1 00:00:00,846 --> 00:00:03,984 We are witness to monumental human progress. 2 00:00:04,452 --> 00:00:07,885 Over the past few decades, the expansion of the global marketplace 3 00:00:07,909 --> 00:00:12,690 has lifted a third of the world's population out of extreme poverty. 4 00:00:12,714 --> 00:00:15,693 Yet we are also witness to an astounding failure. 5 00:00:16,222 --> 00:00:17,988 Our efforts to lift people up 6 00:00:18,012 --> 00:00:21,474 have left behind those in the harshest forms of poverty, 7 00:00:21,498 --> 00:00:23,019 the ultra-poor. 8 00:00:23,043 --> 00:00:27,164 What it means to be ultra-poor goes beyond the monetary definition 9 00:00:27,188 --> 00:00:29,042 that we're all familiar with: 10 00:00:29,066 --> 00:00:31,236 living on less than two dollars a day. 11 00:00:31,620 --> 00:00:34,847 It goes even beyond not having assets 12 00:00:34,871 --> 00:00:36,910 like livestock or land. 13 00:00:36,934 --> 00:00:41,002 To be ultra-poor means to be stripped of your dignity, 14 00:00:41,026 --> 00:00:42,658 purpose and self-worth. 15 00:00:43,114 --> 00:00:45,085 It means living in isolation, 16 00:00:45,109 --> 00:00:47,430 because you're a burden to your own community. 17 00:00:48,004 --> 00:00:51,321 It means being unable to imagine a better future 18 00:00:51,345 --> 00:00:53,004 for yourself and your family. 19 00:00:53,941 --> 00:00:55,764 By the end of 2019, 20 00:00:55,788 --> 00:01:00,694 about 400 million people were living in ultra-poverty worldwide. 21 00:01:00,718 --> 00:01:05,325 That's more than the populations of the United States and Canada combined. 22 00:01:06,071 --> 00:01:07,742 And when calamity strikes, 23 00:01:07,766 --> 00:01:12,299 whether it's a pandemic, a natural disaster or a manmade crisis, 24 00:01:12,323 --> 00:01:15,188 these numbers spike astronomically higher. 25 00:01:16,038 --> 00:01:19,814 My father, Fazle Abed, gave up a corporate career 26 00:01:19,838 --> 00:01:23,717 to establish BRAC here in Bangladesh in 1972. 27 00:01:23,741 --> 00:01:25,572 Bangladesh was a wreck, 28 00:01:25,596 --> 00:01:28,522 having just gone through a devastating cyclone 29 00:01:28,546 --> 00:01:31,365 followed by a brutal war for independence. 30 00:01:31,849 --> 00:01:35,432 Working with the poorest of the poor, my father realized 31 00:01:35,456 --> 00:01:39,617 that poverty was more than the lack of income and assets. 32 00:01:39,641 --> 00:01:42,171 It was also a lack of hope. 33 00:01:42,965 --> 00:01:45,049 People were trapped in poverty, 34 00:01:45,073 --> 00:01:48,796 because they felt their condition was immutable. 35 00:01:48,820 --> 00:01:51,828 Poverty, to them, was like the sun and the moon -- 36 00:01:51,852 --> 00:01:54,176 something given to them by God. 37 00:01:54,703 --> 00:01:57,621 For poverty reduction programs to succeed, 38 00:01:57,645 --> 00:02:00,675 they would need to instill hope and self-worth 39 00:02:00,699 --> 00:02:02,807 so that, with a little support, 40 00:02:02,831 --> 00:02:05,277 people could lift themselves out of poverty. 41 00:02:05,737 --> 00:02:09,128 BRAC went on to pioneer the graduation approach, 42 00:02:09,152 --> 00:02:13,233 a solution to ultra-poverty that addresses both income poverty 43 00:02:13,257 --> 00:02:14,979 and the poverty of hope. 44 00:02:15,487 --> 00:02:17,883 The approach works primarily with women, 45 00:02:17,907 --> 00:02:21,141 because women are the most affected by ultra-poverty 46 00:02:21,165 --> 00:02:24,504 but also the ones most likely to pull themselves and their families 47 00:02:24,528 --> 00:02:25,680 out of it. 48 00:02:25,704 --> 00:02:27,337 Over a two-year period, 49 00:02:27,361 --> 00:02:29,428 we essentially do four things. 50 00:02:29,769 --> 00:02:32,989 One, we meet a woman's basic needs 51 00:02:33,013 --> 00:02:35,508 by giving her food or cash, 52 00:02:35,532 --> 00:02:38,112 ensuring the minimum to survive. 53 00:02:38,136 --> 00:02:41,362 Two, we move her towards a decent livelihood 54 00:02:41,386 --> 00:02:44,269 by giving her an asset, like livestock, 55 00:02:44,293 --> 00:02:47,057 and training her to earn money from it. 56 00:02:47,081 --> 00:02:50,355 Three, we train her to save, budget 57 00:02:50,379 --> 00:02:52,248 and invest her new wealth. 58 00:02:52,272 --> 00:02:55,820 And four, we help to integrate her socially, 59 00:02:55,844 --> 00:02:58,180 first into groups of women like her 60 00:02:58,204 --> 00:03:00,057 and then into her community. 61 00:03:00,573 --> 00:03:04,247 Each of these elements is key to the success of the others, 62 00:03:04,271 --> 00:03:08,009 but the real magic is the hope and sense of possibility 63 00:03:08,033 --> 00:03:11,602 the women develop through the close mentorship they receive. 64 00:03:12,098 --> 00:03:14,469 Let me tell you about Jorina. 65 00:03:14,493 --> 00:03:18,933 Jorina was born in a remote village in northern Bangladesh. 66 00:03:18,957 --> 00:03:20,449 She never went to school, 67 00:03:20,473 --> 00:03:24,647 and at the age of 15, she was married off to an abusive husband. 68 00:03:24,671 --> 00:03:26,710 He eventually abandoned her, 69 00:03:26,734 --> 00:03:28,514 leaving her with no income 70 00:03:28,538 --> 00:03:33,047 and two children who were not in school and were severely malnourished. 71 00:03:33,071 --> 00:03:35,336 With no one to turn to for help, 72 00:03:35,360 --> 00:03:36,828 she had no hope. 73 00:03:37,366 --> 00:03:41,534 Jorina joined BRAC's Graduation program in 2005. 74 00:03:42,050 --> 00:03:43,999 She received a dollar a week, 75 00:03:44,023 --> 00:03:45,182 two cows, 76 00:03:45,206 --> 00:03:46,757 enterprise training 77 00:03:46,781 --> 00:03:49,019 and a weekly visit from a mentor. 78 00:03:49,499 --> 00:03:51,464 She began to build her assets, 79 00:03:51,488 --> 00:03:53,183 but most importantly, 80 00:03:53,207 --> 00:03:57,100 she began to imagine a better future for herself and her children. 81 00:03:57,611 --> 00:04:00,456 If you were visit Jorina's village today, 82 00:04:00,480 --> 00:04:04,426 you would find that she runs the largest general store in her area. 83 00:04:04,450 --> 00:04:06,926 She will proudly show you the land she bought 84 00:04:06,950 --> 00:04:08,509 and the house she built. 85 00:04:09,125 --> 00:04:12,345 Since we began this program in 2002, 86 00:04:12,369 --> 00:04:14,281 two million Bangladeshi women 87 00:04:14,305 --> 00:04:18,163 have lifted themselves and their families out of ultra-poverty. 88 00:04:18,187 --> 00:04:20,526 That's almost nine million people. 89 00:04:21,026 --> 00:04:24,623 The program, which costs 500 dollars per household, 90 00:04:24,647 --> 00:04:26,356 runs for only two years, 91 00:04:26,380 --> 00:04:28,964 but the impact goes well beyond that. 92 00:04:28,988 --> 00:04:32,031 Researchers at the London School of Economics found 93 00:04:32,055 --> 00:04:34,906 that even seven years after entering the program, 94 00:04:34,930 --> 00:04:39,464 92 percent of participants had maintained or increased 95 00:04:39,488 --> 00:04:41,992 their income, assets and consumption. 96 00:04:42,531 --> 00:04:44,798 Esther Duflo and Abhijit Banerjee, 97 00:04:44,822 --> 00:04:48,239 the MIT economists who won the Nobel Prize last year, 98 00:04:48,263 --> 00:04:50,649 led multicountry evaluations 99 00:04:50,673 --> 00:04:54,594 that identified graduation as one of the most effective ways 100 00:04:54,618 --> 00:04:56,373 to break the poverty trap. 101 00:04:56,742 --> 00:04:58,785 But my father wasn't content 102 00:04:58,809 --> 00:05:02,066 to have found a solution that worked for some people. 103 00:05:02,090 --> 00:05:05,616 He always wanted to know whether we were being ambitious enough 104 00:05:05,640 --> 00:05:07,013 in terms of scale. 105 00:05:07,037 --> 00:05:10,776 So when we achieved nationwide scale in Bangladesh, 106 00:05:10,800 --> 00:05:13,900 he wanted to know how we could scale it globally. 107 00:05:14,313 --> 00:05:16,967 And that has to involve governments. 108 00:05:16,991 --> 00:05:19,781 Governments already dedicate billions of dollars 109 00:05:19,805 --> 00:05:22,251 on poverty reduction programs. 110 00:05:22,275 --> 00:05:24,832 But so much of that money is wasted, 111 00:05:24,856 --> 00:05:27,993 because these programs either don't reach the poorest, 112 00:05:28,017 --> 00:05:32,474 and even the ones that do fail to have significant long-term impact. 113 00:05:33,085 --> 00:05:35,739 We are working to engage governments 114 00:05:35,763 --> 00:05:40,201 to help them to adopt and scale graduation programs themselves, 115 00:05:40,225 --> 00:05:44,128 maximizing the impact of the billions of dollars 116 00:05:44,152 --> 00:05:47,179 they already allocate to fight ultra-poverty. 117 00:05:47,898 --> 00:05:51,858 Our plan is to help another 21 million people 118 00:05:51,882 --> 00:05:54,349 lift themselves out of ultra-poverty 119 00:05:54,373 --> 00:05:57,577 in eight countries over the next six years 120 00:05:57,601 --> 00:06:01,753 with BRAC teams on-site and embedded in each country. 121 00:06:02,410 --> 00:06:07,814 In July of 2019, my father was diagnosed with terminal brain cancer 122 00:06:07,838 --> 00:06:09,722 and given four months to live. 123 00:06:10,360 --> 00:06:15,534 As he transitioned out of BRAC after leading the organization for 47 years, 124 00:06:15,558 --> 00:06:18,529 he reminded us that throughout his life, 125 00:06:18,553 --> 00:06:21,806 he saw optimism triumph over despair, 126 00:06:21,830 --> 00:06:25,154 that when you light the spark of self-belief in people, 127 00:06:25,178 --> 00:06:28,576 even the poorest can transform their lives. 128 00:06:29,375 --> 00:06:31,542 My father passed away in December. 129 00:06:33,149 --> 00:06:36,523 He lit that spark for millions of people, 130 00:06:36,547 --> 00:06:38,558 and in the final days of his life, 131 00:06:38,582 --> 00:06:43,346 he implored us to continue to do so for millions more. 132 00:06:43,887 --> 00:06:46,971 This opportunity is ours for the taking, 133 00:06:46,995 --> 00:06:50,466 so let's stop imagining a world without ultra-poverty 134 00:06:50,490 --> 00:06:53,325 and start building that world together. 135 00:06:53,707 --> 00:06:54,944 Thank you.