Article ID: | iaor20171321 |
Volume: | 35 |
Issue: | 3 |
Start Page Number: | 337 |
End Page Number: | 348 |
Publication Date: | May 2017 |
Journal: | Development Policy Review |
Authors: | Husain Matt M |
Keywords: | developing countries, government, performance |
Poverty is a human construct, yet the Euro‐American development assistance programmes that aim to reduce poverty remain a function of systemic problems, profit and politics. Critics argue that widened global income inequality and neoliberalism's ineffectiveness in the Global South can be reflected in recent geopolitical and epistemic tensions. China's rise as an economic and military power and its authority in setting up the Asian Infrastructure and Investment Bank directly threaten Euro‐American dominance in development discourse. These changes can bring multiple perspectives in the aid effectiveness debate. While these views introduce alternatives to the business approach of poverty reduction, they also make the Sustainable Development Goals appear more significant than ever.