(Disclaimer: Because various nonprofit
organizations operate very differently, this blog post is meant to only apply
to international humanitarian nonprofit organizations.)
Here’s the thing:
Most humanitarian nonprofit organizations
(NGOs) are founded on the good intentions to improve people’s quality of life
in one way or another. NGOs feed,
clothe, educate, vaccinate, and relocate people all over the world in order to fulfill
IMMEDIATE needs and with the goal to make their lives better… in theory.
MANY, maybe even MOST, international
nonprofit organizations fix short-term issues (hunger, thirst, bare feet, sickness) while ignoring long-term benefits for the target community. These short-term solutions typically WRECK the long-term growth and
benefits to the target people.
| Short-term solutions are like near-sighted vision: DANGEROUS. |
How?
Short-term solutions are inherently
near-sighted.
(These are generalizations, but the
principles are true).
NGOs give
people food without helping them plant their own crops to eventually feed their
own communities.
NGOs drill
wells to give clean water without providing the skills among the local
people to drill more wells.
NGOs give
shoes for bare feet without providing communities the profit from local
shoe industry and shops.
Finally…
NGOs provide
medical services without providing
medical education to train future, local doctors.
After decades of receiving aid from NGOs and foreign humanitarian workers, communities receiving aid become dependent on aid. Although the aid helps feed/clothe/care for people today, the people are no better prepared for tomorrow.
After decades of receiving aid from NGOs and foreign humanitarian workers, communities receiving aid become dependent on aid. Although the aid helps feed/clothe/care for people today, the people are no better prepared for tomorrow.
If the aid were to stop today, people would die tomorrow.
Under this system, in 10, 50 or 100 years, the communities will still be needing the same help for the same problems.
What are the effects?
After decades
of receiving aid from NGOs and foreign humanitarian workers, communities
receiving aid become dependent on aid. Although the aid helps
feed/clothe/care for people today, the people are no better prepared for
tomorrow.
If the aid were to stop today, people would die tomorrow.
Under this system, in 10, 50 or 100 years, the communities will still be needing the same help for the same problems.
The next post is about the reasons NGOs like short-term solutions better.



