person
is the sole breadwinner, so the family is left without any income.
Many AIDS orphans are left to care
for themselves because their family members don’t understand
the disease and think that bringing in and caring for the orphaned
children will bring a curse upon them. In other cases, it is the
simple fear that they will be exposing themselves and those living
in their household to the disease. For others the matter is as
simple as not having the resources to take anyone else in.
Finally, there is a very serious
issue which needs to be noted: sanitation. Across Africa, there
are millions of people who live without access to the most basic
necessities such as potable water or toilets. It isn’t very
hard to understand that even with enough money to buy food;
if one doesn’t have access to the most basic needs such
as clean water, it is virtually impossible to ever leave poverty.
After all, how on earth can a mother raise healthy children with
no clean water to bathe them in, to cook their food or simply
enough to give them to drink?
Lack of sanitation leads to increased
death rates of children. Contaminated water also increases risk
of illness and death due to communicable diseases. There is a
need for children to work farms and care for the family, (especially
if one or both parents are ill); because of poor or nonexistent
medical care or financial assistance to poor families by the government.
Now add up those factors in addition to the lack of birth control
for women and you have the explanation for the high birth rates
in Africa. After all, between the need for children to help and
the chance that so many children have of dying before they reach
their 5th birthday explains the last contributing factor to poverty:
population.
I hope I’ve been able to
help you understand a few of the things which help cause poverty
in Africa. There is certainly more to say on the issue and we’ll
probably get back to most of these topics in time.
Thanks for joining me this week
and I look forward to seeing you next time for A
Lasting Solution to Poverty!