Living On $2 A Day: An Interview With Economist Jonathan Morduch

The topic below was originally posted on my blog, the Intrepid Liberal Journal. According to the World Bank, almost forty percent of humanity lives on a daily income of less than two dollars per day. Another 1.1 billion scrape by on less than one dollar per day.
How can anyone possibly survive or raise a family with such a meager income? In New York City, two dollars per day won't even cover my daily Brooklyn/Manhattan round-trip subway commute. Yet billions of low skilled people put food on the table, educate their children, grapple with unexpected emergencies and even save money.
In a tour de force of primary research, the authors report that the world's poorest do not live hand to mouth and desperately spend what they earn just to keep from drowning. Instead, they utilize financial tools, rely on "informal" networks through relatives and neighbors and navigate perils such as medical calamities and political strife. Their stories are both inspiring as well as heartbreaking.
Although the world's poorest are far more adept at financial management then previously understood, they're confronted with what the authors describe as the "triple whammy":
- Low income.
- Irregularity of income.
- Unpredictability about when they will earn income.
The authors argue in their book that microfinancing should also be extended to address the needs of exceptionally low-income wage earners as well. It is their contention that poor people in the countries they researched demonstrate on a daily basis that they are responsible money managers and would also be reliable clients of microfinancing services.
One of the authors, Jonathan Morduch, is a New York University ("NYU") professor of economics as well as a managing director of the Financial Access Initiative - a consortium of researchers at NYU, Harvard, Yale, and Innovations for Poverty Action. Morduch, agreed to a telephone podcast interview with me about the book and our conversation was just under twenty-six minutes.
Among the topics covered was how his team earned the confidence of the people interviewed, the informal market tools utilized by the world's poorest in Bangladesh, India and South Africa and why he's a proponent of extending microfinancing to the world's poorest wage earners.
CLICK HERE TO LISTEN TO THIS PODCAST
This interview can also be accessed at no cost via the Itunes Store by searching for either the "Intrepid Liberal Journal" or "Robert Ellman. Another option is to access a flash media player on my blog.
KEYWORDS: Bangladesh, Darryl Collins, India, Jonathan Morduch, microfinancing, Orlanda Ruthven, Portfolios of the Poor, South Africa, Stuart Rutherford
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