A
A

Esther Duflo: Poverty is not that simple

31 min
Watch episode

$2 (about €1.85) a day is enough to cover all basic necessities? This is the World Bank's yardstick for defining extreme poverty, already even factoring in differences in purchasing power between different countries around the world. 

Esther Duflo, who won the Nobel Prize for Economics in 2019 for her work on ways to combat extreme poverty, offers some thoughts on how we can curb inequality. The author advocates «practical solutions», arguing that «it's much easier to think about the effect of something than its cause», and reveals how small measures can have a big impact. 

The economist advocates approaching problems with a «plumber's mentality». By adopting this strategy, she shows how important it is to experiment with various solutions until you find a solution.

In this interview, the Nobel laureate explains how small changes in access to health and education have long-term implications for the lives of the poorest people. Using deworming children in Kenya as an example, she shows how this measure has not only led to improvements in health, but has also helped reduce school absenteeism, providing pupils with better quality education.

Esther Duflo also highlights immigrants’ economic contributions, stressing that the workforce and youth immigrants provide, benefit rather than hinder economic development.

In the fight against poverty, climate change is fueling new inequalities: the richest countries are the biggest polluters, but it is the poorest who are suffering the consequences of the climate crisis the most. In light of this, Duflo calls for a global solution to this problem.

How do you rate this content?
Your opinion is important
0
4 votes
51
Episodes
1
Entrevista a Yuval Noah Harari ao vivo em Lisboa para o programa digital «Não é assim tão simples»
Yuval Noah Harari live: Humanity is not that simple

Live from Portugal for the first time, historian and writer Yuval Noah Harari, author of Sapiens and Homo Deus, reflects on the advances of humanity, its greatest threats and how...

43 min
More about this content

Live from Portugal for the first time, historian and writer Yuval Noah Harari, author of Sapiens and Homo Deus, reflects on the advances of humanity, its greatest threats and how...

2
O escritor e historiador Yuval Noah Harari com a cientista maria Manuel Mota e Adolfo Mesquita Nunes
Yuval Noah Harari live: The future of humanity: challenges for the 21st century

Live from Portugal for the first time, historian and writer Yuval Noah Harari discusses «The Future of Humanity», challenged by questions from scientist and Pessoa Prize winner...

29 min
More about this content

Live from Portugal for the first time, historian and writer Yuval Noah Harari discusses «The Future of Humanity», challenged by questions from scientist and Pessoa Prize winner...

3
Imagem de Daniel Ziblatt, o convidado da entrevista «Democracia não é assim tão simples»
Daniel Ziblatt: Democracy is not that simple

Is democracy dying? What challenges do democracies face today? How can they overcome these challenges? To answer these questions, Pedro Pinto interviews Harvard University...

29 min
More about this content

Is democracy dying? What challenges do democracies face today? How can they overcome these challenges? To answer these questions, Pedro Pinto interviews Harvard University...

4
Imagem da psicóloga norte-americana Laurie Santos
Laurie Santos: Happiness is not that simple

Is there a model for happiness? How can we counteract the biological tendency to repeat the same mistakes? Is happiness a neurological issue, regardless of whether we are rich or...

29 min
More about this content

Is there a model for happiness? How can we counteract the biological tendency to repeat the same mistakes? Is happiness a neurological issue, regardless of whether we are rich or...

Isto não é assim tão simples, entrevistas pela Fundação Francisco Manuel dos Santos
Série
Entrevista
48EPISODES
2021

Big issues, big names in a new programme dedicated to interviews with international personalities from the world of politics, economics and society. These conversations with special guests, conducted by journalist Pedro Pinto, aim to simplify and help demystify some of today's most important issues. Every month, on the Foundation's website.

Read less