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Some
perceptions on the poverty question in Zimbabwe
Busani Mpofu,
Solidarity Peace Trust
September 16, 2011
http://www.solidaritypeacetrust.org/1109/some-perceptions-on-the-poverty-question-in-zimbabwe/
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The World Bank
estimated urban poverty in Zimbabwe in 1990/91 to be 12 percent
while the 1995 Poverty Assessment Study found urban poverty to be
39 percent. In January 2009, Save the Children estimated that 10
out of 13 million Zimbabweans, over 75 percent of the population,
were living in 'desperate poverty.' In April 2010, UNICEF
noted that 78 percent of Zimbabweans were "absolutely poor"
and 55 percent of the population, (about 6.6 million) lived under
the food poverty line while New Zimbabwe estimated that more than
65 percent of Zimbabweans lived below the poverty datum line in
December 2009. Recently, commentators have argued that it is very
clear that poverty is increasing in the country. The sense we get
from the above statistics is that some agencies have defined certain
percentages of Zimbabweans as poor, below some abstractly conceived
poverty lines. The statistics, however, do not tell us how long
those poor people have existed in poverty conditions or the historical
and social dimensions of people's understandings of poverty-what
it is to 'be poor.'
This article
attempts to tackle some perceptions about poverty in Zimbabwe, partly
addressing the issue of the changing understandings of what being
'poor' has meant to those perceived as poor. Drawing
from the experiences of the urban poor, I also attempt to explore
historical and social dimensions of people's understandings
of poverty-what it is to 'be poor'. This is partly because
what people do for themselves, as poverty alleviation strategies,
presumably turns crucially on how they understand their own circumstances
(rather than on whether the state or some other agency defines them
as poor or not). Inevitably, the centrality of unemployment as the
main cause of poverty featured high among urban Africans during
the colonial period. The conception of unemployment, however, appeared
to have changed in the post-colonial era especially after 2000 when
some professional jobs like teaching began to be associated with
poverty.
Perceptions
on identifying poverty, its causes and solutions as perceived by
the poor themselves, politicians, planners, practitioners, academics
and outsiders vary considerably. Other scholars have contended that
the problem of defining and fighting poverty is more of a political
and technical problem than a rational activity while Pete Alcock
argued that we need not look further than politics and politicians
to find the causes of poverty as they run the country and are therefore
responsible for the problems within it. Understanding poverty thus
also requires an understanding of the social policies which have
been developed in response to it and which have thus removed, restructured
or even recreated it.
A challenge
with studying poverty is that it has many facets and people have
their own varied and changing notions of it. Worse still, the poor
themselves are not a homogeneous group, they are diverse. According
to John Iliffe, it is their diversity that makes it even harder
to study them. The above problematic is also related to various
contested definitions of poverty used by anthropologists, economists,
development workers, geographers, sociologists and urban planners
and historians. Economists sometimes use indexes and formulas to
back up their theories that may be very confusing to historians,
while sociologists and development workers may feel they have the
monopoly of writing about poverty because of the proximity of their
work to the poor in societies and also because the they have at
times used the word poverty as a catchword for some of their programmes.
There is therefore
no one correct, scientific, agreed definition of poverty because
poverty is inevitably a political concept, and thus inherently a
contested one.
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