Show me a country where “Catholic charity” significantly reduced poverty. BTW, “Catholic charity” is inferior to a welfare state if it is the ONLY means to reduce poverty.
In addition, increased social spending reduces poverty in developed countries.
See:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welfare_state#Effects_on_poverty
Wikipedia’s not a good source for social policy, I’m afraid—too biased, whichever way you take it, since social science isn’t science.
I referred to “The Tragedy of American Compassion”, which covers the “crowding out” effect in detail, and has a good overview of why private charities such as The Salvation Army (non-Catholic, btw) are more effective at pulling people out of poverty than government.
Remember also what Christ said—we shall always have the poor with us.
Show me the secular state which has eliminated poverty and has put the words of the Lord to the lie.
We’ve had a “war on poverty” for over a generation, have spent trillions upon it, have had many smart people waging it, and yet it poverty is still prevalent.
Given that during the same period we’ve landed on the moon, built a space station, placed numerous satellites in orbit, etc one would think that the problem would be solved by now if it were solvable.
Fun fact for the day: The poverty level in 1963, just prior to the Great Society push, was $3,000. In inflation-adjusted 2007 dollars, that equals $20,357.04.
Since we’ve spent trillions of dollars “eliminating poverty”, we surely must have very few people living on less than $20,357.04 today, right?
Wrong.
You have a right to your own opinion, but not your own facts.
I’d also recommend reading Charles Murray’s excellent “Losing Ground” on this topic.