• Int J Health Serv · Jan 2006

    A critique of Jeffrey D. Sachs's The end of poverty.

    • Doug Henwood.
    • Left Business Observer, New York, NY 10013-2505, USA. dhenwood@panix.com
    • Int J Health Serv. 2006 Jan 1;36(1):197-203.

    AbstractJeffrey Sachs's The End of Poverty is a manifesto and how-to guide on ending extreme poverty around the world; it promotes the U.N. Millennium Development Goals. Sachs achieved fame with his policy package for the "stabilization" of Bolivia (which did nothing to relieve Bolivia's poverty), and became advisor to the Yeltsin government in Russia and to Poland, Slovenia, and Estonia as they began their transitions to capitalism (the last three mixed successes; Russia a thorough disaster). Sachs later became more prominent as a critic of development orthodoxy, and was economic advisor to the Jubilee 2000 movement. The End of Poverty is full of sharp critiques of Western imperialism, but his views on the rest of the development business are more conventional.

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