The End of Poverty WORKSHEET
The End of Poverty WORKSHEET
The End of Poverty WORKSHEET
the award-winning
DOCUMENTARY
The aphorism "The poor are always with us" dates back to the New Testament, but
while the phrase is still sadly apt in the 21st century, few seem to be able to explain
why poverty is so widespread. Activist filmmaker Philippe Diaz examines the history
and impact of economic inequality in the third world in The End of Poverty?, and
makes the compelling argument that it's not an accident or simple bad luck that has
created a growing underclass around the world. Diaz traces the growth of global
poverty back to colonization in the 15th century, and features interviews with a
number of economists, sociologists, and historians who explain how poverty is the
clear consequence of free-market economic policies that allow powerful nations to
exploit poorer countries for their assets and keep money in the hands of the wealthy
rather than distributing it more equitably to the people who have helped them gain
their fortunes. Diaz also explores how wealthy nations (especially the United States)
seize a disproportionate share of the world's natural resources, and how this
imbalance is having a dire impact on the environment as well as the economy..
2.
What
does
their
_______________________
daily
wage
come
to?
JOAO PEDRO
leader, Brazil
STEDILE
Landless
Movement
techniques,
such
textiles
was
________and forced upon ________
exported
from
CASE
STUDY
VENEZUELA
6.
Indebtness
CARACAS,
professor
historian,
JOSEPH STIGLITZ former World Bank VicePresident, Nobel Prize economics, USA
Among what 3 institutions was the set of policies, the
Washington Consensus reached?
the ________, the ________ and the US ________________
What was its particular view that did NOT reflect a
good economic theory? It had a particular
________________ view of ecomics
SUSAN GEORGE- author, Transnational Institute,
France
JIM SHULTZ president, Democracy Center,
Cochabamba, Bolivia
ABEL MAMANI, Water Minister, Bolivia
All of the public companies has had to be
______________ () under structural adjustment
programs. So you get an opportunity for private
companies to extract wealth () Their number was
____________ to _____________ companies a year. They
were sometimes bought by local ________, particularly
the larger ones were bought by our own
______________ _____________.
Bolivia was the _________, the cheap ________ for
these
policies,
privatisation,
market
fundamentalism.
ALMOST
________________ OF THE WORLDS
POPULATION HAS NO ACCESS TO ________________
________________ WATER.
JOHN CHRISTENSEN DIRECTOR, TAX JUSTICE
NETWORK, THE UK
The IMF and the WORLD BANK by liberalizing capital
flows opened up a wholy new criminal environment
where capital can be shifted into tax havens (territories or
countries where certain taxes are levied at a low rate or not at all Individuals or corporations
can find it attractiveto move themselves to areas with reduced or nil taxation levels. This
of huge corporations
and the pockets of a few wealthy families who control
the planet's natural resources.
money that an organization has available to spend )
The first attempts to commercialize fair trade goods in Northern markets were
initiated in the 1940s and 1950s by religious groups and various politically oriented nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) Fair trade is an organized social movement whose
stated goal is to help producers in developing countries achieve better trading conditions and
to promote sustainability. Members of the movement advocate the payment of higher prices
to exporters, as well as higher social and environmental standards. The movement seeks to
promote greater equity in international trading partnerships through dialogue,
transparency, and respect. It promotes sustainable development by offering better trading
conditions to, and securing the rights of, marginalized producers and workers in developing
countries.