All Thinkers

Jeffrey Sachs

Jeffrey Sachs is an American economist. He was born in 1954 in Detroit, in the United States. He studied economics at Harvard University, where he was a brilliant student. He became a full professor at Harvard while still very young. Sachs is known for working in the real world, not only in the university. From early in his career, he advised governments. In the late 1980s and 1990s, he gave advice to countries trying to change from communist or crisis-hit economies to market economies. These included Bolivia, Poland, and Russia. This advice was bold, fast, and very controversial. Later, Sachs turned his focus to global poverty. He moved to Columbia University in New York. He became a leading voice arguing that extreme poverty could be ended, and soon. He advised the United Nations and helped shape major global anti-poverty goals. He also led a large project called the Millennium Villages. It tried to lift specific African villages out of poverty, using many kinds of help at once. Sachs has written bestselling books, including 'The End of Poverty'. He is a famous, energetic, and divisive figure. Some see him as a tireless campaigner against poverty. Others sharply criticise his methods and results.

Origin
United States
Lifespan
born 1954
Era
20th-21st century / contemporary
Subjects
Economics Development Economics Global Poverty Sustainable Development Economic Policy
Why They Matter

Sachs matters because he made the end of extreme poverty feel like a real, urgent goal, not a distant dream. For years, many people treated deep poverty as simply permanent. Sachs argued loudly that it could be ended within a generation, if rich countries chose to act.

His main idea was that the very poorest are caught in a 'poverty trap'. They are too poor to invest in the things, like health, schools, and seeds, that would let them escape. The trap holds them down. Sachs argued that a big enough push of outside help could break the trap and start growth.

Sachs also matters as a doer. He did not only write. He advised governments, shaped United Nations goals, and ran large projects on the ground. He brought energy and attention to global poverty that few others could match.

But an honest account must include serious criticism. His fast 'shock therapy' advice to former communist countries is heavily debated. His Millennium Villages project did not clearly work, and was criticised for weak evidence. Sachs matters as a major and genuinely contested figure: bold, influential, and far from universally admired.

Key Ideas
1
Who Is Jeffrey Sachs?
2
Can Extreme Poverty Be Ended?
3
The Poverty Trap
Key Quotations
"Extreme poverty can be ended, not in the time of our grandchildren, but in our own time."
— Paraphrased from Jeffrey Sachs, 'The End of Poverty', 2005
This captures the bold, hopeful claim at the centre of Sachs's most famous book. For a long time, deep poverty was treated as permanent. Sachs insisted it was a solvable problem, and soon. For students, the quotation shows both Sachs's great strength and the reason he is debated. The strength is the urgency: he refuses to accept poverty as fixed. The risk is overconfidence: critics ask whether ending poverty is really as achievable as he makes it sound.
"The poorest of the poor are not poor because of laziness; they are caught in a trap they cannot escape alone."
— Paraphrased from Jeffrey Sachs, 'The End of Poverty', 2005
Here Sachs explains his idea of the 'poverty trap'. His point is firm: the very poorest are not failing through bad character. They are stuck in a circle, too poor to make the investments that would let them escape. For students, this is an important and humane idea. It shifts blame away from poor people themselves and towards the trap they are caught in. Whether outside help can really break that trap is the question critics then raise.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Problem Solving When teaching students to question whether a problem is really fixed
How to introduce
Tell students that for a long time, extreme poverty was treated as permanent, and that Sachs argued loudly it could actually be ended. Ask students to name a problem people treat as 'just the way things are', and to question whether it truly is. This teaches a problem-solving mindset. Sachs shows the value of refusing to accept a hard problem as unsolvable. He also reminds students that bold confidence has to be tested against real results.
Critical Thinking When teaching students why some people stay stuck
How to introduce
Explain Sachs's idea of the 'poverty trap'. The very poorest are stuck in a circle. They are too poor to invest in the things that would let them escape. Ask students to think of other situations where someone is 'stuck' rather than simply failing. This teaches critical thinking about cause. Sachs helps students see that being stuck and being lazy are not the same thing. Understanding a trap is the first step to thinking about how someone might get out.
Ethical Thinking When discussing what rich countries owe to poor ones
How to introduce
Share Sachs's belief that rich countries could help end extreme poverty if they chose to act. Ask students: do wealthier countries have a duty to help poorer ones, and how much? This opens an honest ethical discussion. Sachs offers one strong, hopeful answer. Encourage students to also consider the hard questions: whether outside help always helps, and whether good intentions are enough on their own.
Further Reading

For a first introduction, 'The End of Poverty' (2005) is Sachs's most famous book and lays out his hopeful argument for general readers. Reliable encyclopedia entries give balanced overviews of his life and career. Because Sachs is a contested figure, students should pair any of his own work with accounts of the criticism, so the debate is clear from the start.

Key Ideas
1
Shock Therapy
2
The Big Push
3
The Millennium Villages Project
Key Quotations
"A scattering of small efforts will not work; what is needed is a big, coordinated push across many areas at once."
— Paraphrased from Jeffrey Sachs's writing on the 'big push' approach to development
This states Sachs's 'big push' idea. He argued that helping with just one thing, like health or schools, alone would not free people from the poverty trap. Many kinds of help had to come together, because they support each other. For students, the quotation shows Sachs's ambition. It also points straight at the main criticism: can outsiders really plan and run such a huge, coordinated effort well? That is the question his critics press hardest.
"Sometimes an economy in crisis needs rapid, decisive change rather than slow, cautious steps."
— Paraphrased from Jeffrey Sachs's writing and advice on 'shock therapy' in the 1980s and 1990s
This expresses the thinking behind 'shock therapy', Sachs's advice to countries leaving communism or facing crisis. The idea was that fast, sharp change might be less painful in the end than a slow one. For students, the quotation should be read alongside the debate about results. Poland's recovery is often seen as a relative success; Russia's 1990s experience is widely seen as harsh and damaging. The same approach, in different places, produced very different outcomes.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Problem Solving When teaching students about coordinated solutions
How to introduce
Introduce Sachs's 'big push' idea: that many kinds of help, health, schools, farming, roads, work better together than any one alone, because they support each other. Ask students to take a big problem and design a solution that combines several connected actions at once. This teaches a problem-solving skill, and also its difficulty: students should discuss how hard it really is to plan and run many coordinated efforts well.
Critical Thinking When teaching students that the same method can give different results
How to introduce
Explain Sachs's 'shock therapy' advice and its mixed record. Poland's recovery is often seen as relatively successful. Russia's 1990s experience was widely seen as harsh and damaging. Ask students why one approach might work in one place and fail in another. This teaches careful critical thinking. Students learn not to judge a method as simply 'good' or 'bad'. Instead, they ask what conditions it needs to work, and what happens when those conditions are missing.
Further Reading

For deeper reading, 'The Age of Sustainable Development' (2015) shows Sachs's broader, later focus on combining poverty reduction with care for the planet. Nina Munk's book 'The Idealist' (2013) is an important, critical account of the Millennium Villages Project and should be read alongside Sachs's own writing. Accessible summaries of the Sachs and Easterly debate help students see both sides.

Key Ideas
1
The Criticisms of Sachs
2
The Sachs and Easterly Debate
3
From Poverty to Sustainable Development
Key Quotations
"We must fight poverty and protect the planet at the same time; they are not separate tasks."
— Paraphrased from Jeffrey Sachs's writing on sustainable development
This captures the broader idea Sachs moved towards later in his career: 'sustainable development'. His argument is that ending poverty and protecting the environment cannot be treated as two separate jobs, because they affect each other deeply. For advanced students, the quotation shows how Sachs's central question grew over time. He began by asking how to end poverty. He came to ask a larger question: how can humanity improve its life without destroying the natural world it depends on?
"Good intentions are not enough; development efforts must be honest about their results, including their failures."
— Paraphrased to reflect lessons drawn from the debate over Jeffrey Sachs's Millennium Villages Project
This reflects a hard lesson from the debate around Sachs's Millennium Villages Project, which was widely criticised for weak evidence and unclear results. Whatever one thinks of Sachs, the episode shows that energy and good intentions are not the same as proven success. For advanced students, the quotation is a serious point about all efforts to do good. Caring deeply about a problem does not guarantee that your solution works. Honest testing, and honesty about failure, are essential.
Using This Thinker in the Classroom
Research Skills When teaching students why projects must be properly tested
How to introduce
Tell students about the Millennium Villages Project: a bold, well-funded effort that was widely criticised. It lacked proper comparison groups, so it was hard to know what its help had really achieved. Ask students how they would design a project so its results could actually be measured. This teaches a key research skill. Good intentions and energy are not proof of success; a project must be built so it can be honestly tested.
Critical Thinking When teaching students to weigh two serious, opposed positions
How to introduce
Present the long debate between Sachs and the economist William Easterly. Sachs argued for big, planned aid efforts. Easterly argued that big top-down plans usually fail, and that small, tested steps work better. Ask students to argue each side fairly. This teaches advanced critical thinking. Students learn that a real disagreement is not about who cares more, but about a hard, honest question, and that thoughtful people land on different answers.
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Sachs proved that extreme poverty can be quickly ended with enough aid.

What to teach instead

He did not prove this, and an honest account must say so. Sachs argued powerfully that extreme poverty could be ended, and he made it a goal the world took seriously. But his main test of the idea, the Millennium Villages Project, did not clearly succeed and was criticised for weak evidence. Sachs raised the ambition and the argument. He did not settle it. Whether large-scale aid can end poverty quickly remains a genuinely open and debated question.

Common misconception

Sachs's shock therapy was simply a success that helped countries leave communism.

What to teach instead

The record is mixed, not a simple success. Sachs advised fast, all-at-once economic change in countries leaving communism. Poland's recovery is often seen as relatively successful. But Russia's experience in the 1990s was widely seen as harsh and damaging, with deep hardship for many people. Serious economists still debate how much shock therapy helped and how much it harmed. Calling it simply a success ignores a real and painful part of the story.

Common misconception

Sachs is universally respected as the leading expert on ending poverty.

What to teach instead

He is influential, but he is far from universally respected, and the disagreement is serious. Some economists sharply criticise his shock therapy advice, his Millennium Villages Project, and what they see as his overconfidence about how easily outsiders can fix poverty. His long public debate with William Easterly shows that thoughtful experts genuinely disagree with him. Sachs is a major and energetic figure, but he is a contested one, not a settled authority.

Common misconception

Sachs thinks poverty is the fault of poor people themselves.

What to teach instead

This is the opposite of his view. Sachs's idea of the 'poverty trap' insists that the very poorest are not poor through laziness or bad character. They are stuck in a circle: too poor to make the investments that would let them escape. Sachs's whole argument is that poor people are trapped, not failing, and that the right outside help could break the trap. One can debate his solutions, but not by claiming he blames the poor.

Intellectual Connections
In Dialogue With
Angus Deaton
Sachs has argued for large, ambitious aid programmes to lift poor countries out of poverty. Deaton has expressed serious doubts, warning that big aid flows can weaken a government's accountability to its own people. They stand on opposite sides of the development debate, both as serious economists. Reading them together gives students a real, honest argument about whether large-scale aid helps or harms, with thoughtful experts on each side.
In Dialogue With
Esther Duflo
Duflo argues that anti-poverty ideas should be tested with small, carefully controlled experiments before being scaled up. Sachs argued instead for a big, coordinated push of help all at once. The contrast is sharp and useful: careful step-by-step testing versus bold large-scale action. Reading them together shows two leading approaches to fighting poverty, and helps students see that even people with the same goal can disagree deeply about method.
Develops
Arthur Lewis
Lewis helped found development economics, the study of how poor countries can grow. Sachs works in that tradition and develops one part of it: the idea that poor countries can be helped to escape poverty through a large, deliberate effort. Both believe development is possible and can be aided. Reading them together shows a line from the field's early foundations to Sachs's bold, modern, and much-debated campaign against extreme poverty.
Complements
Amartya Sen
Sen and Sachs both focus on the wellbeing of the world's poorest people, but from different angles. Sen built a broad framework of development as human freedom and capability. Sachs focused on concrete plans and large efforts to remove extreme poverty's material causes. Reading them together gives students both a deep way of thinking about what development is for, and an ambitious, practical, contested attempt to actually achieve it.
Complements
Wangari Maathai
Maathai, the Kenyan environmentalist, linked poverty, the environment, and the wellbeing of communities, arguing they must be addressed together. Sachs moved towards a similar idea later in his career, with his focus on 'sustainable development': fighting poverty and protecting the planet at the same time. Reading them together connects a grassroots African environmental leader with a global economist who reached, by a different path, a related conviction.
In Dialogue With
Naomi Klein
Klein, the journalist and activist, sharply criticised the kind of fast, free-market 'shock' changes that Sachs advised in the 1980s and 1990s. Her idea of the 'shock doctrine' is, in part, a direct attack on that whole approach. Sachs and Klein represent opposite readings of the same events. Reading them together gives students a genuine and pointed disagreement about whether rapid market reforms helped struggling countries or harmed them.
Further Reading

For research-level engagement, students should read Sachs's development work alongside the substantial critical literature: the debates over shock therapy in Russia and Eastern Europe, the reviews of the Millennium Villages Project, and the long argument with William Easterly over how aid should work. Sachs's later writing on sustainable development connects his anti-poverty work to climate and environmental questions. Any serious study should weigh his ambition and influence against the genuine failures and doubts.