Sunday 30 March 2008

Poverty, again.

While reading an article in the BT on poverty in Brunei, I was thinking, how sad the reality is. It is almost unbelievable that there is extreme poverty in a country so rich (the lives of those in the article are examples of extreme or absolute poverty, and if it is indeed true that there are families earning only about $12 per day, gosh! that's defined as $1/day poverty! ). It is true that Brunei's GDP per capita has doubled within a decade but that unfortunately does not mean the income is more equally distributed.

So, how bad is the poverty in Brunei? Another article (click here), can give the picture. I cringed when I found out that there are 16,186 poor people = 3,747 families! Based on that statistic (the number of zakat recipients), about 4.3 % of Brunei's population therefore falls under the poverty line. And if my calculation is correct, each person is receiving $46 per month from the zakat fund. So a family of 8 (such as Hj Dullah in Kg. Tamoi) will receive $368 a month.

An easy and straight-forward solution to help Hj Dullah would be to give him a boat so he can operate his own water taxi. However, a few years ago, somebody mentioned that this type of aid (i.e. giving boats to Kampong Ayer's poor) actually backfired. The recipients who were supposed to earn a living with the boats, ended up selling the boats for an easy lump-sum money. I must admit, this puts a pressure on policy-makers. To give or not to give? How can we prevent such incidence from happening again? But I also believe, we can't simply just NOT give based on bad past experience.

Nevertheless I find this really is a challenge. While there are many ways to reduce poverty, I however cannot think of any policy measure that can solve the human attitude problem: the ungratefulness and the lack of responsibility that seem to exist rampantly in Brunei.
I often ask, what did we do wrong? But remember this:

“…Surely Allah does not change the condition of a people until they change their own condition…” (Qur’an 13:11).

Salaam.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

This may sound irrelevant but the Yang Berhormat Pehin Mufti has been actively preaching all Bruneian Muslims during his recent rounds of "Kuliah Subuh" (religious talks after Dawn prayers) in Masjids (mosques) all over the Brunei Muara District to advise Muslims to repent before its too late for the Almighty to accept their repentance. Repent from what kind of sins? Corruption is one of the most heinous sins ever committed by any human being, be they Muslims or not. Not paying "Zakat Wajib" or obligatory tithe is another sinful act. Simple but most sinful act of not performing prayers is another root of all evils that may have direct consequences on poverty...

I know at one glance, no connection at all to the issue of poverty in Brunei Darussalam... but take more long hard looks at how menial facts mentioned above could directly or indirectly result in poverty...

Such is the beauty of Islam as a Way of Life, individual members of the Society should take the full responsibility of eradicating poverty and refrain from all forms of selfish indulgence in all things materialistic! We should always look at less well-off, poor, needy people down below and lend them helping hands to the best of our ability and means to an end toward the ZERO POVERTY goal as set by the "Titah" (Address) of His Majesty during the Opening of this year's Legislative Council Meeting.

What's sadly happening in this Abode of Peace now is that a majority of the younger generation in our small nation are getting more and more carefree and lack the civility to care for the growing unfortunate people amongst the population. All they think about is me, me, me world! Other people are none of their bloody business...:(

So the ball is in His Majesty's Government's court because some sort of INTERVENTION MEASURES must be put in place ASAP! Or else a catastrophic consequence of titanic proportion may evolve. People Power may arise one day before we knew it. High time the senior civil service intellectuals and all universities' academia and intelligentsia or 'Circle of Influence' people to start doing official and academic surveys or studies, particularly in the ('unfamiliar territories') fields of Sociology, Social Studies, Socio-economic and Political Science spheres to gauge the seriousness of this issue on poverty in the country and to make recommendations to rectify the status quo and impending problems as a result of the widening gap between the 'rich men, poor men' syndrome within the Community...

That is the harsh reality of the current poverty situation in our beloved nation ("Kau,kau/Aku,aku").

Anonymous said...

Well, Anonymous, I agree with some of your views where refraining from overly self-indulgence and helping the poor financially is good.

However, as Mrs. Rogue Economist mentioned, I'm more inclined to provide the means of wealth rather handing out charity itself, as the former is long-lasting. This is somewhat like the Hadith of the Prophet (Peace be upon Him) where instead of giving money to the beggar, the beggar was provided with an axe to improve his living standards through cutting & selling wood.

I guess in the boat matter, it would be interesting to have done a post-mortem on why the person sold the boat, in the sense of what expenses did he need to pay off. Perhaps the relevant parties could figure out another way to help the person meet these 'expenses' while ensuring he doesn't sell his means of living, i.e. the boat.

On the last bit of academia doing a survey or research on poverty, there was a study done a few years back. For your info.