Brian Fikkert: When Helping Hurts and How Best to Tackle Poverty

Summary:

In this episode, we speak with Brian Fikkert, who is an economist and professor at Covenant College. We speak about his influential book When Helping Hurts, and how Christians can make the greatest possible positive impact in the lives of the poor.

Some things we touch on in this episode:

  • Why short-term missions often make things worse for the poor.

  • How wealthy Americans define “poverty”.

  • “Relief” vs. “Development” work, and where Christians are most needed.

  • Balancing insights from the Bible and economic experiments.

  • Career advice for Christians looking to tackle global poverty.

Articles, organizations, and other media related to this episode


Episode Highlights:

The poor define their poverty in spiritual terms

[00:17:01] “Many of us are coming out of a material framework of what poverty is. And so if I ask the average American what is poverty. They'll define it this way poverty is about a lack of income, lack of housing, a lack of food, a lack of clothing […] The problem is, if you ask poor people around the world, what is poverty? They'll say something like this: “I feel shame. I feel less than human. I feel like I'm not part of society. I feel like trash that everybody wants to get rid of.” They define their poverty, yes, in material terms. But in addition, they define it in psychological, social, and even spiritual terms.”

The negative impact of short-term mission trips

[00:19:42] “What we're arguing, and when helping hurts again, is that poverty is rooted in broken relationships with God, with ourselves, with others, and with creation. I don't know if you've ever experienced a strained relationship in your life, but I have, and it's not usually fixed within a week of having the other person come and give me money and then leaving […] You can't solve the deep seedness in those broken relationships through handing out shoes in a week. It doesn't work. And in fact, it makes it worse.”

On academic experiments and randomized trials 

[00:35:43] “Folks, empirical research is really, really messy. And so kind of this idea that we're going to collect this data and truth is going to emerge from this experiment that we can run with is simply not how the scientific process works. It's way messier than that [...] The problem is we tend to view scientific research and RCTs as this sort of magical process that's not open to questioning, and it's open to all kinds of questioning.”

Balancing insights from scripture with science

[00:41:20] “There's a lot of balls we have to keep in the air all at the same time intellectually and experientially. What I mean by that is this do I think we should do RCTs (randomized control trials)? Of course I do it's. Great. Let's do them. But we tend to put all of our eggs in one basket. What I'd like to see us do is to think about various forms of knowledge, and various forms of acquiring truth. One of them is actually the Bible. So I actually think the Bible gives us a lot of indication about what fosters transformation. And so I'm as interested in the inputs and activities that we use as I am in measuring the outputs, because I think Scripture has actually told us something about what kinds of [programs work].”

Career advice for Christians seeking to make an impact

[00:54:34] “Learn theology. Get some practical skills, get some experience in the field early because later in your career you won't be able to do it. [...] Learn as you go. Don't think you're leaving college with all the answers. Learn as you go about who you are, about who the world is.[...] Economics is a great major, but it's also a very dangerous major because it reduces the human being to homo economicus. But it's a great major. Just do it differently.”



 

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Global Poverty

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