Melinda French Gates on Saving Lives
The co-chair of the world's largest philanthropy talks about what can be done to improve global health and poverty
- By Terence Monmaney
- Smithsonian magazine, July-August 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
We also know that certain strategies have an immense impact. Investing in agriculture, for example. Advances in agriculture during the Green Revolution doubled food production, saved hundreds of millions of lives and laid the groundwork for broader development in many countries.
Recent history has also shown that access to financial services can empower people, especially women, and build up families and entire communities. At the Gates Foundation, we are particularly interested in the potential of small-scale savings accounts to improve poor people’s lives. When people have reliable access to savings, they don’t risk total destitution if there’s a death in the family or a bad crop.
In January, I visited some villages being served by Opportunity International Bank of Malawi to see how savings impact people on the ground. It’s building inexpensive bank branches—one was made out of three shipping containers—and setting up kiosks in shopping centers and post offices. It also operates seven trucks that bring banks to remote places, which is important since 85 percent of Malawians live in rural areas. I saw people waiting in an hour-long line to make an average deposit of about 200 Kwacha, or $1.40. That’s how much demand there is for savings in poor communities!
Are there foreign aid approaches that are not as effective as you once thought they would be?
Certainly there has been spending that hasn’t had its intended impact, and we’ve learned a lot from those experiences. But on the whole, the things that Bill and I have seen and heard on our travels—as well as the key statistical indicators—make it clear that U.S. investments in global health are working. Dollar for dollar, global health is the U.S. government’s best investment.
But too many Americans have no idea about the extraordinary value of these programs. Nearly half of Americans think that foreign aid is one of the biggest parts of the federal budget, even though it actually accounts for less than 1 percent of government spending. And global health funding accounts for just a quarter of all foreign aid—about one-quarter of 1 percent of the overall federal budget.
What will make a lasting impact on poverty?
I’m excited about the ways technology is helping poor people make progress faster. In Kenya, nearly nine million people are using mobile phones to transfer money. That means that if a person needs to send money to her mother in a faraway village, it’s now as easy as sending a text message. As regulators find ways to ensure the safety and security of new financial services and more new products are designed to meet the needs of the poor, financial security will be within reach for millions of families in the developing world. They will have the ability to save for emergencies, pay for health care for their families, start a business or send their children to school.
What importance does the Gates Foundation put on curbing population growth?
We often get asked if improving health or lowering child mortality rates will contribute to overpopulation. Bill and I used to ask ourselves the same question. We learned that just the opposite is true. When a country’s health improves, it sees tremendous benefits in all sorts of areas, including lower birthrates. Research shows that when women know their children will survive to adulthood, they choose to have fewer children.
Inevitably, the foundation has been criticized as too powerful and insufficiently transparent. What do you make of such criticisms?
It’s essential that critics challenge our thinking and question our strategies. That’s how we get better at what we do. We have always been adamant that our success depends on our partners in the field, and we make a point of getting their feedback. We recently conducted an exhaustive survey of all our grantees to understand how we can work more effectively with them. We also have advisory boards that provide regular, expert counsel to our three program areas. In terms of transparency, we publish updates about our strategies and what we are learning at www.gatesfoundation.org.
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Comments (4)
Thank you, Mrs. Gates, for putting to good use the ill-gotten gains of Microsoft (monopoly, illegal competition, sabotage, trade secret theft, etc.)! If you ever come to Indonesia to help, please be careful because the corruptors are so entrenched here that a large portion of the money and supplies will just slip into deep pockets and never reach the needy - just look at Aceh!
Posted by Glenn McGrew on November 2,2010 | 08:01 AM
If you are not inspired by the work and positive effect Bill and Malinda Gates have because of the massive amount of income they have, then you ought to look in your own life and ask what have I done lately? For those out there making a difference, the positive things happening around the world have a lot to do with you!
Thank-you for all you do.
Just some one effected by positive out put when things look glum.
Traci
Posted by Traci Lyman on July 21,2010 | 05:33 PM
I am Chairman of the John Dau (a Lost Boy of Sudan) Foundation. We have built a medical clinic at Duk Payuel, Jonglei State of South Sudan. We are in a very remote region where rain shuts down our means of transportation.
This week we lost a mother and child because she died because we could not perform a C-Section delivery. We could not transport her to a surgical unit 40 miles away.
We are experiencing the infant mortality Melinda describes so well.
We need Melinda's help so we can hire a Sudanese Doctor who can perform surgeries to save mother's and children's lives and our medical staff would not suffer so when they lose a Mother and child that they can't help. We need help.
Our website is www.johndaufoundation.org
Posted by John W Howard on July 20,2010 | 02:47 PM
Most inspiring interview I have read or heard in a long time.
Posted by Bob Wood on July 7,2010 | 11:39 PM