poverty
TRANSCRIPT
Have Nots - Did you feel you were getting anywhere talking to the Haves? Why or Why not? Do you have any other alternatives to solve your problems?
Haves - Why was it easy to laugh at, and look down on the Have Nots?
What problems cause the differences between Haves and Have Nots? Which causes are the most important?
Famine in Ethiopia – Should this woman “get a job?”
Hardim, West Hararghe, Ethiopia - Zeinab Aliye has no
more milk to give her nine-year-old son, Ahmed. The
family has eaten all their food and their farm has been totally
devastated by the drought. Nutritional surveys in several
regions of Ethiopia are already showing increased cases of
malnutrition such as marasmus and kwashiorkor
among children and the elderly.
Starving children searching for insects to eat in Sudan
What is it like to be a Have Not? Who gets to eat?
Boy showing symptoms of
malnutrition in
Malawi
How does hunger affect Have Nots?
Priyanka, 3, an Indian slum girl breaks stones next to her siblings on the banks of the river Mahanada in the north-eastern city of Siliguri. Priyanka earns 150 rupees ($3) a week.Over 400 million people in India live below the internationally agreed poverty line (living on less than US $1 per day). According to estimates, several hundred thousand children work as labourers and beg on streets in India.
“Tell those lazy Have Nots to get an education and fix their own problems”???
There are 100,000,000 children at work today
“Don’t ask me to help you – GET A JOB!
How can the weather and climate cause hunger?
What age group is most affected by famine?
Children in Zimbabwe
waiting for a meal.
Street children in Russia
Woman in Sierra Leona – What does she have to do to cook this food.
Where does your next meal come from?
Eritrea's plight
In a good year she grows enough sorghum to feed her family and still has enough to sell at market. But last year's harvest produced nothing, so this year she has sold all her livestock just to buy supplies. "We eat until the food runs out," she said, "After that we either have to cancel the meal or search for some leaves (traditionally eaten by her tribe - the Kunama). There used to be leaves, but now even those have gone, we are in big trouble."
Honduras – Not all Have Nots look alike
El Salvador
“Just have less babies”
Is that the answer?
Dentistry in Peru
Boy walking past rubble in Albania
How does war affect the Have Nots?
Where do you get your meal when the street is your home?
Homeless girls in southeast Asia.
Brazilian boy working in the fields.
Will he be able to get an education and improve his life?
Flooding
in
Cambodia
Children fetching water in Osh, Kyrgyzstan
Where did your last drink of water come from?
Mother and baby from Peru
Boy from Malawi
Can he change world poverty?
Who can?
Girl from Moldova, Russia
How poor do you have to be to be a Have Not?
Village in Malawi – How many clothes do you own?
Standpipe in Peru
Peruvian woman weaving
How much should she get paid?
Fresh water supply in Engucwini, Malawi
Villagers around a well in Kwabangasi Uganda
Girl tending to
Family chores in Malawi
Laundry and bathing in Malawi
A Cambodian boy who works on the streets of Phnom Penh collecting rubbish to supplement his families income
Who works harder for what they make, Haves or Have Nots?
Laborers processing sissal (rope) in Nova Palmares community, North- East Brazil.
Is education the answer?
What do you do to help yourself when your parents are dead from war, famine or AIDS?
How long do you expect to live?
What “quality of life” should you experience?
Get a job?
Who are the parents when the average age in the country is 17 years?
What does your house look like?
Who should help? Do you have to be a star?
International star Bono of the Irish rock band U2 performs at the Live 8 concert to raise world understanding of global hunger.
Where do you draw the boundaries that separate people?
Who owns this world?
Rank Country GDP - per capita
1 East Timor $ 500
2 Somalia $ 500
3 Sierra Leone $ 500
4 Malawi $ 600
5 Tanzania $ 600
6 Burundi $ 600
7 Congo, Republic of the $ 700
8 Congo, Democratic Republic of the $ 700
9 Comoros $ 700
10 Eritrea $ 700
11 Ethiopia $ 700
12 Afghanistan $ 700
13 Niger $ 800
14 Yemen $ 800
15 Madagascar $ 800
16 Guinea-Bissau $ 800
17 Zambia $ 800
18 Kiribati $ 800
19 Nigeria $ 900
20 Mali $ 900
Poorest Countries in the World
Rank Country GDP - per capita
1 Luxembourg $ 55,100
2 Norway $ 37,800
3 United States $ 37,800
4 San Marino $ 34,600
5 Switzerland $ 32,700
6 Denmark $ 31,100
7 Iceland $ 30,900
8 Austria $ 30,000
9 Canada $ 29,800
10 Ireland $ 29,600
11 Belgium $ 29,100
12 Australia $ 29,000
13 Netherlands $ 28,600
14 Japan $ 28,200
15 United Kingdom $ 27,700
16 France $ 27,600
17 Germany $ 27,600
18 Finland $ 27,400
19 Monaco $ 27,000
20 Sweden $ 26,800
Richest Countries in the World
According to UNICEF, 30,000 children die each day due to poverty. And they “die quietly in some of the poorest villages on earth, far removed from the scrutiny and the conscience of the world. That is about 210,000 children each week, or just under 11 million children under five years of age, each year.
Today, across the world
1.3 billion people live on less than one dollar a day
3 billion live on under two dollars a day
1.3 billion have no access to clean water
3 billion have no access to sanitation
2 billion have no access to electricity
William H. Gates
Today he is worth a staggering
$52.8 billion .
He could pay the salary of President George W. Bush (US$400,000) for
132,000 years
You could win Survivor 52,000 times and still not match up to his fortune.
The GDP (Gross Domestic Product) of the poorest 48 nations (i.e. a quarter of the world’s countries) is less than the wealth of the world’s three richest people combined.
Richest People in the World Rank Country Individual 1 United States Gates, William H III 2 United States Buffett, Warren E 3 India Lakshmi Mittal 4 Mexico Carlos Slim Helu 5 Saudi Arabia Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Alsaud 6 Sweden Ingvar Kamprad 7 United States Paul Allen 8 Germany Karl Albrecht 9 United States Lawrence Ellison 10 United States S Robson Walton
1 United States, William Gates III 2 United States Warren Buffett
3 India Mittal Lakshmi
What we spent in Billions of Dollars Cosmetics in the United States 8 bIce cream in Europe 11 bPerfumes in Europe and the United States 12 bPet foods in Europe and the United States 17 bBusiness entertainment in Japan 35 bCigarettes in Europe 50 bAlcoholic drinks in Europe 105 bNarcotics drugs in the world 400 bMilitary spending in the world 780 b
What is needed in Billions of dollarsBasic education for all 6 bWater and sanitation for all 9 bReproductive health for all women 12 bBasic health and nutrition 13 b