Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Freedom of choice is foundational to poverty relief
Freedom of choice is foundational to poverty relief
Dec 15, 2025 8:54 AM

This essay won second place in the essay contest of the Acton Institute’s 2020 Poverty Cure Summit, which took place on Nov. 18-19, 2020. The author will receive a $3,000 prize. An expanded and lightly edited version of her essay is presented below. – Ed.

Defining and describing humanity has always been one of the trickiest questions facing philosophers, scholars, and authors – most specifically the question of “what makes us human?” Inherent to this discussion is the conversation about the nature of human dignity. What is passed within the term “human dignity”? Perhaps it helps to look at the inverse – what dehumanizes? The consistent element of dehumanizing policies and practices is a revoking of freedom. Freedom to make choices is one of the fundamentals of human dignity. Crimes such as slavery dehumanize, because they limit or eliminate the individual’s choice. In a similar way, poverty solutions that limit an individual’s choice by means of putting strict conditions on aid do not uphold the dignity of a human person. Essential to human dignity is choice; therefore, the solutions that best uphold the dignity of the human person must seek to increase the individual’s access to choice.

For the purpose of this discussion, a few assumptions will be made. First, making choices is important to dignity. Second, these decisions should be made within a moral framework that seeks to dignify other humans, as well. Third, individuals are better equipped to make these decisions for themselves than a central government. Humans are made in the image of the Creator and are designed to be creators themselves who have free choice and are capable of action. The poverty solutions that best uphold the dignity of the human person are those that allow and promote freedom through choice.

Many government attempts at solving poverty are well intentioned, but often these e with a host of conditions that box an individual into certain choices. Food stamps and other “survival” policies have anti-fraud measures that are very limiting and e an ever-present reminder that the person receiving this aid is different. The poor must spend their money differently and can have choice again when they are rich. For example, one of the most widespread food aid programs in the United States is the WIC food program, which sets specific limits on which foods and which brands of food can be purchased with the benefits, as denoted by the small WIC label on a price stamp in a grocery store. Choice, and by extension dignity, seems to be reserved as a luxury. Policies like this, that seek to maximize efficiency by conditioning aid, as an unintended consequence may actually undermine the dignity of the poor.

Unfortunately, beyond failing to maintain the recipients’ dignity, these sorts of policies often also fail to be financially efficient. As a general rule, the more guidelines and requirements a program has, the more of its funding is lost to administrative costs. With recent pushes to simplify welfare programs in the United States, there has been a corresponding decrease in administrative costs. Beyond mere administrative inefficiencies, however, restricted aid does not confer the same value to the receiver that the government expends. This is not an intuitive concept. It may help to picture this example; if someone were to give you a $25 gift card to a boutique clothing store, it simply would not be worth the same to you as $25 in cash. Sentiments aside, the restrictions and limits inherent to a gift card (i.e., it can only be used in certain places, and you may prefer a different brand, or you may be able to buy more clothes for a lower price at another store) decrease its monetary value to the recipient. Thus, the inefficiency is twofold: There is a loss at the administrative level, as it costs more money to manage the issuing of aid, and the aid is worth even less than it is labeled to the receiver, as its inflexibility decreases its value. Restricted welfare programs not only fail to uphold human dignity but also fail to uphold economic efficiency.

As Russ Roberts points out in his lecture for the Acton Institute’s Poverty Cure Summit, we are all likely well-aware of the maxim, “If you give a man a fish, you feed him for a day, but if you teach him how to fish, you feed him for a lifetime.” But he explains that this sort of view is short-sighted. Knowing how to fish allows one to survive, to avoid death, but this basic skill alone does not essentially imply a decent standard of living and dignity. However, Roberts points out, “If you could then allow them to interact with others in a market economy, they can prosper.” The market is the mechanism for prosperity and independence from aid. This is the road to thriving. The point being, the open market is where prosperity occurs and the person flourishes. Well-intentioned policymakers undoubtedly desire citizens to thrive. In order to do so, they should promote work that is well-integrated with the market. If financial independence and freedom are the goal of aid, it should be administered in a way that promotes economic productivity. Historically, the best motivator for productivity is profit, and the free market – with low restrictions on work and trade – offers the clearest connection between the two. The most efficient, effective, and dignifying solutions to poverty promote access to work without too many conditions, rules, or requirements. This means that deregulation in certain areas of the workplace can be one of the best solutions to poverty.

While many regulations make sense and are the duty of the government to maintain, many more regulations claim this role than truly fulfill it. In many places throughout the market, both in the United States and abroad, there are restrictions that make it difficult to work and move out of poverty. Many of these regulations do not make sense. Braiding hair, arranging flowers, and auctioneering are all licensed professions in American states. Such barriers to entry uniquely harm the economically disadvantaged. They create an artificially high entrance fee to earning a living: You cannot begin to work until you have spent time and money getting licensed. Not only does the licensing process have costs associated with training, testing, and filing, but one of the often-overlooked costs is the time opportunity cost. For someone struggling to earn a subsistence level e, time spent in cosmetology school or flower-trimming school is hours and days that could have been spent earning an e somewhere else. This can be prohibitive and trap people into lower e jobs with lower entrance barriers. The economic losses here are profound. The Institute for Justice has conducted years of analysis and study on the economic impact of occupational licensing in the United States and found “losses in economic value ranging from about $30 million (Rhode Island) to more than $840 million (California). A broader measure finds losses ranging from $675 million (Rhode Island) to over $22 billion (California).” Certain professions have reasonable education and licensing barriers: There is a reason high school students don’t have summer jobs as neurosurgeons. Many of these barriers, however, are an unnecessary and harmful regulations.

One of the clearest examples of this was illustrated during the summit by Isis Brantley, who shared her 20-year legal battle over braiding hair without a license. Isis, now an internationally recognized authority in natural braiding, knew her passion for braiding since she was a teenager. She opened a small, private salon, which was later raided by police. Following her 1997 arrest for braiding without a license, Brantley spent money and years of her life fighting for her rights, which culminated in a federal court ruling in her favor.

One of the greatest solutions to poverty would be increasing access to these and other professions that act as gatekeepers by means of high entry requirements like unnecessary certification and licensing. The next step after removing barriers may be to subsidize access through interview training courses, résumé help sessions, and possibly public transport credit options. These programs promote an individual’s choice of profession, are in touch with the market, and level the playing field for people attempting to enter the market. These sorts of programs empower individuals to work where they choose and thus promote choice, a concept fundamental to human dignity. They also help people reenter the open market, which can put them on track to ing economically independent and eventually negate the need for welfare.

Public and private approaches to alleviating poverty need to keep in mind the dignity of the individuals they are serving and prioritize choice. Central to human dignity is choice. The most fundamental freedom is freedom to choose where to live, where to work, how to spend money, what to wear, and more. The best solutions to poverty do not merely lift individuals out of poverty but allow them the agency to mobilize. Freedom of choice is central to dignified poverty relief.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Government funds bring corruption to Mayberry
Front Royal, Virginia, is just 70 miles from Washington, D.C., by road but a million miles away by culture. One resident described the town, which bills itself as “the northern gateway way to the Shenandoah Valley,” as “sort of like Mayberry.” This author, having visited the city many times, can confirm that description. Federal, state, and local authorities say the town has e victim to tens of millions of dollars in embezzlement and corruption involving more than a dozen county...
Samuel Gregg on the bankruptcy of woke capitalism
Should corporations hitch their businesses to leftist causes, such as suppressing the Betsy Ross flag? At Public Discourse, Acton Institute Director of Research Samuel Gregg writes that “woke capitalism feeds on deep confusion about the nature and ends of business.” Gregg describes how businesses contribute to mon good by fulfilling their own ends, which generate wealth and prosperity for society. He adds: Woke capitalism, I suspect, is only in its early stages. Progressives understand its effectiveness in herding American entrepreneurs...
Freedom, virtue and redemption: what have we been saved from?
“We have a sense that, actually, we do not have to be redeemed by Christianity but, rather, from Christianity,” wrote Pope Benedict XVI in an outstanding essay first published in English last year with the title Salvation: More Than a Cliché? “There is an insistent feeling that, in truth, Christianity hinders our freedom and that the land of freedom can appear only when the Christian terms and conditions have been torn up.” The question that the Pontiff Emeritus asks is...
David Deavel reviews ‘Justice in Taxation’ by Robert Kennedy
Recently at the Imaginative Conservative, David Deavel, assistant professor of Catholic Studies at the University of St. Thomas, reviewed one of the newest contributions to the Acton Institute’s long-running Christian Social Thought monograph series: Justice in Taxation by Robert G. Kennedy. After framing the review with a personal touch, Deavel outlines the central questions of Kennedy’s book: The Gospel answer to whether it’s lawful to pay taxes is that we should indeed “render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s” (see Mark...
On mythical materialism
Secular materialists and atheists like Richard Dawkins and Sam Harris like to mock religious people for being superstitious and illogical: resorting to fanciful explanations of events by invoking the work of God or miracles. Yet it is always amusing to me to see the length that materialists will go to hold fast to their mythical materialist beliefs. It almost charming to watch Sam Harris make a logical case for determinism and against the existence of free will, all the while...
Giuseppe Franco to Deliver the 2019 Calihan Lecture: ‘Religion, Society, and the Market’
Mark your calendar! As announced earlier this year, Professor Giuseppe Franco is the recipient of the 2019 Novak Award. In the ing 19th annual Calihan Lecture, Franco will examine the social philosophy and economic ethics of Wilhelm Röpke, 19th century economist said to be one of the spiritual fathers of the social market economy. The lecture will take place on Wednesday, October 9, 2019 at the University of San Diegoin California, during which Prof. Matt Zwolinski, director of the University’s...
Farewell Letter from Rome
This will be my last letter from Rome, as I am resigning as director of Istituto Acton, effective tomorrow, October 1. I started writing these monthly pieces in January 2010 to give you some idea of what it’s like to live and work in the Eternal City, with occasional missives from different parts of the world that I visited. I hope you have found them entertaining, maybe even enlightening. After twenty wonderful years here, it is simply time for a...
6 ways to combat consumerism
The Gospel reading on Sunday was the story of Lazarus and the rich man. I often refer to this parable in discussions about poverty, because Augustine points out that it was not wealth that sent the rich man to hell, but his indifference. He just didn’t care. He was too attached to the world and his ings and goings to notice Lazarus. As Pope mented in Evangelii gaudium, Almost without being aware of it, we end up being incapable of...
Bruce Ashford: Marxism is a false religion (video)
If Marxism despises religion, why does it take on all the trappings of the most fanatical faith? Bruce Ashford, the provost of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary, discusses this in a video released today. Ashford traces those who view Marxism as an idolatrous religion, not to some backwoods minister, but to French philosopher Raymond Aron, a contemporary of Jean-Paul Sartre. Aron’s 1955 book The Opiate of the Intellectuals, Ashford says, teaches that “structurally and existentially Marxism functions more like a religion...
Acton Line podcast: Is Catholicism at odds with the American experiment?
In 1995, Pope John Paul II spoke to a crowd in Baltimore, MD, saying, “Democracy cannot be sustained without a mitment to certain moral truths about the human person and munity. The basic question before a democratic society is: how ought we to live together?” This question has proved important throughout history and has left some people wondering how neutral our founding ideas were and whether particular faith traditions, especially Catholicism, patible with the American political order. So what defines...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved