1 00:00:01,166 --> 00:00:04,236 I've been living in rural East Africa for about 10 years, 2 00:00:04,260 --> 00:00:07,440 and I want to share a field perspective with you on global poverty. 3 00:00:07,934 --> 00:00:10,508 I believe that the greatest failure of the human race 4 00:00:10,532 --> 00:00:13,938 is the fact that we've left more than one billion of our members behind. 5 00:00:14,335 --> 00:00:16,677 Hungry, extreme poverty: 6 00:00:16,701 --> 00:00:19,989 these often seem like gigantic, insurmountable problems, 7 00:00:20,013 --> 00:00:21,446 too big to solve. 8 00:00:22,006 --> 00:00:23,715 But as a field practitioner, 9 00:00:23,739 --> 00:00:26,543 I believe these are actually very solvable problems 10 00:00:26,567 --> 00:00:29,008 if we just take the right strategies. 11 00:00:30,390 --> 00:00:32,505 Archimedes was an ancient Greek thinker, 12 00:00:32,529 --> 00:00:35,013 and he taught us that if we lean on the right levers, 13 00:00:35,037 --> 00:00:36,447 we can move the world. 14 00:00:36,959 --> 00:00:40,675 In the fight against extreme poverty, I believe there are three powerful levers 15 00:00:40,699 --> 00:00:42,072 that we can lean on. 16 00:00:42,096 --> 00:00:45,098 This talk is all about those levers, and why they make poverty 17 00:00:45,122 --> 00:00:47,207 a winnable fight in our lifetimes. 18 00:00:47,994 --> 00:00:49,396 What is extreme poverty? 19 00:00:50,287 --> 00:00:52,232 When I first moved to rural East Africa, 20 00:00:52,256 --> 00:00:54,156 I stayed overnight with a farm family. 21 00:00:54,629 --> 00:00:56,729 They were wonderful people. 22 00:00:56,753 --> 00:00:59,625 They invited me into their home. We sang songs together 23 00:00:59,649 --> 00:01:00,800 and ate a simple dinner. 24 00:01:00,824 --> 00:01:02,928 They gave me a blanket to sleep on the floor. 25 00:01:03,359 --> 00:01:05,738 In the morning, however, there was nothing to eat. 26 00:01:06,265 --> 00:01:09,702 And then at lunchtime, I watched with an increasingly sick feeling 27 00:01:10,041 --> 00:01:14,133 as the eldest girl in the family cooked porridge as a substitute for lunch. 28 00:01:14,703 --> 00:01:18,907 For that meal, every child drank one cup to survive. 29 00:01:19,575 --> 00:01:21,565 And I cannot tell you how ashamed I felt 30 00:01:21,589 --> 00:01:23,552 when they handed one of those cups to me, 31 00:01:23,576 --> 00:01:26,048 and I knew I had to accept their hospitality. 32 00:01:26,781 --> 00:01:30,761 Children need food not only to survive but also to grow physically and mentally. 33 00:01:31,265 --> 00:01:34,431 Every day they fail to eat, they lose a little bit of their future. 34 00:01:35,114 --> 00:01:37,996 Amongst the extreme poor, one in three children 35 00:01:38,020 --> 00:01:41,620 are permanently stunted from a lifetime of not eating enough. 36 00:01:42,326 --> 00:01:44,838 When that's combined with poor access to health care, 37 00:01:44,862 --> 00:01:49,322 one in 10 extremely poor children die before they reach age five. 38 00:01:49,819 --> 00:01:52,356 And only one quarter of children complete high school 39 00:01:52,380 --> 00:01:53,884 because they lack school fees. 40 00:01:53,908 --> 00:01:59,680 Hunger and extreme poverty curb human potential in every possible way. 41 00:02:00,771 --> 00:02:05,061 We see ourselves as a thinking, feeling and moral human race, 42 00:02:05,085 --> 00:02:08,120 but until we solve these problems for all of our members, 43 00:02:08,144 --> 00:02:09,829 we fail that standard, 44 00:02:10,332 --> 00:02:12,674 because every person on this planet matters. 45 00:02:12,698 --> 00:02:14,490 This child matters. 46 00:02:15,125 --> 00:02:16,884 These children matter. 47 00:02:17,638 --> 00:02:19,442 This girl matters. 48 00:02:20,209 --> 00:02:21,898 You know, we see things like this, 49 00:02:21,922 --> 00:02:23,499 and we're upset by them, 50 00:02:23,523 --> 00:02:25,325 but they seem like such big problems. 51 00:02:25,349 --> 00:02:28,184 We don't know how to take effective action. 52 00:02:28,893 --> 00:02:30,790 But remember our friend Archimedes. 53 00:02:31,572 --> 00:02:33,900 Global poverty has powerful levers. 54 00:02:33,924 --> 00:02:35,513 It's a problem like any other. 55 00:02:36,023 --> 00:02:38,469 I live and work in the field, and as a practitioner, 56 00:02:38,493 --> 00:02:41,296 I believe these are very solvable problems. 57 00:02:41,320 --> 00:02:42,801 So for the next 10 minutes, 58 00:02:42,825 --> 00:02:44,979 let's not be sad about the state of the world. 59 00:02:45,003 --> 00:02:46,503 Let's engage our brains. 60 00:02:46,858 --> 00:02:49,603 Let's engage our collective passion for problem-solving 61 00:02:49,627 --> 00:02:51,816 and figure out what those levers are. 62 00:02:52,416 --> 00:02:55,569 Lever number one: most of the world's poor are farmers. 63 00:02:56,157 --> 00:02:58,220 Think about how extraordinary this is. 64 00:02:58,244 --> 00:03:00,705 If this picture represents the world's poor, 65 00:03:00,729 --> 00:03:04,034 then more than half engage in farming as a major source of income. 66 00:03:04,368 --> 00:03:06,295 This gets me really excited. 67 00:03:06,319 --> 00:03:08,671 All of these people, one profession. 68 00:03:09,247 --> 00:03:10,703 Think how powerful this is. 69 00:03:10,727 --> 00:03:14,245 When farmers become more productive, then more than half the world's poor 70 00:03:14,269 --> 00:03:16,673 earn more money and climb out of poverty. 71 00:03:16,697 --> 00:03:17,917 And it gets better. 72 00:03:17,941 --> 00:03:20,196 The product of farming is, of course, food. 73 00:03:20,220 --> 00:03:23,825 So when farmers become more productive, they earn more food, 74 00:03:23,849 --> 00:03:25,570 and they don't just help themselves, 75 00:03:25,594 --> 00:03:28,820 but they help to feed healthy communities and thriving economies. 76 00:03:29,228 --> 00:03:32,801 And when farmers become more productive, they reduce environmental pressure. 77 00:03:33,443 --> 00:03:35,725 We only have two ways we can feed the world: 78 00:03:35,749 --> 00:03:39,072 we can either make our existing farmland a lot more productive, 79 00:03:39,096 --> 00:03:42,376 or we can clear cut forest and savannah to make more farmland, 80 00:03:42,400 --> 00:03:44,650 which would be environmentally disastrous. 81 00:03:45,688 --> 00:03:49,000 Farmers are basically a really important leverage point. 82 00:03:49,496 --> 00:03:51,429 When farmers become more productive, 83 00:03:51,453 --> 00:03:54,064 they earn more income, they climb out of poverty, 84 00:03:54,088 --> 00:03:58,163 they feed their communities and they reduce environmental land pressure. 85 00:03:58,187 --> 00:04:00,832 Farmers stand at the center of the world. 86 00:04:02,306 --> 00:04:04,006 And not a farmer like this one, 87 00:04:04,030 --> 00:04:05,625 but rather this lady. 88 00:04:06,055 --> 00:04:08,211 Most of the farmers I know are actually women. 89 00:04:08,699 --> 00:04:11,971 Look at the strength and the will radiating from this woman. 90 00:04:11,995 --> 00:04:14,207 She is physically strong, mentally tough, 91 00:04:14,231 --> 00:04:17,662 and she will do whatever it takes to earn a better life for her children. 92 00:04:17,686 --> 00:04:20,830 If we're going to put the future of humanity in one person's hands, 93 00:04:20,854 --> 00:04:22,667 then I'm really glad it's her. 94 00:04:22,691 --> 00:04:28,101 (Applause) 95 00:04:28,125 --> 00:04:29,381 There's just one problem: 96 00:04:29,405 --> 00:04:34,148 many smallholder farmers lack access to basic tools and knowledge. 97 00:04:34,748 --> 00:04:38,436 Currently, they take a little bit of saved food grain from the prior year, 98 00:04:38,460 --> 00:04:41,840 they plant it in the ground and they till it with a manual hand hoe. 99 00:04:41,864 --> 00:04:44,629 These are tools and techniques that date to the Bronze Age, 100 00:04:44,653 --> 00:04:47,591 and it's why many farmers are still very poor. 101 00:04:48,755 --> 00:04:50,137 But good news, again. 102 00:04:50,161 --> 00:04:51,312 Lever number two: 103 00:04:51,336 --> 00:04:55,702 humanity actually solved the problem of agricultural poverty a century ago. 104 00:04:56,449 --> 00:04:59,472 Let me walk you through the three most basic factors in farming. 105 00:04:59,944 --> 00:05:04,341 First, hybrid seed is created when you cross two seeds together. 106 00:05:04,365 --> 00:05:07,169 If you naturally pollinate a high-yielding variety 107 00:05:07,193 --> 00:05:09,504 together with a drought-resistant variety, 108 00:05:09,528 --> 00:05:13,366 you get a hybrid that inherits positive traits from both of its parents. 109 00:05:13,390 --> 00:05:17,087 Next, conventional fertilizer, if used responsibly, 110 00:05:17,111 --> 00:05:18,910 is environmentally sustainable. 111 00:05:19,433 --> 00:05:22,427 If you micro-dose just a pinch of fertilizer 112 00:05:22,451 --> 00:05:24,535 to a plant that's taller than I am, 113 00:05:24,559 --> 00:05:26,733 you unlock enormous yield gain. 114 00:05:27,118 --> 00:05:28,822 These are known as farm inputs. 115 00:05:29,241 --> 00:05:31,841 Farm inputs need to be combined with good practice. 116 00:05:31,865 --> 00:05:35,959 When you space your seeds and plant with massive amounts of compost, 117 00:05:35,983 --> 00:05:38,536 farmers multiply their harvests. 118 00:05:38,946 --> 00:05:41,522 These proven tools and practices have more than tripled 119 00:05:41,546 --> 00:05:44,594 agricultural productivity in every major region of the world, 120 00:05:44,618 --> 00:05:47,391 moving mass numbers of people out of poverty. 121 00:05:47,928 --> 00:05:51,267 We just haven't finished delivering these things to everybody just yet, 122 00:05:51,291 --> 00:05:53,032 particularly in Sub-Saharan Africa. 123 00:05:53,925 --> 00:05:55,647 So overall, this is amazing news. 124 00:05:55,671 --> 00:05:59,227 Humanity actually solved agricultural poverty a century ago, 125 00:05:59,677 --> 00:06:00,884 in theory. 126 00:06:00,908 --> 00:06:03,832 We just haven't delivered these things to everybody just yet. 127 00:06:04,354 --> 00:06:06,741 In this century, the reason that people remain poor 128 00:06:06,765 --> 00:06:08,971 is because maybe they live in remote places. 129 00:06:08,995 --> 00:06:11,090 They lack access to these things. 130 00:06:12,154 --> 00:06:14,715 Therefore, ending poverty is simply a matter 131 00:06:14,739 --> 00:06:18,161 of delivering proven goods and services to people. 132 00:06:18,185 --> 00:06:20,483 We don't need more genius types right now. 133 00:06:20,507 --> 00:06:24,956 The humble delivery guy is going to end global poverty in our lifetime. 134 00:06:26,088 --> 00:06:27,576 So these are the three levers, 135 00:06:27,600 --> 00:06:30,253 and the most powerful lever is simply delivery. 136 00:06:31,033 --> 00:06:34,320 Wherever the world's companies, governments and nonprofits 137 00:06:34,344 --> 00:06:37,043 set up delivery networks for life-improving goods, 138 00:06:37,400 --> 00:06:39,541 we eliminate poverty. 139 00:06:40,023 --> 00:06:42,016 OK, so that sounds really nice in theory, 140 00:06:42,040 --> 00:06:43,330 but what about in practice? 141 00:06:43,354 --> 00:06:45,356 What do these delivery networks look like? 142 00:06:46,006 --> 00:06:48,541 I want to share the concrete example that I know best, 143 00:06:48,565 --> 00:06:50,476 my organization, One Acre Fund. 144 00:06:51,165 --> 00:06:52,560 We only serve the farmer, 145 00:06:52,584 --> 00:06:55,949 and our job is to provide her with the tools that she needs to succeed. 146 00:06:56,284 --> 00:06:59,238 We start off by delivering farm inputs to really rural places. 147 00:06:59,262 --> 00:07:01,528 Now, this may appear initially very challenging, 148 00:07:01,552 --> 00:07:03,763 but it's pretty possible. Let me show you. 149 00:07:03,787 --> 00:07:06,847 We buy farm inputs with the combined power of our farmer network, 150 00:07:06,871 --> 00:07:09,190 and store it in 20 warehouses like this. 151 00:07:09,638 --> 00:07:13,614 Then, during input delivery, we rent hundreds of 10-ton trucks 152 00:07:13,638 --> 00:07:16,476 and send them out to where farmers are waiting in the field. 153 00:07:16,953 --> 00:07:20,391 They then get their individual orders and walk it home to their farms. 154 00:07:20,415 --> 00:07:22,882 It's kind of like Amazon for rural farmers. 155 00:07:23,694 --> 00:07:28,512 Importantly, realistic delivery also includes finance, a way to pay. 156 00:07:28,536 --> 00:07:32,989 Farmers pay us little by little over time, covering most of our expenses. 157 00:07:33,587 --> 00:07:35,724 And then we surround all that with training. 158 00:07:36,151 --> 00:07:39,802 Our rural field officers deliver practical, hands-on training 159 00:07:39,826 --> 00:07:41,231 to farmers in the field 160 00:07:41,255 --> 00:07:42,800 every two weeks. 161 00:07:43,496 --> 00:07:47,080 Wherever we deliver our services, farmers use these tools 162 00:07:47,104 --> 00:07:48,674 to climb out of poverty. 163 00:07:49,193 --> 00:07:51,617 This is a farmer in our program, Consolata. 164 00:07:52,033 --> 00:07:53,876 Look at the pride on her face. 165 00:07:54,212 --> 00:07:57,870 She has achieved a modest prosperity that I believe is the human right 166 00:07:57,894 --> 00:08:00,507 of every hardworking person on the planet. 167 00:08:01,264 --> 00:08:06,166 Today, I'm proud to say that we're serving about 400,000 farmers like Consolata. 168 00:08:06,190 --> 00:08:11,857 (Applause) 169 00:08:11,881 --> 00:08:14,159 The key to doing this is scalable delivery. 170 00:08:14,482 --> 00:08:17,371 In any given area, we hire a rural field officer 171 00:08:17,395 --> 00:08:20,551 who delivers our services to 200 farmers, on average, 172 00:08:20,575 --> 00:08:23,426 with more than 1,000 people living in those families. 173 00:08:23,805 --> 00:08:27,236 Today, we have 2,000 of these rural field officers 174 00:08:27,260 --> 00:08:28,641 growing very quickly. 175 00:08:28,665 --> 00:08:30,472 This is our delivery army, 176 00:08:30,991 --> 00:08:32,658 and we're just one organization. 177 00:08:32,682 --> 00:08:35,846 There are many companies, governments and nonprofits 178 00:08:35,870 --> 00:08:38,081 that have delivery armies just like this. 179 00:08:38,105 --> 00:08:40,151 And I believe we stand at a moment in time 180 00:08:40,175 --> 00:08:45,078 where collectively, we are capable of delivering farm services to all farmers. 181 00:08:45,755 --> 00:08:47,532 Let me show you how possible this is. 182 00:08:47,960 --> 00:08:49,829 This is a map of Sub-Saharan Africa, 183 00:08:49,853 --> 00:08:51,958 with a map of the United States for scale. 184 00:08:51,982 --> 00:08:55,370 I chose Sub-Saharan Africa because this is a huge delivery territory. 185 00:08:55,394 --> 00:08:56,567 It's very challenging. 186 00:08:57,248 --> 00:09:00,901 But we analyzed every 50-mile by 50-mile block on the continent, 187 00:09:01,292 --> 00:09:05,897 and we found that half of farmers live in just these shaded regions. 188 00:09:07,265 --> 00:09:09,597 That's a remarkably small area overall. 189 00:09:10,195 --> 00:09:12,504 If you were to lay these boxes next to each other 190 00:09:12,528 --> 00:09:14,164 within a map of the United States, 191 00:09:14,188 --> 00:09:16,453 they would only cover the Eastern United States. 192 00:09:17,284 --> 00:09:20,526 You can order pizza anywhere in this territory 193 00:09:20,832 --> 00:09:23,983 and it'll arrive to your house hot, fresh and delicious. 194 00:09:24,581 --> 00:09:27,848 If America can deliver pizza to an area of this size, 195 00:09:27,872 --> 00:09:30,895 then Africa's companies, governments and non-profits 196 00:09:30,919 --> 00:09:33,942 can deliver farm services to all of her farmers. 197 00:09:33,966 --> 00:09:35,249 This is possible. 198 00:09:36,995 --> 00:09:39,748 I'm going to wrap up by generalizing beyond just farming. 199 00:09:40,292 --> 00:09:42,399 In every field of human development, 200 00:09:42,423 --> 00:09:46,252 humanity has already invented effective tools to end poverty. 201 00:09:46,276 --> 00:09:47,687 We just need to deliver them. 202 00:09:48,322 --> 00:09:50,563 So again, in every area of human development, 203 00:09:50,587 --> 00:09:53,989 super-smart people a long time ago invented inexpensive, 204 00:09:54,013 --> 00:09:55,845 highly effective tools. 205 00:09:55,869 --> 00:09:57,801 Humanity is armed to the teeth 206 00:09:57,825 --> 00:10:01,163 with simple, effective solutions to poverty. 207 00:10:01,596 --> 00:10:04,368 We just need to deliver these to a pretty small area. 208 00:10:05,266 --> 00:10:08,368 Again using the map of Sub-Saharan Africa as an example, 209 00:10:08,392 --> 00:10:11,866 remember that rural poverty is concentrated in these blue shaded areas. 210 00:10:12,440 --> 00:10:16,324 Urban poverty is even more concentrated, in these green little dots. 211 00:10:17,282 --> 00:10:19,798 Again, using a map of the United States for scale, 212 00:10:20,317 --> 00:10:23,876 this is what I would call a highly achievable delivery zone. 213 00:10:24,346 --> 00:10:26,508 In fact, for the first time in human history, 214 00:10:26,532 --> 00:10:30,031 we have a vast amount of delivery infrastructure available to us. 215 00:10:30,055 --> 00:10:32,779 The world's companies, governments and non-profits 216 00:10:32,803 --> 00:10:35,026 have delivery armies that are fully capable 217 00:10:35,050 --> 00:10:37,433 of covering this relatively small area. 218 00:10:37,927 --> 00:10:40,052 We just lack the will. 219 00:10:40,913 --> 00:10:42,324 If we are willing, 220 00:10:42,348 --> 00:10:44,156 every one of us has a role to play. 221 00:10:45,920 --> 00:10:49,291 We first need more people to pursue careers in human development, 222 00:10:49,315 --> 00:10:51,463 especially if you live in a developing nation. 223 00:10:51,487 --> 00:10:54,973 We need more front line health workers, teachers, farmer trainers, 224 00:10:54,997 --> 00:10:57,109 sales agents for life-improving goods. 225 00:10:57,439 --> 00:11:00,109 These are the delivery people that dedicate their careers 226 00:11:00,133 --> 00:11:01,799 to improving the lives of others. 227 00:11:02,532 --> 00:11:04,485 But we also need a lot of support roles. 228 00:11:05,731 --> 00:11:08,582 These are roles available at just my organization alone, 229 00:11:08,606 --> 00:11:10,096 and we're just one out of many. 230 00:11:10,399 --> 00:11:14,173 This may surprise you, but no matter what your technical specialty, 231 00:11:14,197 --> 00:11:16,407 there is a role for you in this fight. 232 00:11:17,158 --> 00:11:20,505 And no matter how logistically possible it is to end poverty, 233 00:11:20,529 --> 00:11:22,424 we need a lot more resources. 234 00:11:22,448 --> 00:11:24,292 This is our number one constraint. 235 00:11:24,811 --> 00:11:28,187 For private investors, we need a big expansion of venture capital, 236 00:11:28,211 --> 00:11:31,935 private equity, working capital, available in emerging markets. 237 00:11:32,477 --> 00:11:35,586 But there are also limits to what private business can accomplish. 238 00:11:35,928 --> 00:11:39,579 Private businesses often struggle to profitably serve the extreme poor, 239 00:11:39,897 --> 00:11:42,229 so philanthropy still has a major role to play. 240 00:11:42,998 --> 00:11:45,551 Anybody can give, but we need more leadership. 241 00:11:46,112 --> 00:11:48,059 We need more visionary philanthropists 242 00:11:48,083 --> 00:11:51,995 and global leaders who will take problems in human development 243 00:11:52,019 --> 00:11:55,049 and lead humanity to wipe them off the face of the planet. 244 00:11:56,276 --> 00:11:59,098 If you're interested in these ideas, check out this website. 245 00:11:59,122 --> 00:12:00,830 We need more leaders. 246 00:12:02,174 --> 00:12:04,196 Humanity has put people on the moon. 247 00:12:04,220 --> 00:12:06,797 We've invented supercomputers that fit into our pockets 248 00:12:06,821 --> 00:12:08,877 and connect us with anybody on the planet. 249 00:12:08,901 --> 00:12:12,183 We've run marathons at a five-minute mile pace. 250 00:12:12,207 --> 00:12:14,650 We are an exceptional people. 251 00:12:15,822 --> 00:12:18,948 But we've left more than one billion of our members behind. 252 00:12:19,485 --> 00:12:21,783 Until every girl like this one has an opportunity 253 00:12:21,807 --> 00:12:23,705 to earn her full human potential, 254 00:12:24,047 --> 00:12:27,918 we have failed to become a truly moral and just human race. 255 00:12:28,516 --> 00:12:31,272 Logistically speaking, it's incredibly possible 256 00:12:31,296 --> 00:12:32,896 to end extreme poverty. 257 00:12:33,220 --> 00:12:36,102 We just need to deliver proven goods and services 258 00:12:36,126 --> 00:12:37,323 to everybody. 259 00:12:37,665 --> 00:12:41,389 If we have the will, every one of us has a role to play. 260 00:12:42,024 --> 00:12:44,913 Let's deploy our time, our careers, 261 00:12:44,937 --> 00:12:46,188 our collective wealth. 262 00:12:46,781 --> 00:12:49,517 Let us deliver an end to extreme poverty 263 00:12:49,541 --> 00:12:51,208 in this lifetime. 264 00:12:51,971 --> 00:12:53,122 Thank you. 265 00:12:53,146 --> 00:13:00,146 (Applause)