SORT BY 
ISSUES
WRITERS
DATE
0 posts in the last 24 hours
Suggest a post:
undispatch@gmail.com
Get help:
Report a problem
David Brooks Wants to Know Why Haiti is Poor
Subscribe to these comments

|
|
|
sdf:
11 May 2:26am
M2TS Converter [1],
[1] http://www.hdm2tsconverter.net
read more
Shruti:
10 May 12:43pm
Nice information..... Thanks Internet Marketing Co [1]
[1] http://www.imsoftwaredevelopment.com/
read more
Ravi:
10 May 12:40pm
I read your article.The things you have written sound very sincere and nice
topics i am looking forw
read more
Rahul:
10 May 12:38pm
You have mention good post above I really enjoy the information. I wish to
come again on your site i
read more
yarinsiz:
7 May 7:33pm
The Health care situation in Nigeria is very poor,the rural poor do not have
access to good health c
read more
daniel r:
7 May 1:25pm
Well, the post is in reality the freshest on this noteworthy topic about
read more
|
|
|
kamagra:
11 May 6:24am
Meagen Kelly was just on Fox Fraudcasting rubbing her bad self all up and
down, getting all hot and
read more
sdf:
11 May 2:28am
M2TS Converter [1],
[1] http://www.hdm2tsconverter.net
read more
magic100:
7 May 8:16pm
Let's not forget the old feminist books, that changed a lot of women's
perspectives in the 70s and (
read more
kamagra:
6 May 6:01pm
This will understandably make the already ambitious Millennium Development
Goals even harder to achi
read more
Micheal Ricky:
5 Apr 7:20am
This is a really good read for me, Must admit that iphone life [1]
[1] http://www.iphonelife.co.uk
read more
Visitor:
26 Mar 7:31am
Ethiopia's donors asked to condemn 'attack' CBS | March 25, 2010
-------------------------------
read more

The Somali Pirates' Business Model
Mark Leon Goldberg - March 17, 2010 - 1:13 pm
Male Monsters -- Girl Buried Alive for Being a Girl and the World Shrugs (Trigger Warning)
Peter Daou - February 5, 2010 - 2:12 pm
One Laptop Per Child - The Dream is Over
Alanna Shaikh - September 9, 2009 - 9:06 am
What About Health Care Everywhere Else?
Matthew Cordell - March 22, 2010 - 10:23 am








DISPATCH TWEETS






Alanna Shaikh - January 15, 2010 - 4:31 pm
David Brooks starts out strong in a New York Times editorial asking why Haiti is so poor. He makes the very good point that development economics has remarkably few consistent ideas on how to bring about growth. Unfortunately, things take a turn for the worse a couple of paragraphs later. He ends the piece blaming voodoo and Haitian culture for the nation’s ongoing poverty and his recommendation for change is “paternalism.”
When talking about the challenges of international development, Brooks is absolutely right. None of the development economists of our day seem to agree with each other – witness the constant disagreement between, say, Bill Easterly and Dani Rodrik. We know how to do some things – lower infant mortality, improve education attainment – but we don’t know the magic formula to increase GDP and improve quality of life. Brooks is also right that micro-aid will only get you so far. Lots of tiny efforts don't seem to add up to much change anywhere, not just in Haiti but throughout the world.
The next section of his editorial is when things go off the rails. He quotes “The Central Liberal Truth,” a book that has been debunked by just about anyone who took the time to read it and then think, and attacks Haitian child rearing practices. His comment, “Child-rearing practices often involve neglect in the early years and harsh retribution when kids hit 9 or 10,” is downright slanderous. In my web searching, I can’t find anything to support that claim, and I’d be willing to bet that David Brooks has no more prior knowledge of Haiti than I do.
In fact, I know he has less prior knowledge of Haiti than I do, because he goes on to blame “the voodoo religion” for spreading the message that “life is capricious and planning futile.” Haitian Vodu is actually a monotheistic religion with an emphasis on supporting ones community and helping the poor.
It’s tempting to blame Haitian culture for the country’s poverty. The Dominican Republic sits next door like a case-control experiment. Culture must have an impact on growth and development; it’s too important not to. What that impact is, however, is up for debate, just like the rest of the big development ideas.
We have terrible poverty on much of our planet. The US government can’t even get the unemployment rate in Detroit down below 50%. I wish we could pin Haiti’s poverty on national culture; at least then we’d have a cause to work on. The fact is, Brooks got it right in the first paragraph. We’ve still got far too much to learn about ending poverty.