Get rich- ride a bike!

Earning more, eating better and environmentally resilient: the impact of the bicycle in the developing world shown in new studySchool children cycle to school in Africa (credit: World Bicycle Relief)

From road.cc

Earning more, eating better and environmentally resilient: the impact of the bicycle in the developing world shown in new study

A two-year study from the World Bicycle Relief charity showed significant returns on investment and the bike’s power as a “catalytic tool”…

by Callum Devereux

Wed, Dec 03, 2025 11:19

3

The distribution of bicycles in Zambia, as part of a recent study, significantly enhanced the life outcomes of its participants.

The trial involved more than 1400 participants, including around 200 community health workers, and was held in Zambia’s rural Mumbwa District, west of the capital city of Lusaka. The study found that when adults gained access to bicycles –and were supported with trained mechanics and spare parts – the improvements were clear.

The two year randomised controlled trial began in 2023 and included Zambia’s most severe drought in decades. But the study showed that households with bicycles were found to have better food security and maintained higher incomes whereas households without bicycles experienced a marked drop in overall living standards.

As seen in the developed world, bicycle users were also found to rely significantly less on motorised transport and experienced productivity gains compared to those without.

Dave Neiswander, CEO of the World Bicycle Relief charity that distributed the bicycles and commissioned the study, said that the results showed the bicycle can be “a catalytic tool” which “gives people back their time, connects them to opportunity, and builds resilience that endures beyond crisis.”

Healthcare worker cycling in AfricaHealthcare worker cycling in Africa (credit: Mana Meadows/World Bicycle Relief)

Nearly 70 percent of participants were women, with the study also examining social mobility and life satisfaction. After one year, women who received bicycles were found to have increased their life satisfaction by 11% compared to the control group who were not provided with bicycles, which WBR describe as “leading to greater self-esteem and decision-making power within households”.

After two years, women with bicycles were found to generate 43 percent more in monthly business revenue than women without.

Over the course of the study, WBR estimate that for every £1 invested in bicycle provision, it amounts to a return on investment of £14.70, measured not only in increased household incomes, but also higher rates of school attendance, and increased accessibility of healthcare.

IDinsight’s Junior Economist Kashif Ahmed, who produced the report on behalf of the WBR and analysed the findings, said “A nearly 15-to-1 return on investment places bicycles alongside the most impactful anti-poverty programs, delivering lasting social and economic benefits at a fraction of the cost.

“For policymakers and funders seeking scalable, evidence-based approaches, bicycles represent a proven, high-value solution.”

It’s not the first time that the bicycle has been seen as a key tool of social mobility, and the findings have also been echoed in the UK.

> Free bike schemes in deprived communities improve people’s health, wellbeing and social mobility, report shows

A Sport England-commissioned report last month found that the trial of distributing bikes for free in the most deprived areas of the country substantially improved people’s health, wellbeing and social mobility.

That study, endorsed by the Active Wellbeing Society, found an economic return of investment of £11.80 for every £1. Those trials also included “wraparound support” of bike lessons, maintenance and group rides free of charge.

Global poverty almost history!

Great news about global poverty from the World Bank and IPA: (And it’s good news about market forces, development and economic freedom not protest marches!)

Global poverty now down to single digits


One of the most important of human achievements has been the very significant reduction in extreme poverty experienced by men, women, and children throughout the world.

And in what is sure to be good news, the World Bank has just released a study informing us that one billion people rose out of extreme poverty since 2000, and that in spite of the global financial crisis a few years ago.

The same study reveals the heartening news that the global poverty rate, calculated as the number of people earning $1.90 or less (on an purchasing power parity international dollar basis), is estimated to have fallen into single digits this year.

In 1990, the global poverty rate was a sobering 37.1 per cent but has precipitously fallen since. This is what the World Bank had to say about this amazing achievement, in a press statement:

The number of people living in extreme poverty around the world is likely to fall to under 10 percent of the global population in 2015… giving fresh evidence that a quarter-century-long sustained reduction in poverty is moving the world closer to the historic goal of ending poverty by 2030.

Full article here

Food Prices Stable Over 50+ Years

The great population scares of last century confidently predicted that the world would not be able to feed an increasing population. You would expect that if that prediction were to come true then food prices would be increasing. In fact, the U.N. says that since 1961 the world prices for food have slightly decreased, adjusting for inflation.

 

From cato.org:

UN: Food Prices Are Lower Today than in 1961

Food prices are (slightly) lower today than they were in 1961. Yes, that’s right. Adjusted for inflation, the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization calculates, the food price index in 2015 stood at 131.2. It was 131.7 in 1961.

In the meantime, the world population has increased from 3.01 billion to 7.28 billion – a rise of 4.2 billion or 135 percent.

If you are Paul Ehrlich, Lester Brown, William and Paul Paddock, Garrett Hardin, Rajiv Gandhi and countless other followers of Reverend Malthus, this should NOT be happening. But, it is. Human beings are intelligent animals. Unlike rabbits, who overbreed when food is plentiful and die out when it is not, humans innovate their way out of scarcity.

Fair Trade- The ethical way to oppress the poor

I’ve always been suspicious of “Fair Trade” products as a simplistic way to make us feel better about eating chocolate or drinking coffee while causing more problems than they solve.

From spiked!

It’s official: Fairtrade screws over labourers

A new study exposes Fairtrade for what it is – a Western vanity project that impoverishes those it’s meant to benefit.he world’s ethical shoppers are still reeling this week after a report revealed that Fairtrade programmes are of little benefit to those working on farms in the developing world.

 

The government-funded study published by SOAS, a part of the University of London, was conducted over a four-year period in Uganda and Ethiopia. It showed that labourers on farms that are part of Fairtrade programmes are usually paid less and are subject to worse working conditions than their peers on large commercial farms, and even other small farms that are not part of Fairtrade programmes. Professor Christopher Cramer, the study’s main author, said: ‘Fairtrade has not been an effective mechanism for improving the lives of wage workers, the poorest rural people.’

The study also found that the ‘social premium’ incorporated into the price of Fairtrade products, which is meant to be used to improve infrastructure in poor communities, is often misspent. In one instance, researchers found that modern toilets built with this premium were in fact for the use of senior farm managers only. The report also documented examples of health clinics and schools set up with social-premium funds that charged fees that were too high for the labourers they were intended to benefit.

Read the full article here