A new focus for USAID: Ending extreme poverty

A family rides their fishing boat in Tonle Sap, Cambodia. Ending $1.25-a-day poverty in two decades is an ambitious goal for Rajiv Shah and the USAID. Photo by: hectorbuelta / CC-BY

EDITOR’S NOTE: First it was World Bank President Jim Kim, now USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah. Charles Kenny, senior fellow at the Center for Global Development, analyzes Shah’s vision to end $1.25-a-day poverty in two decades.

On Thursday, USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah is set to give a speech at the Brookings Institution on the goal of ending extreme poverty, planned to put a bit more policy oomph behind U.S. President Barack Obama’s call in the State of the Union address earlier this year for America to join with its allies to end $1.25 poverty in two decades. Here’s some things it would be great to hear in the speech:

There’s one thing I’m pretty sure will be in the speech and I’m happy about it — and that’s optimism. The proportion of the world in absolute poverty has gone from about one half to about one fifth since 1990. Global child mortality has halved. Continued and rapid development progress is eminently possible, and there’s a big role for the United States and USAID to play in supporting it. While Shah’s reform agenda has got a long way to go, he has made some real progress in making the agency a better tool to support global development. If he can use the drive to end global extreme poverty as a means to further improve and target U.S. aid so it can make the most difference, here’s hoping Thursday’s speech is a blockbuster.

 Edited for style and republished with permission from the Center for Global Development. Read the original article.