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The Action Blog

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| October 14th, 2008 by Easton Ellsworth

… and then blog about it. ;)

Share this list everywhere - Digg, StumbleUpon, Delicious, Mixx, Twitter, the bus, the train, the plane, the street, the dinner table, the pulpit, the classroom, the boardroom, the bedroom, etc.

And use it. It’s called Blog ACTION Day for a reason.

Thank you to all who contributed ideas.

Thank you to our huge list of over 80 supporting organisations (here, here and here).

May Blog Action Day 2008 be absolutely unforgettable.

Got poverty relief idea to add to this list? Know how we could improve and/or spread this list? Leave your ideas in a comment below or email us at central@blogactionday.org.

88 Ways to Take Action Against Poverty Right Now

  1. Eat meatless meals 2x a week. Donate that grocery money to a local food bank. - TarotByArwen
  2. Be homeless for a day/night. - Lex
  3. Stop putting off adopting a child through an organization like Compassion International (or adopt another one). - Lex
  4. Make a loan on Kiva, or buy a couple gift certificates and give them away to friends. - Lex
  5. Get a group together to go door-to-door collecting canned foods for your local soup kitchen/shelter. - Lex
  6. Take a homeless person to dinner and actually sit/talk with him. - Lex
  7. Stop being lazy. Find a way to do your job better so that you can save an hour a day, or be that much more productive. - Alex Shalman
  8. Stop buying junk to make yourself look pretty and donate it to homeless people and hungry people. - Craigsnede
  9. Make flyers to stick in the local library. - Craigsnede
  10. If you have a musical instrument you no longer use, donate to the still-struggling musicians and students in New Orleans, who are still recovering from Hurricane Katrina. A few great organizations that will accepts musical instruments are Tipitina’s Foundation (www.tipitinasfoundation.org) and The New Orleans Musicians Relief Fund (www.nomrf.org/donations.html).
  11. I’m interviewing a Capuchin monk vowed to Poverty about his work with Detroit’s poor for my blog, and I’m trying to arrange a fund raiser with my author and PIVTR radio station friends.
  12. Find a gripping picture or video having to do with poverty and publish it on the Web.
  13. Stop drinking Coke and bottled water for a day and save on plastic. Will save a lot of plastic if each of us does it for only one day.
  14. Share your skill or knowledge, so they can improve their knowledge to increase their life/prosperity.
  15. Visit an orphanage.
  16. Stop being lazy.
  17. Give comfort to the poor.
  18. Donate.
  19. Check your closet and make sure that anything you have not used last winter is taken to a charitable organization. Ask your friends and neighbors and volunteer to pick up the clothes, launder them and deliver them to those organizations. They will do no good in your closet and a world of good to someone in need.
  20. On one day only eat food that you have asked someone for directly or for the money you need to buy it. Pay attention to the feelings.
  21. Have a “sponsor me” day. Donate money to a poverty relief cause for everyone who leaves a comment on your blog that day.
  22. Designers for Blog Action Day group on Flickr. Submit your designs: http://www.flickr.com/groups/bad2008design/
  23. Organize a Hunger 101 Program for a local youth group. Our Girl Scout community learned about what they could do to help the working poor in our community. http://spedr.com/da5f This inspired them to organize several Take Action events: http://spedr.com/krfw
  24. Add the “Women Rock” badge to your website or Facebook page.
  25. if any of us knew or aware about any organisation which can help educate them, like, skills centre, entrepeneurship centre..u know, stuffs they do to help these pople actually do something to improve their life, we might try to collect name carsd from these organisations (NGOs or ministries), and walk around and passed these cards to them, with of couse, maybe some donations of any supplies.
  26. Skip a weekly trip to the grocery store and donate the money saved to a food bank. I do this once a year for my family of 5. For that week we only eat what is left in the pantry or fridge. By the end of the week, pickings are slim and we get a sense of what it feels like to not have the luxury of tasty, well balanced meals every night.
  27. Make a personal fundraising page in 5 minutes on Firstgiving.com. Raise money securely online for any US-based nonprofit committed to ending poverty in the US or around the world. Here’s an example page: http://www.firstgiving.com/bapbwm.
  28. Have dinner on the floor and make it a very small meal (like chicken broth, watered down milk, and maybe a small piece of bread?) Talk about the blessings you have and that the meal represents those who don’t get to eat “big” on a daily basis.
  29. Volunteer at a soup kitchen!
  30. Play freerice.com!
  31. If you have take out coffee, skip it for an entire week, donate the savings!
  32. Give 5 bucks to a homeless person who looks hungry!
  33. Talk with your children about poverty and who it affects.
  34. Save your old stuff and sold it for charity
  35. Support charity organization in your country. Reducing poverty may start in your nearest region.
  36. Do something to touch 3 people or to reach out to 3 people and get them to pay it forward.
  37. Give a gallon of water to each of 3 people who need it?
  38. Give a $10 gift certificate to each of 3 homeless, single mothers so that she and her children can have one hot meal at a fast food restaurant?
  39. Ask 3 entrepreneurs to each make a donation to 3 people or causes?
  40. Holding perhaps daily or weekly community classes for imparting knowledge from our side and educating the local masses is something we all can do by coming together at grass root level.
  41. Avoiding overconsumption.
  42. Contributing to relief funds which can assist this cause.
  43. Host a 1 day famine and collect donations. With the donations, pass it to a Welfare/Poverty Organisation.
  44. Plan a pot luck/BBQ or a get together inviting close friends and neighbours, to bring awareness and also to raise funds for a shelter home. Funds can be used to purchase the necessary groceries for the home.
  45. Pray for the comfort and safety of the world’s poor. Pray for the strength, wisdom and courage to help each of them find prosperity.
  46. Combat corruption!
  47. Don’t just talk to your kids about poverty - get them involved by having them go through their toys and clothes to find concrete things to pass along. The next time they want you to buy something for them - talk about what that money could buy for someone who had no food… then follow through and donate the money you didn’t spend.
  48. Donate your time and expertise to teach a class to those trying to find a new way to earn a living.
  49. To add to the previous suggestions, rather than just donate money to homeless people, why not use the money you would use on yourself for a coffee to buy one for someone else. If you get coupons for free beverages or meals, keep them with you and give them to someone in need.
  50. As you find organizations to which you like to donate food, clothing, etc., spend some time volunteering for that organization. Contribute to the organizations you are already supporting in other ways.
  51. Educate others. If you are a teacher, talk to your students about poverty. Get their opinions. Inspire them. If you work in other areas, strike up a conversation with your colleagues in the lunchroom or lounge. Get educated so you can answer questions and provide information that might spur others into action.
  52. Visit The Hunger Site every day and click the link to feed the hungry. It’s fast and it’s free and there’s absolutely NO excuse not to do it every day you’re online!
  53. Be compassionate.
  54. Invite friends to watch documentaries how poverty destroyed ones life,family and their future.
  55. Do not waste water on that day.
  56. Express your love and compassion for one street child by having an enrollment conversation with her.
  57. Ask your child to share her food with the child of your maid on that day.
  58. Make a list of five items you haven’t used for long and have no plans to use them in future either. And distribute them among local poors with all humility.
  59. Compose a poem on the theme ‘Making Poverty A History’ and get it published in a local magazine or paper. Also, ask your baby to recite the poem in her school.
  60. Talk to your five relatives about the poverty issue and invite them to come up with their suggestions to eradicate poverty.
  61. Organize a drawing competition for kids on the poverty theme and exhibit their works in a local school or community centre.
  62. Do not overeat on that day.
  63. Save electricity on that day and contribute the equivalent savings to a local charity.
  64. Contribute your one day salary to a child rehabilitation centre.
  65. Get a few friends, gather all your unused items, sell it and buy something a meal for the poor in your neighborhood.
  66. Si tan solo los gobiernos hicieran mucho mas por este flagelo, la pobreza se reduciría en un 70% por no decir 100%. Observo como a algunos gobiernos que han prometido en sus campañas electorales que acabarían con este mal, luego de llegar al poder y por motivo del oro negro les entran grandes cantidades de dinero, ¿y que es lo que han hecho con el, en vez de ayudar al pais? Financiar con ese dinero (que se supone es del pueblo), proyectos políticos solo para sus intereses personales… da tanta tristeza ver cuanta gente tirada por la calle, sin tener que comer, o donde dormir, mientras estos señores se gastan el dinero de tantos ciudadanos, comprando poder para satisfacer su ego.
  67. Travel to a poor country or area. Look for ways to make a difference on the ground there.
  68. On your next off day from work, go to a homeless shealter and help serve food to those who are there, talk with them, listen to their stories, you will find that they were at one time, alot like yourself.
  69. Let’s learn to love and respect one another, and to give to those who have less.
  70. Pictures. It’s one thing to say that the milk my son spilled at lunch this afternoon was more than some kids get. But some people don’t see how real that is unless they’re looking at a picture.So, I’m looking for them.
  71. Talk about poverty.
  72. To most Americans, it’s not real unless we see it. I’m going to be revamping my blog so that poverty is prominent, and I’m talking about it more often.
  73. Don’t stop at the generalities. War, famine, corruption, etc. all happen, and should be resisted. However, let’s dig deeper and go into the specifics. Not just talking about thousands of people dying of thirst … let’s talk about a real person.
  74. Pull out the hearts of the readers, and make them confront what they know is right and wrong.
  75. Instead of video games and other toys, give your neighbors and friends gift certificates for classical music lessons. For every $1 spent on music education, by my calculations, you get a $4.57 return on your investment from age 4-22 and that investment can never be taken away from you. Throughout one’s lifetime it pays much, much more. Take the money you save and give it in music lessons to the next person.
  76. Go to your school board meetings and demand better music education. The arts are part of the core curriculum of “No Child Left Behind” and as I’ve been telling people for a few months now, the less we have to pay for health care and crime, the more we have to spend on food and shelter and doing good for our neighbors.
  77. The more intelligent we are and the more productive we are, the more fruitfully we can spend our time, and the more we can produce to give away.
  78. The reason why poverty still exist in Indonesia is because people is giving cash money to the poor at the streets and those money usually being used for things that usually destructive/not good (buying drugs, etc.) In order to stop poverty, the government already got their program to fight it but it didn’t go successfully for people still think that they are better off at the streets and there’s this what-so-called ‘mafia’ that organize these poor people at the streets.
  79. In order to fight this, the people started to give food/meal/clothes to the poor instead of cash money so it would stop the process.
  80. I think in order to stop poverty is to give what the people really need, not just giving it away for the sake of ‘being kind’ ;)
  81. Fund educational programs for women.
  82. Ensure that women have legal protections.
  83. Educate people about the plight of women around the world.
  84. Educate yourself on one aspect of poverty that affects women, whether it’s educating yourself on what’s going on with rape or abortion legislation in your own local area, or finding out what you can do to help women in other countries attain the basic human rights they deserve, by doing research on organisations that help women and contributing to those organisations in some way.
  85. Do a campaign of creative advertisements for public awareness and a call to action. Do a poster, do an ambient campaign, write a radio or TV spot.
  86. Breadline Africa is launching a Blogger Bake Off to help raise awareness and funds. If you want to do something on Blog Action Day, you should turn your talking (which is very worthwhile) into action: donate to a charity. Organisations that use funds directly in poor communities will be using your money where it can do the most good: at the grass roots level.
  87. Educate yourself.
  88. Prepare a space in your home for the poor to stay as needed.

Well, what are you waiting for? Pick something from this list. Go NOW. Do it.

Do it.

And the world will be richer in mind and body.

photos by uncultured, babasteve, Aaron Dieppa


Comments
  1. Great list. I have Stumbled this and will definitely save it.

  2. Everyone has outdone themselves with this list. Can’t wait for Wednesday to get my Poverty article up!

  3. Brilliant ideas. I’m going to be doing some of these for sure

  4. 89: Set up a volunteer social media surgery to support local charities and community groups.

  5. Awesome list. I have to figure on something to write on. xD

  6. Oh, yes, here is a good website: http://www.freerice.com/ answer questions and they donate rice. Vocabulary questions actually.

    Question: could you change “Stop buying junk to make yourself look pretty and donate it to homeless people and hungry people” to something like “stop buying vanity products and donate the money” or something like that? right now it sounds cheesy. xD

  7. Gravatar

    Ashley Messick

    Great list! Can’t wait to try to figure out something to blog about.

  8. Rock on!

    Can’t wait to see what happen on Oct 15th.

  9. My idea:
    Give to Operation Christmas Child by donating or putting together a box of gifts for a poor child at http://www.samaritanspurse.org/index.php/OCC/index/

    Will post more ideas on my blog at 3Stairs.com.

  10. Good, this is AWESOME, i just cant wait to share my views and to help end poverty throughout the world on BLOG ACTION DAY 2008.

  11. BUY FAIRTRADE!!
    (available at every Coles and Woolworths- just look for the fairtrade label)
    check out: http://www.fta.org.au for more information

  12. Great post! Hope mine doesn’t let you all down. I’m still new to blogging and am learning fast!

  13. use Ripple search engine to fight poverty…one click at a time.
    http://www.ripple.org

  14. Poverty is a very serious cancer in more especially the developing world. Any yet this problem can be solved. poverty is lack of knowledge,ability, cooperation and spirit of helping each other to come out from this problem. No body wants to be poor but how can one come out of this? The only way is the organizations,government to join hands and identify those organized communities who doing some thing and supported in their activities that income generating.

    Thanks to the willing hearts to and to those who are making donations be it financial,or through sensitization on how to deal with poverty.

  15. Wow so impressed with these ideas, save and apply all in my life! :D

  16. Nice list. Really gives people something to think about. My article will go up tomorrow.

  17. Good Post, I will translate it into Chinese in my blog!

  18. Fantastic list! I hope tomorrow is a huge success.

  19. What a fabulous list!! I’d like to add one…

    Through their “More Than Footprints” campaign, TripAdvisor is giving away $1 million among 5 charities. You can vote to determine which charity receives the most money! Think of the $1 million as a pie. Each organization’s slice of that pie depends on how many votes it receives. More votes = more money.

    Vote today at http://www.tripadvisor.com/Causes-m=11509

    Making a donation can be hard but clicking a button is easy. :)

  20. Perfect!

    I just published a post titled “Can Twitter Eliminate Poverty?”

    Enjoy and happy Blog Action Day.

    John

  21. LET’s DO something for them …

  22. Great list - we should all link to it as well tomorrow.

  23. number thirty is easy. do it! (i am from Indonesia)

  24. Sollte für alle 365 Tage gelten. Fairplay im Alltag - der Weg ist das Ziel

  25. Great idea ! I will post your link on my blog.

  26. Another great charity site is AIDtoCHILDREN.com. It donates money to children in need through World Vision.

    Check it out at http://www.aidtochildren.com

  27. Hello!!

    I´ll Post something… I will stard do something..

    Thank you for ideas and actions!!

    Bye and kisses from Brazil!

  28. Excellent post………I believe we all should take some responsible “action” today……….

  29. Hi All,

    Blog Action Day is one of the best things the web has seen. Poverty is a great topic for everyone to discuss. Especially with the economic turmoil we are in. It pays for us to think about the less fortunate. As well as writing about volunteering at a homeless shelter on my own blog I also added this site to the new Tip’d community. Please logon and vote it up so it can be at the top of that community news.

    Sincerely,
    Jeremy

  30. Please vote the 88 Ways to DO Something About Poverty Right Now up on the tipd.com community right now! Here is the link:

    http://tipd.com/Economy/88-ways-to-do-something-about-poverty-right-now-1/

  31. Here’s an idea which comes from 11 years of blogging about poverty. Start a people-centered business that re-invests into the community and social purpose as described in my link above.

    This was the work of one homeless man, who pitched an idea at his President, went on to leverage a 10 million dollar microfinance pilot in Russia and authored the “Marshall Plan” for Ukraine aimed at eliminating childcare institutions.

    His pitch to Clinton is in my link.

  32. Hi, I’m doing some thing this list, amaizing and I ‘ ll post in my blog in portuguese…let’s the world in the action little!!!

  33. Thank you for putting Blog Action Day together. We at Christian Children’s Fund appreciate it. Please click on my name to see our posts for today — two more posts are coming!

  34. Great list!

  35. Here are 5 Easy Online Ways to Help Reduce Poverty
    http://www.quickonlinetips.com/archives/2008/10/reduce-poverty/

  36. Blog Action Day 2008 - Poverty [Pobreza]

    Mi participación.

    Salud!

    Carlos Miragaya

  37. maybe consider using goodsearch as your default search engine, so that you can contribute to the charity of your choice, while making searches online. :)

  38. Do all of your CHRISTMAS SHOPPING at a website, blog, or page which will donate a percentage of what you spend to a charity. And get all of your family members to do likewise! :)

  39. Blog Action Day is a wonderful effort of so many, very dedicated and passionate people. I just posted on poverty on my blog as well.

  40. Poverty is one of the issues that has always been bothering us and this is really a good action to overcome the poverty…

    So, please count me in as well :)

  41. Desde hoy voy a tratar de no solo cambiar ni forma de ver a la pobreza, sino ayudar a combatirla.
    No hay duda que si los que podemos hicieramos mas, la situacion no fuera tal y como esta.

  42. I am from Greece. All of us must do something for the others peoples. With the mondial crise, tomorow we can find ourself the new poor of the world. WE MUST ACT. ALL TOGETHER! For our children and for the future of the world!

  43. Gravatar

    Dr RazaHaider

    A Horizon based methodology

    Many question, same theme, different, approaches .sizeable modes, vague intentions, existing motive to rectify, unavailability of platform, haphazard directions, inconclusive action and reaction, with resultant failure, disagreement and frustration, soreness culminating in to pessimisms and deliberate negligence ,embarking a hand full of sorrow ,pain and agony to the sufferer.

    What is this term poor?

    If we perceive this term through the vocabulary of dictionary, we can very well assess that the term has so many contextual meaning that it will never be regarded and used in the contest of our desired motive.

    In thesaurus, poor means deficient, inadequate ,having little or no money or wealth, beggarly, destitute, down-and-out, necessitous, needy, penniless, poverty-stricken, below a standard of quality, bad, somebody regarded as irresponsible or worthless, unsatisfactory ,decidedly inferior quality, cheap, lousy, miserable, rotten, conspicuously deficient in quantity, fullness, meager, scant, scanty, spare, sparse, stingy, deserving pity, pathetic..

    In the light of above definition if we perceive the definition it will be as in my version of opinion that, it is a person, having little or no money to look after himself or his belongings in the shape and contest of basic necessity of life.

    Satisfactorily understanding the terminology as lay man, my next inquiry in terms of questionnaire will be, who are these people who could not make and over come these basic necessity as the essentials?

    If we start taking a hunt so to dig the requisite criteria to search the desire motive, we can never find the base line which may delineate the demarcation line between poor and immediate above class as it will again open a chapter of discussion that demand horizon based methodology.

    So concisely the chapter demand to curtail discussion to the resident class of people that groups together as poor ,rather to get in to the discussion of competitive match with immediate superior class, which may again be considered as poor in different immediately above class of people and so on .

    Although here the term will not be utilized in the contest of basic necessity but again will be utilized in terms of horizon based methodology.

    What is this term, horizon based methodology .Why do we have to take our discussion from the table of this entry?

    Horizon in thesaurus is defined as a place where earth meets the sky .Its a circle in apparent sphere of sky. It is a circle on celestial sphere. It is also define as a geological layer however in the contest of our discussion it is the range of experience or limits that somebody’s interest, knowledge, experience, requirement and desire.

    Methodology in thesaurus is the mode and method to conduct research or study to organize the system with principles and under lying rules and regulation.

    So the horizon based methodology would be define as a self designed organized system of principle, rules and regulation that is restricted in the boundary of interest ,experiences ,requirements and desires , by self implementation.

    This methodology has different perception in different classes of individual.

    If I revert back to the theme of the chapter, and opinion based discussion to dig the class of people that are tagged as poor, in the light of same methodology, I would be of the opinion that it is this class of society that has similar more subdivisions to demand review, however at a glance the prime objective and motive of their business is to afford and balance the input in terms of finance and output in terms of living, in the name of necessity.

    Critically evaluating such class ,it will be clear that this class exist in almost every immediate cadre that exist ,and modus operandi of these individual is to maintain the requisite cadre as none can afford to be disembarked from their position and class in the society .

    In order to cut short my discussion, these different classes of so called poor exists in different cadres of society, rich, middle and poor, maintaining and trying a status quo so to manage and become affordable to continue their survival though living in hand to mouth or at the extreme of their demarcation line thus continuing and maintaining their status in the format and design, in spite of the continuous rise of inflation.

    Although a mild change in inflation does not sabotage the existing upper classes of poor, that in extreme case can only change their mask status, but switching and down grading at the lowest cadre of population is a menace as ultimate acceptance at the cost and corner of disgrace and ego is the main thrust which is not bearded and brings disaster in the form of crime, suicide, and malpractices.

    We in our system of society are used to ,this facts that retrieving back where one can feel and maintain a slight better position in the cadre, is actually not allowed .this is partially due to the fact that we can not compromise what is in our opinion a status symbol and essentiality in the form of luxury ,and similarly the threat that deceiving your own entry would let one ground in the eyes of society ,thereby striving to balance the same in the run , even at the cost of the state of hand to mouth .

    If we perceive on the contrary the lowest cadre or class in our system that has nothing but to perceive things in thoughts only, multiple reasons and threats would be felt, however few may be observed in state of dissatisfaction in such class whereas majority has comfortable mode to continue their reservation with minimal discomfort.

    These minorities are the people that are striving hard to maintain their base line ,which if breached would take them to below poverty line where majority are satisfactorily managing their issues ,as norms ,nature ,comfort ,necessity, desire has been over come and ego and self respect has been sacrificed ,due to their extremes of dependencies or whatever .

    It is this minority class of people that are most affected by any such rise in inflation and price rise, as at the extreme of demarcation has already been reached and is according to their horizon base methodology, a factor that will smashed their existence in society .

    Political history and poverty

    In February 1997, Nawaz Sharif became Prime Minister of Pakistan.

    He made improving the economy his top priority, emphasizing liberalization and privatization of the economy.

    The second biggest challenge for Sharif’s government was to avoid default on its foreign obligations.

    When Benazir Bhutto’s second government was dismissed in November 1996, foreign exchange reserves had sunk to below $630 million, or just enough to finance a little over four week’s imports.

    This was in contrast to debt repayment of just over $600 million due in December 1997.

    In order to cope with this precarious situation, Sharif made a direct plea to Pakistanis living abroad to make foreign exchange deposits to help tide the country over with its debt obligations.

    The third challenge for the Sharif government was to control the rising domestic debt, which reached 90 percent of the GDP in 1996-97.

    The fourth challenge was to control the accelerating trends in poverty, which were on the rise in the 1990s.

    Towards the end of 1997, Pakistan again found itself in political crisis.

    His political instability greatly affected the economy and had an especially great impact on foreign investment.

    The prime minister developed differences with the president over the passage of the 13th amendment and with the judiciary over the establishment of special “anti-terrorist” courts.

    The crises were ultimately ended by covert military intervention, which resulted in resignation of President Sardar Farooq Ahmad Khan Leghari and marginalization of the role of Chief Justice of Pakistan, Sajjad Ali Shah.

    Domestic businessmen put investment decisions on hold.

    In addition, several necessary, but sensitive, decisions were postponed.

    The government had done nothing to act on its commitment to reduce the number of federal government employees from 300,000 to 200,000 by the end of November.

    The government also promised international agencies that it would protect public sector power corporations—such as the Water and Power Development Authority (WAPDA), Karachi Electric Supply Corporation (KESC), and Sui Northern Gas Company—from imminent bankruptcy by raising utility rates from 20 to 50 percent.

    But Sharif balked at taking such decisions in the politically charged environment that prevailed in the country.

    At the beginning of 1998, Nawaz Sharif’s government claimed that the country’s economic prospects were improving.

    But in reality, the economic scene remained cheerless, if not bleak, and negatively affected by the deteriorating law and order situation in the country. Several other factors also undermined confidence.

    The government, despite its electoral mandate, had shied away from taking tough, but necessary, fiscal decisions.

    In addition the government did little to achieve the macroeconomic targets set out in its loan program with the IMF.

    In May 1998, Pakistan conducted nuclear tests, which resulted in economic sanctions from the international community.

    These sanctions greatly affected the already poor economy.

    However, the situation changed at the end of the year when the United Sates began to relax the sanctions and encouraged international financial institutions to provide help to Pakistan.

    In November, the United States lifted some of the economic sanctions on India (which also tested nuclear weapons in 1998) and Pakistan after securing their commitments to practice non-proliferation.

    However, according to the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) The prime minister developed differences with the president over the passage of the 13th amendment and with the judiciary over the establishment of special “anti-terrorist” courts.

    The crises were ultimately ended by covert military intervention, which resulted in resignation of President Sardar Farooq Ahmad Khan Leghari and marginalization of the role of Chief Justice of Pakistan, Sajjad Ali Shah.

    The sanctions imposed on Pakistan by the USA are not significant in terms of potential American assistance to Pakistan; in fact, the US government has not given any economic loans or grants to Pakistan since the USA aid was cut off to Islamabad in 1990 following Pakistan’s refusal to freeze its nuclear program.

    However, they have indirectly affected other resources of assistance: the IMF, World Bank and Asian Development Bank will not resume economic assistance until the US and other G8 countries have signaled that they will not block approval.

    It was again towards the end of 1998 that Pakistan faced another severe political crisis. Sharif enforced his Shariat Bill to impose Islamic law, which prompted widespread opposition from minorities, human rights groups, and even some Islamic groups, who complained that it would undermine rights guaranteed in the 1973 constitution while simply serving to distract from more important issues.

    Civil strife increased in Karachi and the Mutthida Quami Movement (MQM) ended its coalition with the Pakistan Muslim League Nawaz (PML-N) party.

    Subsequently, Sharif dismissed the government in Sindh and imposed central government rule in the province.

    Furthermore, the army chief resigned amid rumors about an imminent military coup in the country, which was followed by an intensification of the political crisis in October 1999, when the military took over the reins of government.

    All these factors adversely affected the economy as political uncertainty led to the evaporation of foreign investors’ confidence.

    For details, see Economist Intelligence Unit, Pakistan Country Report, Fourth Quarter (November) 1997, 7

    Measurement of poverty

    The most common way to measure poverty is based on income or consumption levels.

    A person is considered poor if his or her consumption or income level falls below a minimum level necessary to meet basic needs.

    This minimum level is usually called the poverty line.

    The World Bank uses reference lines set at $1 and $2 per day in the 1999 Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) terms (where PPPs measure relative purchasing power by comparison to other countries).

    It was estimated that in 1999, 2.2 billion people worldwide had consumption levels below $1 a day—23 percent of the population of the developing world, with an additional 2.8 billion living on less than $2 a day.

    In Pakistan, 31 percent of the population lives on less than $1 a day, while 85 percent lives on less than $2 a day.

    Furthermore, Pakistan has a per capita income of $420 a year.

    The World Bank began including many other factors besides income levels to measure poverty.

    These non-income indicators include health, education, and access to basic services.

    In these terms, Pakistan has, for example, an adult literacy rate of 42 percent for males and 71 percent for females.

    In the health sector, nearly one in ten children die before reaching the age of five.

    Pakistan’s method to measure poverty line

    The government of Pakistan uses a different yardstick for measuring the poverty in the country and sets its own poverty line.

    Instead of applying the universal formula of one dollar a day of earnings per capita to count the absolute poor, it considers a monthly income of PRs 748, enough to afford 2,350 calories a day, or almost PRs 1,000 less, as being poor.

    Those having less than that income are held as too poor now.

    What that means is that, instead of an income of PRs 1,710 a month on the basis of PRs 57 for a dollar for 30 days, one has to get PRs 25 per day or PRs 748 in a month not to be regarded as poor.

    The incidence of poverty increased in Pakistan during the 1990s.

    A report from the Asian Development Bank, “Country Strategy and Program 2002-2006, Pakistan,” outlines the economic reversal that occurred in the 1990s.

    Poverty increased from 26.6 percent in 1992 to 32.2 percent in 1999, with the total number of poor increasing by more than 12 million people.

    Poverty is most intense in rural areas, where about three-fourths of the poor live.

    The failure of economic growth to keep up with a burgeoning workforce (growing at an average rate of 2.4 percent a year) exacerbated these trends.

    Structural causes of economic failure, such as an expanding foreign debt and economic mismanagement, were joined by a failure to invest in growth in human development, in areas like education, health care, and other basic social services.

    Private investment faltered also, driven by political uncertainty.

    According to some studies, caloric-based poverty in effect doubled from 17.4 percent in 1987-88 to 32.6 percent in 1998-99.

    As a result, Pakistan became less competitive as economic globalization expanded in the 1990s.

    There are various ways that serves a poverty alleviation pillars.

    The first pillar of this strategy is macroeconomic stabilization and resumption of economic growth.

    The second pillar of poverty alleviation strategy is improved governance.

    Structural reforms constitute the third pillar of the poverty alleviation strategy.

    Broad based reforms in tax administration, trade liberalization, and the financial sector form the core. In tax administration, the Central Board of Revenue is being restructured, while the tax base has been widened. Trade liberalization has resulted in tariff rationalization, removal of various restrictions on exports and imports, and deregulation. Financial sector reforms have already resulted in a sound and healthy banking system, a buoyant stock market, a growing corporate debt market, and the strengthening of regulation and supervision.

    The fourth pillar of the strategy is poverty-targeted interventions.

    Prominent among these are education sector reforms, healthcare for all, population planning, Zakat, the Khushali program for employment generation through public works, a food support program, and the Khushali bank

  44. i wanted to add my blog please, http://fueradecontrol666.blogspot.com/

    goodbye

  45. You can also fight poverty with the purchases you make everyday. Check out http://tradeasone.com for large selection of Fair Trade products. Just by re-thinking the gifts and everyday items (food, coffee, lotion) that we buy, we can help break the cycle of poverty for men and women in some of the poorest areas of the world.

  46. Thanks for sharing!

  47. I have to say I really didn’t like the small mention of abortion as beneficial to women. It’s exactly the opposite, when abortion is portrayed as the solution to everything, the poor women just get it and NOTHING changes. They’re just as poor, uneducated and lost as before they even got pregnant. The real solution is never abortion, it’s creating education and job opportunities for all women and girls, including those who are pregnant or raising children, so that they don’t NEED abortion to be successful and respected.
    Take a look at http://community.livejournal.com/feminists4life/ , especially comments and archives, the amazing girls there make many great points about how to really change women lives.

    Also I meant to say what another commenter said - there also http://aidtochildren.com in addition to http://freerice.com :)
    There are more sites like http://thehungersite.com too, for example http://povertyfighters.com , http://solvepoverty.com , http://porloschicos.com or http://pajacyk.pl

  48. Great ideas - an excellent list to choose from and so many options! Every action, be it big or small, counts. Another way to contribute is that if you are going to make a purchase - a gift, clothing, food and more - buy fairtrade. Supporting fairtrade ensures people who most need it are paid a fair wage and helps to maintain a sustainable community.

  49. I have to say I really didn’t like the small mention of abortion as beneficial to women. It’s exactly the opposite, when abortion is portrayed as the solution to everything, the poor women just get it and NOTHING changes. They’re just as poor, uneducated and lost as before they even got pregnant. The real solution is never abortion, it’s creating education and job opportunities for all women and girls, including those who are pregnant or raising children, so that they don’t NEED abortion to be successful and respected.
    Take a look at http://community.livejournal.com/feminists4life/ , especially comments and archives, the amazing girls there make many great points about how to really change women lives.

  50. Together we can do many thing about Poverty. Lets unite and join hands to remove Poverty from this earth.

  51. love it.

  52. My participation in the poverty issue. Aimed at those who …

    http://www.carlosmiragaya.name/index.php?e=e&a=2008&m=10&aid=200810151654

    Greeting

  53. How can we here in america say that we are a people of god ,but close our eyes,walk right by our homeless people on the street,s. woman and children,elderly,etc—well, I have news for us ,we are a people of god and we are ready to do for our homeless familys.we were waiting for a family plan that will work on behalf of all of our homeless familys——–heres my thoughts,.a new way or another way to give a christmas gift,an all year round gift to a homeless person/family is to not go shopping this year for a lot of gifts to give out to people,,the same people that you give gifts to every year.,share with them and ask them to join you to adope a person or family/homeless .to get that person/familyoff the street for good,,.to work with others all over america to change homeless peoples life,s america we can do this..working together in the way of god get the people,our god familys,our homeless familys into a better way of life .with the love of god that we receive every sec of the day, lets share that love to its fullness this year,dec 25 2008 /dec 25 2009–lets plan for change. lets see the change,lets be the change for our homeless familys.lets be their blessings they are gods children also.family,s out there,lets do this now ,this year.we as a hold have put this off for to long.let make this christmas a gift to our homeless familys.–peace-love and joy to my familys—-sign–louise, throught prayer we will be given the know how to make this all happen.



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