The United Nations’ grim assessment of global poverty, particularly in Africa, casts a long shadow over the prospects of achieving the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030.
Countries like Kenya, despite showing economic promise, continue to grapple with the pervasive challenge of lifting a significant portion of their population out of deprivation.
In stark contrast, China’s unprecedented success in lifting more than 800 million people out of poverty within a few decades stands as a monumental achievement in human history.
the Chinese experience offers not a rigid blueprint to be copied, but a rich repository of practical strategies and philosophical approaches that can be adapted to local contexts to accelerate the fight against poverty.
The first critical lesson from China is the primacy of infrastructure-led development.
One of the real causes of poverty in Kenya is the isolation of rural and peri-urban communities.
Author's summary: Applying China's poverty alleviation strategies to Kenya.