Donate Give Monthly

Menu

Donate Give Monthly


Email SignUp

Stay connected and receive updates from Opportunity International Australia.

Follow Us

Search


PO Box A524
Sydney South NSW 1235, Level 11, 227 Elizabeth Street Sydney NSW 2000

Telephone: 1800 812 164

© 2024 Opportunity International AustraliaABN 83 003 805 043

Global Poverty: An Amazing Success Story …but we still have a long way to go

By Chris Murdoch

On the eve of Anti-Poverty Week in Australia and the 25th anniversary of International Day for the Eradication of Poverty, I’m reflecting on the journey out of poverty so many families have made in the last twenty years. Journeys to freedom. Journeys to lives with choices, dignity and hope.

In the late 1960s and early 70s, the global community recognised a very large number of families lived in extraordinarily challenging circumstances. Families who somehow survived on an income of less than US$2.50 per day and struggled to feed their children, put a roof over their heads and send them to school.  

Penina

Families like Penina and Nicodaemus’ and their four children, who live in a one room shack in West Timor. No electricity. No water. No toilet. No transport. They earn between thirty and sixty cents a day selling the vegetables from their garden they don’t need for their own survival. They have so little money, they are forced to choose between food, clothes and sending their children to school. This is not a choice anyone should have to make.

As the enormity of the poverty challenge entered global consciousness, the world community responded in a variety of ways, including creation of the Millennium Development Goals. One of those goals was the eradication, or at least the halving, of poverty and the eradication of hunger. And that was successful in focusing people’s minds on the issue.

Since then, economic growth and a range of poverty alleviation initiatives have halved the number of families like Penina and Nicodaemus’ who live in extreme poverty.  So, we now know there are solutions to global poverty on a scale relevant to the problem. We know that we can do it!  What we also know is that the job’s not over, there’s still too many families living in poverty in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa.

What we know from our experience in the past 20 years, is that organisations like Opportunity International Australia can help to reduce global poverty. But there is much more work to do. The task before us is more difficult and complex than the task we’ve already undertaken because many of the families we need to reach are the most marginalised. They have slipped through the cracks and don’t have a safety net to catch them. They may be hard to reach because they live in remote rural locations; they might be suffering illness and malnutrition and lack affordable healthcare and education services in their area; or there may be a domestic violence issue that prevents women from working.

At Opportunity, we are adapting the way we help families break the cycle of poverty. We know the context in which families live, such as their remote location or lack of health and education services, is increasingly important.  We are exploring ways of providing specialised services on a large scale and sustainable basis and tailoring our services to meet the specific needs of the families we serve.

We’re supporting the UltraPoor program in the Philippines, in partnership with the Australian Government through the Australian NGO Cooperation Program (#ANCP), that’s focused on families who are not yet ready for microfinance because of the extreme poverty in which they live. Marilyn has been selected as one of the first participants in this program. Marilyn lives with her husband in a humble shelter with their three children. Without any assets that might earn her an income, no government support and no regular employment, each day Marilyn struggles to buy enough food to feed her family – let alone pay for her children to go to school.

Marilyn, her children and mentor

Marilyn selected a piglet and sari sari store as the small businesses she would set up as part of the program. She’ll receive training on how to raise the pig and get it to market, and how to develop her sari sari, as well as assets to get started such as a piglet and feed, and stock for her little store. Each week, she’ll be visited by a program officer who’ll mentor and coach her and encourage her to put aside savings. At the end of two years, life should look very different for Marilyn and her family. She’ll have a regular income from diversified sources. Her family will eat at least two good meals a day. They’ll have access to safe drinking water and a toilet. Most importantly, she’ll be equipped with both the skills and the resources to sustain their progress out of poverty. 

So, as well as providing financial services, we are also exploring how Opportunity can provide education and healthcare in an affordable and sustainable way. The high uptake of mobile phones in developing countries is helpful, as we can reach families in remote locations and provide microfinance and other services to them with higher efficiency and at greater scale than was previously possible.

What I would say is, the reasons families like Marilyn’s and Penina and Nicodaemus’ live in poverty are mostly contextual. What Opportunity desires for these families is to live lives of meaning, purpose, opportunity and hope. That can be done with a combination of financial services and key interventions like health and education services.

The stories I hear of families freeing themselves from poverty renew my passion every day for my role. I met a young man, Mukul, in Delhi a few years ago, who was heading a technology startup. When he learned I was from Opportunity, his face beamed and he told me his life story. He grew up in a remote rural area in North India and his family was so poor they considered taking Mukul out of school because they couldn’t afford to pay his school fees. His mother was determined to give Mukul a good education, so she applied for a small loan from Opportunity to buy some goats. With the income she earnt from selling goat milk, she kept Mukul in school, he went to university then worked in business. Such an inspiring story of a young man’s journey from poverty to opportunity!  His mother’s sacrifice changed everything. She built a bridge for him to a new life. Mukul is the human face of what’s possible….

If you would like to help families like Marilyn’s and Penina and Nicodaemus’ to lift themselves out of poverty please click here.

 

.

Stay in Touch