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Monday, July 3, 2023

How Mao Zedong Helped Reduce Poverty

the AZEL

PERSPECTIVE

Commentary on Cuba's Future, U.S. Foreign Policy & Individual Freedoms - Issue 311 B
 
José Azel's latest books "On Freedom" and "Sobre La Libertad" are now available on Amazon. 

How Mao Zedong Helped Reduce Poverty

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My hometown newspapers, The Miami Herald and El Nuevo Herald, have recently headlined stories on the tragic increase of hunger in Venezuela.
Yes, it is important to call attention to how the socialist regime of Chavez-Maduro has impoverished that resource-rich nation. It is also important to focus the spotlight on the economic disasters brought about by “command economies” in Cuba, North Korea, and everywhere where the allure of central planning has prevailed.

Yet, there is a broader story of how extreme poverty is being eradicated worldwide, and how the world is becoming middle class, as argued by Harvard’s psychology professor Steven Pinker. Dr. Pinker is listed by Time, Foreign Policy, and other magazines as one of the world’s most influential thinkers.

He protests, together with economist Max Roser, whose work focuses on how living conditions around the world are changing, that headlines should proclaim:

“NUMBER OF PEOPLE IN EXTREME POVERTY FELL BY 137,000 SINCE YESTERDAY”

They assert that this same headline could have been repeated by the media every day for the last twenty-five years. That is how much daily progress we are making in reducing worldwide extreme poverty.  From 1820 to 2015, the percentage of the world population living in extreme poverty has declined from 90 percent to 10 percent. Almost half of that decline has occurred in the last thirty-five years.

This brings up the obvious question as to why has extreme poverty declined so dramatically as of late. To this question, International Development economist Steven Radelet offers a witty explanation: “In 1976, Mao single-handedly and dramatically changed the direction of global poverty with one simple act: he died.”

What these social scientists are pointing out is that, the death of Mao Zedong unleashed major causes for the worldwide decline of extreme poverty. In China, Mao’s death allowed the introduction of substantial free-market reforms by his successor Deng Xiaoping.

The poverty reduction success of free-market reforms in China has been dramatic. Since Mao’s death, the daily caloric consumption per person in China has increased from approximately 1,500 calories to 3,100 calories. This higher level is what U.S. guidelines recommend as needed for a highly active young man.

It is not a stretch to affirm that Mao’s death, and the demonstration effect of the success of free-market capitalism in China, had an ideological impact on the rest of the communist and socialist world. Within fifteen years, the Soviet Bloc had imploded, most of the socialist world was in disarray, and the intellectual advocates of communism were in dismay.

Beginning in the 1980’s world economies began emulating China in a shift from collectivization and central planning to more open economies; not only in Russia and Eastern Europe, but in countries such as India, Brazil, and Vietnam, as well as some African countries.

Today, calories consumed per person per day in Africa have risen to 2,600, and for India’s population of one billion, caloric consumption is at 2,400. As a pervasive problem, catastrophic famines seem to have been eradicated from most continents although unfortunately, they still happen in some regions.

And there is more good news. Increases in wealth, as measured by GDP per capita, are naturally correlated with better nutrition and health, and correspondingly, with longer lives. But a much less obviously correlation is also at play. Increases in a country’s wealth also correlate positively with higher ethical values, with human rights, with tolerance, with freedom, and with peace. (Steven Pinker).

Demonstrably, extreme poverty is declining worldwide. Scholars can attribute the worldwide poverty reduction to myriad factors; the end of the Cold War, technological advances in industry and agriculture, globalization, the increased trade facilitated by large container ships and cargo aircraft, lower tariffs, lower barriers to international investments, and much more.

But, as Dr. Pinker notes, when a lot of good things are happening at once, and they reinforce each other; it is analytically difficult to identify the first domino in the falling dominos series.

For me, I echo Radelet, “…Mao single-handedly and dramatically changed the direction of global poverty with one simple act: he died.” That was the first falling domino.

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Abrazos,
 
Lily & José
 
(click on the name to email Lily or Jose)
José Azel, Ph.D.

José Azel left Cuba in 1961 as a 13 year-old political exile in what has been dubbed Operation Pedro Pan - the largest unaccompanied child refugee movement in the history of the Western Hemisphere.  

He is currently dedicated to the in-depth analyses of Cuba's economic, social and political state, with a keen interest in post-Castro-Cuba strategies. Dr. Azel was a Senior Scholar at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies (ICCAS) at the University of Miami, Jose Azel has published extensively on Cuba related topics.

In 2012 and 2015, Dr. Azel testified in the U.S. Congress on U.S.-Cuba Policy, and U.S. National Security.  He is a frequent speaker and commentator on these and related topics on local, national and international media.  He holds undergraduate and masters degrees in business administration and a Ph.D. in International Affairs from the University of Miami.

José along with his wife Lily are avid skiers and adventure travelers.  In recent years they have climbed Grand Teton in Wyoming, trekked Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania and Machu Pichu in Peru.  They have also hiked in Tibet and in the Himalayas to Mt. Everest Base Camp.

They cycled St. James Way (
El Camino de Santiago de Compostela) and cycled alongside the Danube from Germany to Hungary and throughout southern France.  They have scuba dived in the Bay Islands off the Honduran coast and in the Galapagos Islands. Most recently, they rafted for 17 days 220 miles in the Grand Canyon. 

Their adventurers are normally dedicated to raise funds for causes that are dear to them. 

Watch Joe & Lily summit Kilimanjaro.

Books by Dr. José Azel
José Azel’s writings are touched with the wisdom of a master, and the charm of an excellent communicator. Anyone who wishes to understand why countries do, or do not, progress will find in this book the best explanations. And, from these readings emerge numerous inferences: How and why do the good intentions of leftist collectivism lead countries to hell? Why is liberty not a sub product of prosperity, but rather one of its causes?

If it was in my power, this work would be required reading for all college and university students, and I would also recommend its reading to all politicians, journalists, and policymakers. With his writings Azel accomplishes what was achieved in France by Frédéric Bastiat, and in the United States by Henry Hazlitt: Azel brings together common sense with intelligent observation, and academic substance. Stupendous,

Carlos Alberto Montaner
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Los escritos de José Azel están tocados por la sabiduría de un maestro y la amenidad de un excelente comunicador. Cualquiera que desee entender por qué los países progresan, o no, encontrará en este libro las mejores explicaciones. De estas lecturas surgen numerosas inferencias: ¿Cómo y por qué las buenas intenciones del colectivismo de izquierda llevan a los países al infierno? ¿Por qué la libertad no es un subproducto de la prosperidad, sino una de sus causas?

Si estuviera en mis manos, esta obra sería de obligada lectura de todos los estudiantes universitarios, pero además, le recomendaría su lectura a todos los políticos, periodistas y policy makers. Con sus escritos Azel logra lo que Frédéric Bastiat consiguiera en Francia y Henry Hazlitt en Estados Unidos: aunar el sentido común, la observación inteligente y la enjundia académica. Estupendo.

Carlos Alberto Montaner
                                                           Compre Aqui
"Liberty for beginners is much more than what the title promises. It is eighty themes touched with the wisdom of a master, and the charm of an excellent communicator. Anyone that wishes to understand why countries do, or do not progress, will find in this book the best explanations. Stupendous"

Carlos Alberto Montaner

"Libertad para novatos es mucho más de lo que promete el título. Son ochenta temas tocados con la sabiduría de un maestro y la amenidad de un excelente comunicador. Cualquier adulto que desee saber por qué progresan o se estancan los pueblos aquí encontrará las mejores explicaciones. Estupendo."

Carlos Alberto Montaner

Compre Aqui

In Reflections on FreedomJosé Azel brings together a collection of his columns published in prestigious newspapers.  Each article reveals his heartfelt and personal awareness of the importance of freedom in our lives.  They are his reflections after nearly sixty years of living and learning as a Cuban outside Cuba. In what has become his stylistic trademark, Professor Azel brilliantly introduces complex topics in brief journalistic articles.
En Reflexiones sobre la libertad José Azel reúne una colección de sus columnas publicadas en prestigiosos periódicos. Cada artículo revela su percepción sincera y personal de la importancia de la libertad en nuestras vidas. Son sus reflexiones después de casi sesenta años viviendo y aprendiendo como cubano fuera de Cuba.  En lo que ha resultado ser característica distintiva de sus artículos, el Profesor Azel introduce con brillantez complejos temas en  breves artículos de carácter periodístico.
Mañana in Cuba is a comprehensive analysis of contemporary Cuba with an incisive perspective of the Cuban frame of mind and its relevancy for Cuba's future.
Pedazos y Vacíos is a collection of poems written in by Dr. Azel in his youth. Poems are in Spanish.
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