Development Works Number 1, March 2012

Number 1, March 2012 Development Works Bread for the World Institute provides policy analysis on hunger and strategies to end it. The Institute educates its network, opinion leaders, policy makers and the public about hunger in the United States and abroad. Snapshot Laura Elizabeth Pohl • Development assistance enables people in poor countries to build a better life for themselves and their children. Jane Sabbi and her sister-in-law work in their garden in Uganda. Sabbi now cultivates beans and vegetables to help give her children the nutrients they need. Effective Development Assistance: Now Is The Time Bread for the World and other organizations working to end global hunger frequently talk about development assistance and how it can help hungry people overseas. But what exactly is development assistance? And why should we support funding for it when many Americans are facing hard times? Development Assistance Means…. Bees and chickens Most of Alexander Appiah’s friends had left his hometown, Nkwabeng, Ghana, to work in nearby cities. But at 28, Appiah wanted to farm. He had few resources; he and his wife were just scraping by with a quarter-acre of cassava and yams and his off-season job as a farm laborer. 1 • In developing countries, investing small amounts in training, tools, or start-up costs can yield significant improvements because people make good use of the resources available to them. Development assistance helps communities and nations strengthen their economies and create better living conditions— for example, by enabling people to buy seeds and fertilizers, establish small businesses, or meet public needs such as clean water. • Countries develop successful strategies against hunger by using their own resources and development assistance to strengthen the essentials, such as more productive farms and access to nutritious food and basic health care, particularly for vulnerable groups such as pregnant women and young children. • Effective development assistance saves millions of lives every year—and this is done through programs that the United States can afford. It is both the right thing and the smart thing to do.