http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaileditorial.asp?
fileid=20050813.F04&irec=3

Understanding the root causes of absolute poverty

Benget Simbolon Tnb., Jakarta

Coordinating Minister for People's Welfare Alwi Shihab stated during 
the closing ceremony of the Millennium Development Goals meeting 
last week that poor people lack the motivation to improve their 
lives.

The minister is not alone in saying this. Many people shared his 
view. Others put it even more bluntly: The poor are poor because 
they are lazy.

Is this true? It is not fair to jump to any conclusions without 
first asking, "Why?"

On a humorous television program some time ago, a man kept talking 
to a second man. Every time the second man tried to say something, 
the first man cut him off and kept on talking. He never gave the 
second man a chance to be heard. When a third man joins them, the 
first man tells him the second man is very quiet. How come?

We say the poor lack motivation, but this is actually a truth of our 
own making.

Just look at our social structure. The poor, especially poor farmers 
living in rural areas, have long been dominated by the system we 
designed or at least contributed to: the Wong Gede-Wong Cilik 
(Powerful-Powerless) relationship, in which they have no say at all 
in decisions.

Anthropologists say that due to an unfavorable social structure, 
most of the poor in Indonesia succumb to the concept of fate. They 
believe they were predestined to suffer in this world. They have to 
accept it because there is nothing they can do about it.

With no chance of being heard in society, many of them, knowingly or 
unknowingly, develop a passive mentality. Others prefer to turn to 
the invisible world, rather than the visible world, to solving their 
everyday problems. That explains why they like to use the services 
of shamans or wait for a kind of Ratu Adil (their own version of The 
Just King) to liberate them.

Perhaps to meet such expectations, many people prefer to take 
the "give fish" approach rather than the "give a fishing rod" 
approach in helping the poor. We can see this in a number of aid 
programs and charitable efforts that function more to strengthen the 
people's passivity rather than their spirit of working hard to 
achieve something.

Take some of the local reality shows as an example. They are 
actually very moving in nature and help the poor to some extent. But 
unfortunately, assistance is only given to a selected few through a 
lucky draw, giving the impression that "waiting for your turn 
patiently" rather than "working your way up" is the way to go.

While the "give fish" approach to assistance can help temporarily, 
it does not help the poor empower themselves so they can have their 
own fishing rod to catch their own fish for life.

Their lack of motivation can also be traced from their isolated 
condition. Most of the poor, including those in cities, cannot 
benefit from the existing information services and infrastructure.

There are many villages that are completely isolated, like Kabuka 
village near the border of Indonesia and Timor Leste reported on by 
The Jakarta Post on Wednesday. This make the people socially 
isolated and contributes to their inability to improve their lives.

Being poor also means having no resources. And without resources, 
the poor cannot become involved in social activities. They are 
imprisoned within their subsistent lives.

While they see lives around them move dynamically, their everyday 
lives are stagnant. In some ways, they see their lives only getting 
worse.

This is happening with many farmers in rural areas. Due to the 
absence of favorable regulations on land ownership, they have seen 
their land ownership decreased to an average of 0.25 hectares per 
household, while more and more of them are landless and have to be 
satisfied earning money as agricultural workers.

Their saddening condition is worsened by the fact that we are a 
corrupt society, in which the rich can use their resources to bribe 
their way to what they want, while the poor can only accept their 
fate.

The poor, therefore, are like the stagnant water unwillingly trapped 
outside the main stream of a river. Only some outside movement will 
push them into the flow of the main stream.

They are waiting for the outside movement, especially from the 
government, to change the social system and facilitate a further 
process of democratization, politically and economically, so that 
they will be empowered to free themselves from the poverty trap.

The author is a staff writer at The Jakarta Post. 




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