The Kenyan economics expert James Shikwati, 35, says that aid to Africa does more harm than good. The avid proponent of globalization spoke with SPIEGEL about the disastrous effects of Western development policy in Africa, corrupt rulers, and the tendency to overstate the AIDS problem.Some highlights from the interview:
6/13/2011 2:14:10 PM
This is... kind of complicated.I agree that the AIDS problem is often overstated. The statistic for transmitting it in regular heterosexual sex, for instance, is said to be something like 2 in 1000. But that's being unfair, since Africa has it's own strains of AIDS specifically mutated to effectively transmit between the people there. At its worst though, in places like Botswana, it tore apart societies, adult infection rates are still like 1 in 4, although there are probably people willing to disagree with this number. Either way, it played a large role in evaporating the dream of prosperity.Foreign aid has problems, but advocates will turn it around and ask if one considers it a "net good" or a "net bad". There is absolutely no agreement on that, but it really doesn't matter since the decision is determined by the externalities. There are political externalities that cause governments to be more friendly to us. There's also the externalities that it f-ing costs us money in the first place, which I think sufficiently makes the Ron Paul argument. Who cares about the academic debate of if this is a net good or evil when we're going broke anyway? If it's obvious that the benefit is hotly contested then, speaking strictly fiscally, it seems like an easy decision to stop paying for it.
6/13/2011 2:26:26 PM
I agree, of course, that in the case of aid given by the U.S. government, we simply don't have the means to do it and should stop immediately.An important thing to note, though, is that much of the aid provided to Africa is given on a voluntary basis. Massive amounts of food and clothes are donated to Africa by various European and American organizations every year. These donations are actually stunting the economic development of many African countries.If true, this fact flies in the face of decades of U.S. and European doctrine: that development is a process that can be encouraged, or even initiated, by outside forces. This implies a top-down approach, rather than a bottom-up, "spontaneous order." In so many ways, our policies are shaped by this faulty logical foundation. Our military interventions aim to help nations "catch up" to us culturally, but have failed to do so in most if not all cases; the same justifications used for European imperialism were used for the war in Iraq. Our domestic policies aim to inject money where it's needed, yet we have a public education system that has failed spectacularly and a health care system where prices have exploded.When dealing with extremely complex and chaotic systems such as human civilization, we have to make a distinction between immediate, observable effects, and long-term, harder-to-discern effects. Policymakers are typically unwilling to consider the latter.[Edited on June 13, 2011 at 3:20 PM. Reason : ]
6/13/2011 3:12:05 PM
Part of the reason for foreign aid isn't humanitarian. It's to minimize power vacuums so we don't end up with places like Somalia to cause us problems with pirates and terrorists and shit. If we can have the powers that be also forced to hold our pocket, sit down to pee whenever we say so, and not be aligned with our rivals, then that's useful, too.
6/13/2011 9:29:32 PM
Signed.
6/13/2011 9:41:37 PM
agreed
6/13/2011 10:32:52 PM
Do we bear any responsibility if, in the course of preventing these "power vacuums," we severely hinder the progress of other cultures, or do we truly live in a dog eat dog world, where any action that protects our national interests is permissable?In any case, the kind of aid I think you're referring to is not exactly what's being discussed in this interview. I used military intervention as an example of where we attempt to "help" other nations skip major steps in their development, but always fail. It's part of a broader argument that real, lasting societal change comes about from within.
6/13/2011 10:58:12 PM
6/14/2011 9:51:50 AM
Foreign aid is a great idea. Government to government transfers are always a terrible idea. As such, why the hell are government to government transfers the only thing that is classified as foreign aid?!?!If the federal government stopped paying a penny to other governments, our foreign assistance would still be on par with other countries. [Edited on June 14, 2011 at 9:59 AM. Reason : .,.]
6/14/2011 9:58:36 AM
6/14/2011 11:44:16 AM
6/14/2011 11:59:15 AM
6/14/2011 1:15:53 PM
This time, this time, I agree with the OP
6/15/2011 9:41:08 AM
6/15/2011 10:14:17 AM
multiple countries aided with the gulf coast spill.
6/15/2011 10:30:13 AM
6/15/2011 11:16:19 AM
It sounds like the problem isn't really the existence of aid to Africa, but the form that it generally takes and its administration, which is more a lifeline rather than a step ladder to development; as well as allowing too much leeway in how it's spent by local politicians. Increasing aid in areas like roadbuilding, well-digging, agricultural mechanization, broadband, and other infrastructure would enable self-sufficiency and growth without pricing out local markets.
6/15/2011 12:50:37 PM