Microsoft founder Bill Gates has launched a campaign to help extremely poor families in sub-Saharan Africa by giving them chickens.
The billionaire and philanthropist says raising and selling the birds can be efficient to tackle extreme poverty.
He has promised to donate 100,000 chickens, and the project’s page has already been shared thousands of times.
The UN estimates that 41% of people in sub-Saharan Africa live in extreme poverty.
Mr Gates said a farmer breeding five hens could earn more than $1,000 (£690) a year. The poverty line is about $700 (£484).
He added that the goal was to help 30% of the rural families in sub-Saharan Africa raise improved breeds of vaccinated chickens, up from the current 5%.
Giving away 100,000 chickens in an effort to alleviate poverty is a noble gesture in itself. But the plan throws up a few questions.
As the chicken population increases, where is the feed going to come from? Will more arable land have to be given over to growing chicken feed?
Also, with more chickens on the market, simple demand/supply economics suggests the average price of a chicken would fall.
There’s also the issue of dumping.
The US, the European Union and Brazil are accused of selling chickens into African markets at prices way below what local farmers can afford to sell them for.
At the launch of the campaign in New York, Mr Gates said: “These chickens are multiplying on an ongoing basis so there’s no investment that has a return percentage anything like being able to breed chickens.”
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