Professional Documents
Culture Documents
By Dick Wittenberg
It was during her studies at Harvard that she first started wondering why
Africa is the only continent that is forever struggling. Later, as she was
working on her thesis at Oxford, she tried to figure out why poor Asian
countries like South Korea or Thailand managed to join the world of
emerging nations when no African country did. For the next eight years,
she worked for the US investment bank Goldman Sachs. Gradually her
conviction grew stronger: Africa will never get on its feet unless it makes a
clean break with the system of development aid.
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and a reduction of poverty. Name one African country where this has
happened."
"The danger is that this book will get more attention than it deserves,"
wrote The Guardian. "Her proposal to phase out aid in five years is
disastrously irresponsible: it would lead to the closure of thousands of
schools and clinics across Africa, and an end to the HIV antiretroviral,
malaria and TB programmes, along with emergency food supplies, on
which millions of lives depend.
She speaks fast, without pausing for breath. "I am fairly aggressive," she
admits. Asked about her age, she offers instead that the average life
expectancy in her country of birth is between 36 and 37. "I have passed
that particular milestone."
If most people have focused on the first half of her book, Moyo herself
thinks the really explosive material is in the second half. There she offers
African government a series of tools to balance their budgets without the
need for development aid: issue government bonds; attract foreign
investment; boost exports by concentrating on emerging markets like
India or China; put remittance, the money sent home by Africans living
abroad, to good use... "It's not rocket science," she says. "Other countries
have done it with success."
Moyo: "I'm really not saying anything new. In fact, I'm plagiarising. I
quote other people's research. As early as the sixties, Peter Bauer, the
development economist, was describing development aid as 'a tax on poor
people in rich countries that benefits rich people in poor countries'. He was
ignored. In the world of development aid it is not a secret that it just
doesn't work. But aid organisations and celebrities like Bob Geldof are
keeping the myth alive. My own family suffers the consequences of
development aid every day."
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"But at the end of the day they let the African countries get away with it.
World Bank research has shown that 85 percent of development aid was
used for other than the intended purpose. Donor countries are propping
up the most corrupt regimes. From 1980 until 1996, 72 percent of World
Bank aid went to countries that did not abide by the rules. The need for
donor countries to just keep on giving appears to be insatiable."
"The cynical answer is: because it distracts attention from the trade
barriers they have erected in order to protect employment in the West.
These trade barriers cost Africa an estimated 500 billion dollars every
year. That's ten times the amount Africa is given in development aid. And
because they secretly don't believe that Africa is ever going to pull it
together. They feel sorry for the Africans. So they buy themselves a
conscience.
"You can pay school fees for a 12-year-old girl. You can makes sure she
has an education. You can say: look what development aid can
accomplish. But what good is that for the girl is she can't find a job after
she leaves school? Because they are no jobs to be had. Every time I go
home to Zambia, there are more street children. They can read, they can
write, they speak English. And the only thing they can do to make a living
is to hustle. More and more parents in the countryside are keeping their
children out of school. If there are no jobs in the cities anyway, they say,
the children might as well start working on the land right away."
But isn't pulling the plug on development aid a recipe for mass
mortality?
"Only the elite will feel the pain. The poor won't even notice the
difference. It's not like they ever saw any of that money anyway."
Development aid experts like to point out that for decades the rich
nations have used development aid as a weapon in the cold war,
as an instrument of foreign policy. Unlike you, They plead for more
and better direct aid.
"So where are we going to direct the aid now? In the sixties aid was
supposed to be used for big infrastructure projects. In the seventies it was
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"The president has been critical of development aid repeatedly in the past.
But he is still dependent on it for 70 percent of his budget. He read an
article about me in the Financial Times during a flight. He saw a chance to
rid Rwanda from development aid. He wanted me to come to Rwanda right
away. I was to meet with his ministers, who would then spend the
weekend debating development aid.
"We discussed how to get a credit rating report as a country, how to sell
government bonds, how to attract foreign investors, how to find new trade
partners... 'Just imagine,' I wrote in my book, 'that one by one African
governments would get a phone call from the donor countries: "We're
phasing out your development aid over the next five years."' An adviser to
president Kagame told me: 'We want to be the ones to make that phone
call.'"
"Most African leaders find it much more convenient to just cash the
development cheque every year. This way they don't have to take action.
They can do whatever they want. There is no one to call them to account."
Paul Collier, your old professor at Harvard and Oxford, thinks you
are far too optimistic about African countries getting access to
world financial markets.
"With all due respect but I have worked in the financial markets. I know
what investors want. It is not an easy road to take. But it's possible. The
reward is sustainable growth.
"I grew up in a country where every kind of initiative was either dismissed
or suppressed. They can't. They won't. I'm fed up. Let's try something
new. Because the old approach clearly doesn't work."
Isn't this the worst possible time to try a new approach now that
the credit crunch has paralysed the financial markets?
"These are challenging times. But it's not because the American and
European markets are out of reach that all markets are. There are gigantic
financial reserves in China and the Middle East just screaming for
investment opportunities. And even if the markets are closed, all the more
reason for African countries to start preparing for when they open up
again. This apocalyptic situation isn't going to last forever. So go practise
your roadshow for investors. Why should they invest in your country and
not another? Your answer is going to have to be convincing."
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ourselves to the fact that Africa will never develop? How much longer are
we going to keep using colonialism as an excuse? Can we finally move
on?"
"I don't get that. I think it's hypocritical. At Harvard he was always saying
that Russia, Poland and Bolivia had to adapt to the free market even if it
was going to hurt. But when it comes to Africa, he has a whole other
recipe. Is he saying that Africa is fundamentally different from the rest of
the world? Is he saying that Africa will never get it together? Is he saying
there is something terribly wrong with this continent? I would love to
debate him. His arguments are emotional. They have little to do with
economics or logic."
Dambisa Moyo: Dead Aid: Why aid is not working and how there is
another way for Africa, 208 pages, Allen Lane. www.deadaid.org
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