It
is very difficult to know the impact of
the MDGs on poverty reduction. On the
one hand, poverty measurements are ambiguous,
arbitrary and contested, even in the best
of cases such as China and India. On the
other hand, the mechanisms by which MDGs
might have effected poverty reduction
are not at all clear, particularly in
light of the major global structural processes
that condition the impact of aid flows
and development more generally. Moreover,
the emphasis in the MDGs on absolute measures
and the implicit bias towards targeting
quite possibly undermine poverty reduction
in many contexts. Hence, this article
argues that the MDGs should be replaced
by a re-politicisation of the mainstream
development agenda, together with a genuine
revival of emphasis on universalistic
modes of social policy as viable means
of dealing simultaneously with poverty
and inequality.
*THIS ARTICLE
WAS ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED IN IDS BULLETIN,
VOLUME 41, NUMBER 1, JANUARY 2010
February
3, 2010.
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