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enlarge | Author: Paul Collier Publisher: Oxford University Press Category: Book
List Price: $28.00 Buy New: $12.53 You Save: $15.47 (55%)
New (55) Used (41) from $11.76
Rating: 51 reviews Sales Rank: 47665
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 224 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.5 x 0.9
ISBN: 0195311450 Dewey Decimal Number: 338.90091724 EAN: 9780195311457 ASIN: 0195311450
Publication Date: April 27, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: New & Shrinkwrapped. In stock - Immediate despatch from an efficient and professional leading British bookselling firm.
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Thought provoking December 12, 2007 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
Very complete analysis of the causes poverty of the not quite "developing" nations of the world. It is sometimes a bit dry and sometimes it belabors the obvious. Sometimes it presents some startling insights about the cycle of poverty of nations. Though most of the book is quite depressing it does conclude with some potential solutions. The author is perhaps a little too critical of traditional foreign aid and perhaps a little too confident in market based solutions.
Summarizes Statistical Studies of Factors Affecting Incomes for People in the Poorest Countries November 27, 2007 Are you troubled by the grinding poverty in the poorest countries? If so, this book will give you hope that something more can be done.
How can a global economy that routinely produces new billionaires leave a billion people behind in countries where the economic prospects are bleak despite enormous spending aimed at turning things around? Obviously, the remedy isn't working. You could have figured that out for yourself without reading this book.
Professor Paul Collier takes us beyond that disquieting simplification to measure what some of the reasons are that contribute to the stalled economies in those countries (which are mostly located in sub-Saharan Africa and central Asia) where a billion people live.
The primary factors that he can isolate include frequent armed conflicts (coups, civil wars, and wars with other countries), producing high value natural resources that can be easily exported, having no access to the oceans while being surrounded by neighboring countries having a lot of problems, and poorly performing government in a small country. Armed conflicts not only take a lot of lives and do a lot of damage; armed conflicts drive people into new areas creating enormous dislocations and increased disease. Armed conflicts interrupt the ability to run a farm, a business, or to have a normal life. High value exports encourage those in government to seek payoffs from the exports while the exports drive up the value of the currency making local businesses less competitive with imports. If you are surrounded by bad neighbors, you cannot do much exporting or importing so your economy is stuck where it is. A poorly performing government simply siphons off funds into corruption.
If a poor country overcomes these problems, it has new issue: There may not be a local size sufficient to compete with other low-cost labor markets in global exports.
Give a country too much aid of the wrong kind, and you make things worse. Excess infrastructure aid (a current favorite among developed countries) leads to corruption and more spending on the military (which increases the risk of armed conflicts). Military intervention is only cost effective if those who are the peace keepers are serious and the spending is low (unlike Iraq). Laws and charters can provide guidelines that can make the subsequent actions more appropriate. Appropriate trade policies can also help open markets for those from the poorest countries.
The book concludes with a call to action to shift development spending from the middle four billion to the bottom billion while increasing reliance on influences other than sending money for aid.
I appreciated having the chance to read this book and recommend it to those who want to know what can be done to help the poorest people. I would have learned more if Professor Collier had shared more details of his research, rather than just citations of his academic works. I was particularly interested in how strong these statistical patterns are. I was also curious about the multivariate effect of these factors in the past.
I have a lot of admiration for the hard work that goes into assembling data to do this kind of work and to then find ways to draw conclusions from the data that make sense. Bravo to Professor Collier and his colleagues!
At the same time, I would encourage serious readers to also look at the problem from the ground up . . . what educated people who live in these countries can do to make things better for the most impoverished. I am highly encouraged by the work that some of my students have done in identifying how small educational and capital inputs can generate enormous numbers of successful entrepreneurs who need employees. Many of these nations lack an educational infrastructure that can produce the skilled labor and business leadership needed for rapid economic growth. It looks to me like working on providing such advanced educational opportunities could be a great way to attack these persistent problems, as well.
Bottom Billion November 24, 2007 This is a real-world analysis of why 1/6 of the world's population have not benefited from the global economic boom. Collier also presents realistic proposals for addressing the 4 traps that keep some country's from advancement. You'll never look at NGO's the same way again after reading this book.
Superb analysis and concrete recommendations October 27, 2007 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Humanity has never been so prosperous in recorded history, as we are in the beginning of the twenty-first century. However the bottom billion, the poorest of the poor continue to lead miserable lives just across our homes. This population accounts for a sixth of the world's population and is concentrated mostly in countries of Africa and Central Asia. Paul Collier's statistical analysis of huge databases painfully collected from various sources point out to four primary factors that contribute to "failing states": Conflict, Natural resources (and Dutch disease), Landlocked and Poor Governance. The book does not give too many details of the research methodology and statistical tools, but only presents a crisp summary of the outcome. This aspect is good for readers who would like to avoid heavy academic material and focus only on the issues in simple terms. In essence this approach makes difficult topics very simple to comprehend.
Paul Collier's structure of the book, firstly an overview of the bottom billion issues, then a chapter each for the four traps and a chapter each for four bold solutions (Aid, Military Intervention, Laws and Charters and Trade Policy) makes it highly readable.
To compare this book with "Culture and Prosperity" by John Kay, I found some common factors that are responsible for poverty. However, Collier's work is not just about what causes poverty, but in the current context of globalization, looking at utilizing the strengths of other prosperous countries and global institutions, to find a quick and permanent solution to banish poverty and misery from all parts of the world. This made me compare the book with "The End of Poverty" by Jeffrey Sachs. Collier's approach is broader than Sachs's and includes some bold measures like Military Intervention and takes a multi disciplinary approach. The deep passion and the urgency for solutions to end global poverty, is identical in both the books.
Some findings in the book are striking and interesting. For example, on the impact of globalization, Collier explains how globalization has further aggravated the problems of the bottom billion in terms of flight of skills and capital from these countries. Similarly, he advocates favorable trade policies from developed countries to protect the bottom billion countries from competition from China and India, since these Asian giants have already made rapid strides in economic growth in the last three decades during which the bottom billion have missed the boat. The boat would never come back in the near future and hence the need for some innovative measures.
On the whole, I would unhesitatingly give this book a five star rating. It is important that this book gets published in multiple languages to spread the great ideas, especially in those countries that matter most- the bottom and the top and to initiate global action to eradicate poverty from the face of this beautiful planet.
The Bottom Line on World Poverty October 20, 2007 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is one the best policy books that I have read and an example of what a good policy book should be all about. It deals with the subject that is often in public spotlight and yet it seems as intractable today as it was decades ago. This sad state of affairs may in at least part be attributed to some of the misunderstanding of what global poverty is all about, who is most affected by it, and what sort of traps those most affected find themselves incapable of escaping. As this book clearly argues, the so called "poverty trap" in and of itself is not a trap at all, since otherwise all World would still be as poor as a few centuries ago. Furthermore, vast segments of the "global poor" actually live in countries that are developing at a more or less steady pace and can expect to be lifted out of that poverty within a generation or two. The ones who seem stuck are the bottom billion of the world population, and this book deals with them. The research that this book is based on comes up with four basic traps that could permanently hinder the poorest countries in development. The traps, some of them counterintuitive, are: 1. The Conflict Trap 2. The Natural Resource Trap 3. Landlocked with Bad Neighbors 4. Bad Governance in a Small Country
Not every one of the poorest countries in the world is subject to all of these traps, but they are subject to at least one of them. Furthermore, Collier is not content to just describe the problem; he offers several courses of action that can deal with them. At least one of them, military interventions, has been largely discredited lately in the eyes of the public and policy wonks alike. However, if we are sincere and serious about helping the poorest in this world, we need to keep the military option open. All in all, this is a wonderful book that is both data-driven and engaging. Even if you have not followed the issues surrounding global poverty in the past, this book may induce you to get engaged in thinking about it more actively and seriously.
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