the anti poverty program did not yield the desired results justify
Answers
Answered by
1
Anti-poverty programs are narrowly focused and disconnected from macroeconomic policymaking
Far-reaching reforms are needed in the country’s anti-poverty policies. The most basic modification is to shift from having a centerpiece anti- poverty program to making poverty eradication the centerpiece of social, economic, and environmental policies. It is particularly crucial to reform macroeconomic policies because these have the farthest-reaching and longest-lasting impact on the livelihoods, incomes, and welfare of the greatest number of Filipinos.
As it is, ‘anti-poverty’ efforts are conventionally conceived as ‘social reform’ programs dichotomized from macroeconomic policy- making, and, furthermore, are distantly secondary to this. They are narrowly focused and micro, individualistic, or targeted in nature. They are in addition commonly fragmented and dispersed. Government anti-poverty agencies and instrumentalities are moreover detached from macroeconomic policy-making and, in effect, perennially relegated to dealing with the effects of poverty rather than its causes.
Far-reaching reforms are needed in the country’s anti-poverty policies. The most basic modification is to shift from having a centerpiece anti- poverty program to making poverty eradication the centerpiece of social, economic, and environmental policies. It is particularly crucial to reform macroeconomic policies because these have the farthest-reaching and longest-lasting impact on the livelihoods, incomes, and welfare of the greatest number of Filipinos.
As it is, ‘anti-poverty’ efforts are conventionally conceived as ‘social reform’ programs dichotomized from macroeconomic policy- making, and, furthermore, are distantly secondary to this. They are narrowly focused and micro, individualistic, or targeted in nature. They are in addition commonly fragmented and dispersed. Government anti-poverty agencies and instrumentalities are moreover detached from macroeconomic policy-making and, in effect, perennially relegated to dealing with the effects of poverty rather than its causes.
Similar questions