Foreign Policy Blogs

No silver bullets

I am currently reading the Millennium Villages 2008 Annual Report.  Here’s some food for thought:

The MVP (Millennium Villages Project) is highlighting the value and feasibility of integrated community-based investments, rather than the one-by-one investment strategies too often deployed in rural areas.  Because of budgetary limitations, donors and NGOs too often search for a single “highest impact” or magic bullet initiative that will be most “cost effective”: girls’ education, safe water and sanitation, HIV/AIDS control, livestock, and so forth.  One or maybe two of these are deployed in a village, without the benefit of a more holistic strategy.  The result, all too often, is the lack of sustainability of the individual investment, and the lack of an overall breakthrough out of the poverty trap.  Such one-dimensional strategies fail to reach threshold levels of community capital investment needed to break the poverty trap.  Page 55-56

 

Author

Cynthia Schweer Rayner

Cynthia Schweer Rayner is an independent consultant and philanthropy advisor specializing in public health, social entrepreneurship and scalable business models for positive social change. As a recovering management consultant, she spent several months living in South Africa, and later co-founded the US branch of an organization providing support to orphaned and vulnerable children. In 2009, she was an LGT Venture Philanthropy Fellow, working with mothers2mothers (m2m), a multinational non-profit organization employing mothers living with HIV as peer educators to positive pregnant women. She currently works with individuals, companies and nonprofits to finance and develop models for positive change. Cynthia has an MBA from INSEAD and a BA in English Literature from Georgetown University. She currently lives in Cape Town and visits New York frequently, where she co-owns a Manhattan-based yoga studio, mang'Oh yoga (www.mangohstudio.com).