Parashat Re'eh
Dealing With Poverty
It would be wise to consider sound anti-poverty programs that tackle the
general problem of lack of ownership.
By Alon Ferency
This
commentary is provided by special arrangement with American Jewish World
Service. To learn more, visit www.ajws.org.
This week's parashah,
Re'eh, begins: "See, I place
before you today blessing and curse" (Deuteronomy 11:26). Today's
international curse has but one name: poverty. Unfortunately, our parashah foreshadows this as inevitable,
saying: "Poverty in your midst will be unceasing" (Deuteronomy
15:11). Is poverty humankind's eternal burden? Can the Torah give insight to
reduce poverty's menace? Re'eh offers
two answers with contemporary applications. The first raises practical and halakhic conflicts; the second offers
hope through formalizing property rights.
Our
parashah offers an initial simple solution: shemitah, the statutory remission of
debt and credit every seven years. The
Torah
implies that this commandment will eliminate poverty: "There will be no poor among you" (Deuteronomy 15:4). Today,
politicians and rock stars endorse shemitah
in the form of debt relief to Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC). Through
HIPC initiatives, recipient countries would be permitted to reduce or remit
their foreign debt service.
Since
creditor countries will surely account for debt remission as a form of aid, and
since foreign aid budgets are already notoriously anemic, the question must be
posed: is debt relief an efficient way to alleviate poverty? According to a
World Bank study, roughly six factors influence a country's capacity to absorb aid in order to combat poverty:
low inflation, a budget surplus, openness to trade, little corruption, strong
rule of law, and effective bureaucracy.
These criteria are jarring if held against some major recipients of proposed
HIPC debt relief such as Nigeria and Iraq. Both of these countries currently
rank among the top eight most corrupt countries worldwide.
Pragmatic concerns
aside, ethical questions also arise from this practice: might debt relief
programs eventually diminish the mores of personal and national accountability,
leading to a binge of borrowing and poorly thought-out programs? Could the
initiative eventually undermine the rule of law itself? Lawlessness as a
corollary of debt relief would be abhorred by our parashah, for Re'eh
specifically condemns "every man doing what is right in his own
sight" (Deuteronomy 12:8). Furthermore, the requirements of shemitah ultimately conflict with the
commandment in Parshat Re'eh to lend
to the poor (Deuteronomy 15:8).
By retroactively
canceling debts, shemitah, like HIPC
relief, may deter creditors from entering into lending relationships. In the
end, if creditors stop lending to the poor, prospective borrowers and the
poorest citizens will suffer most. This violation of halakhah would have proved so tragic that the rabbis invented legal
fictions to circumvent shemitah.
The Importance of Property
If
not shemitah, can the parashah provide us with other solutions
to the problem of poverty and debt? Perhaps it would be wise to consider sound
anti-poverty programs that tackle the general problem of lack of ownership, an
idea also evoked in this week's parashah:
"The Levite has no portion nor heritance among you...Do not neglect the
Levite" (Deuteronomy 12:12,19).
This
command not to neglect the Levite is reiterated in Deuteronomy 14:27. Since the
rabbinic tradition is ever aware of scriptural superfluity, might the reader
infer that the second utterance comprises all who are like the Levite, i.e.,
the landless? What may be done for people who do not own property?
One
promising policy is formalizing microeconomic property rights. In my experience
as a health extension agent in the Cameroonian Sahel, most land was informally
leased from local chiefs and princes, who in turn held the property in trust.
In the same way, the Economist
reports that less than one African in ten has formal title to the property on
which she or he lives.
Reviving Dead Capital
According
to Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto, this wholly "informal ownership of
land and goods" and "lack of such an integrated system of property
rights in today's developing nations makes it impossible for the poor to
leverage their now informal ownerships into capital (as collateral for
credit)." This leaves the rural or urban poor sitting indefinitely on
wealth that they can never use: "dead capital."
De
Soto and others argue for formalizing these informal arrangements, "for
example by giving squatters in shanty towns land titles to the land they now
live on." At last estimate 10 years ago, the value of informally owned African houses and farms was about one trillion
dollars, or 70 times the continent's annual foreign aid.
Economist
Thomas Howell notes that real estate held, but not owned, by poor people in
developing nations (for example, those villages in the Cameroonian Sahel) is
"more than 20 times all direct foreign investment in the Third World and
more than 90 times all the foreign aid to all Third World countries over the past
three decades." What's more, tensions between over-imprecise property
titles may even ignite civil conflicts, including Côte d'Ivoire's civil war.
Formalizing
property rights is vital to eliminating poverty--let us advocate for such
policies. Perhaps this is a key to fulfilling the promise of our parashah: "There shall no longer be
any poor among you, and surely God will bless you" (Deuteronomy 15:4).
Give the poor proper title to the property they already hold, and they will no
longer be so poor.
Alon Ferency is a rabbinical student at the Ziegler School
of Rabbinic Studies at the American Jewish University.