Writing in the Charlotte Observer, former Senator Bill Frist offers his take on the state of global health and President Obama’s recently announced global health strategy. Praising the Millennium Challenge Corporation’s holistic approach to global health, Frist explains how the MCC can help lay “the groundwork for poverty reduction and economic development.”
Excerpts below, full piece here:
Economists would argue that one of the surest ways out of poverty is for people to increase their incomes to take care of themselves and their families. For incomes to rise, developing economies must work to generate growth opportunities through trade and commerce, reliable infrastructure, and sound policies that create and sustain jobs for the poor.
When the poor are stricken by disease and weak health, they are unable to take advantage of these opportunities. Rather than climbing out of poverty, they fall deeper into it. It’s clear that economic development and human development are intertwined. Growth needs a healthy workforce. The productivity and development of communities – and their ability to participate in the global economy – rely on the physical well-being of citizens to innovate, build, harvest, and work. Sustaining such productivity requires children to learn in school, not fall behind because they are too sick to concentrate. By building healthier, hopeful, and productive communities, we build safer and more secure societies that can alleviate global poverty and contribute to global prosperity. When communities are productive and thriving they don’t become breeding grounds for dangerous extremism.
We need to rethink America’s global health diplomacy within this context […]
-Chris Scott