Or, as with pensioners, they have at some stage made the contributions that have enabled them to get a pension, so they are among other things able to buy The Big Issue.
Yet in the case above, what seemed to be happening on most occasions was that The Big Issue was bringing the vendor to the marketplace and people were turning him back into a beggar. Yet most people who we talk to say that what they love about The Big Issue is that it gives people the dignity of not begging.
Take the paper, read it, but don’t forget to pay the vendor first
I always insist that people take the paper, otherwise it does not make sense to parade someone as working, yet in fact they are still relying on handouts.
Take the paper, read it, but don’t forget to pay the vendor first. That is the equation that we developed to get people away from begging. For standing around, waiting for the goodness of the world to descend upon you, is no life at all. It robs you of the chance of developing skills; like looking after your money, learning to sell, learning to live within the means of the money you make.
Begging is begging. Begging leads on most occasions to begging. I know of many Big Issue vendors who have stabilised themselves through selling, and developed and moved on. I know others who have no desire or capacity to move on but they have created themselves a selling niche, selling a product in the marketplace.
Yet I also have known through my long street association many beggars who have been mentally and socially and physically destroyed by being beggars. Fine people, at times strong, at times physically weak, yet all diminished and turned into recipients of people’s illusions that they are helping.
‘Trade not Aid’ was invented by people who worked in Asia and Africa because they could see the destruction wrought by giving aid to nations in crisis. Yet that did not end the crisis because it kept people destitute through dependency.
We operate the same system. ‘Trade not Aid’ works just as well on the streets of Glasgow, Cardiff or Birmingham. Lift people up through the dignity of what they are doing.
I can understand why people may pay over the top for a copy of The Big Issue. That is their choice. But when people just give money and say ‘Keep the paper’, they are only doing some short-term good.
And they are harming our model.
But it could have been different, if we had followed the advice of a woman who in the early days of The Big Issue wrote to me to complain. She was outraged when she spoke to a Big Issue vendor –she found out that the person selling the paper kept the money made; after buying the paper from us.
In short, he was working for his ‘own gain!’ That flew in the face of all her concepts of goodness and charity. She recommended, else she would stop buying, that we collect all the money together and give it out to the poor. In other words: ‘Aid not Trade’.
We did not follow the model she recommended. We backed the robustness of our own programme: to give people the chance to earn their own money. And give them the chance by this of ending their exclusion outside of society.
And that is what we continue to struggle to do. To stick to the principle that we are here to help people to help themselves by earning their own money. I know of many people, including myself, who have been enabled by this simple device. ‘A hand up not a handout’ is the wisest and toughest and most rewarding thing you can give someone today.
John Bird is the Founder and Editor in Chief of The Big Issue. Email him: john.bird@bigissue.com or tweet: @johnbirdswords