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Last Day to Vote: Building Assets into a 21st Century Foreign Assistance Framework

Its last day of the Better World Campaign’s On Day One project and there is still time to vote for the idea you think President-Elect Barak Obama should prioritize on the first day of the next administration for improving the United State’s image in the world. When blogger Mark Goldberg of the UN Foundation came to New America in the spring of 2008 soliciting ideas for policy proposals, I thought it was little more than a fun experiment in the use of new media to express opinions. I had no idea the Campaign would face the ideas off against each other in November, narrowing 81 selected ideas down to 9 for ’09 (9 big ideas for the incoming president to consider upon taking office). Or that my idea to reform foreign assistance (to focus the allocation of funds more squarely on the social and economic empowerment of poor people) would win the Global Poverty category. Or that there would be a Round 2 to the contest in which the 9 for ’09 would face off yet again.

I don’t expect to win the contest — my idea is up against some even more lofty and innovative competitors. On the other hand, that this idea – that funds should be more smartly allocated to providing opportunities for asset building and wealth creating empowerment for the poor, rather than wasted and corrupted on ineffectual top-down projects – has resonated with voters in this first place (and making a fair showing at that), should be utterly encouraging for those of us working to elevate asset-building microfinance and social policies around the globe.

Even in a world of economic uncertainty, there is a still a belief that given the right tools, the poor and traditionally disenfranchised can stake their own claim it the dream of a better future. The microcredit movement has helped shape this confidence in the power of individuals to lift themselves out of poverty. Yet, the tools people need to take ownership of their lives extend well beyond microcredit, including (but certainly not limited to) an identity that will allow them access to the formal economy; property rights so that they can take ownership in their land, home, or business; access to an array of financial services such as savings accounts allow them to save for future investments in education, a business or old age and insurance to further protect them from the vulnerability of any number of shocks, and; access to policies and programs that facilitate this process, such as child development accounts, conditional cash transfers, or other microfinance-plus initiatives.

Reforming the foreign assistance framework to redirect resources toward bottom-up programs is a fairly specific policy idea, yet it finds itself competing with much grander goals. In this final day of the contest, I thank voters for their encouraging show of interest in telling President Obama to break the wasteful status quo in development assistance spending and, instead, concentrate on something with potentially a much greater return on investment – the empowerment of people.

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Last Day to Vote: Building Assets into a 21st Century Foreign Assistance Framework