Philippa Stroud & Anne Bradley on pandemic and poverty

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This week we’re bringing you another conversation from our recent Poverty Cure Summit. The Poverty Cure Summit provided an opportunity for participants to listen to scholars, human service providers, and practitioners address the most critical issues we face today which can either exacerbate or alleviate poverty. These speakers discussed the legal, economic, social, and technological issues pertaining to both domestic and global poverty. Rooted in foundational principles of anthropology, politics, natural law, and economics, participants had the opportunity to gain a deeper understanding of the root causes of poverty and identify practical means to reduce it and promote human flourishing. In this conversation, moderator Al Kresta talks with Baroness Philippa Stroud, CEO of the Legatum Institute, and Anne Rathbone Bradley, the George and Sally Mayer Fellow for Economic Education and the academic director at The Fund for American Studies, about poverty and the COVID-19 pandemic.  For decades, the number of individuals living in extreme poverty across the globe has fallen. Yet last month, the World Bank reported that COVID-19 could add approximately 100 million people to the ranks of those in extreme poverty by the end of 2020. The panelists examine how the pandemic has impacted poverty reduction efforts and how the marketplace has responded to the pandemic. Baroness Philippa Stroud - Legatum Institute Anne Bradley - The Fund for American Studies Poverty Cure Summit - Access now on-demand for only $19 How to rebuild the economy after COVID-19 - Richard Turnbull A free-market agenda for rebuilding from the coronavirus - Henrik Rasmussen Subscribe to Acton Institute Events podcast Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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