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The
International Writers Magazine - Our Tenth Year: Africa
Should
the Aid plug to Africa be pulled out?
A critical response
Ronald
Elly Wanda
"Stars
come and go" said William Goldman in Adventures In The Screen
Trade. And Goldman was right. Lately in the African literary and
development circle, Dambisa Moyo with her new book Dead Aid:
How Aid is not working and how there is another way for Africa,
has become one such a 'star'. The book, not to my surprise, has
received a very warm welcome within the western academic circuit-
that is usually unreceptive to African intellectual contributions.
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For
instance, one Oxford University don (Moyos former tutor both at
Oxford and Harvard) reviewing for the Independent wrote: "Dambisa
Moyo is to aid what Ayaan Hirsi Ali is to Islam. Here is an African
woman, articulate, smart, glamorous, delivering a message of brazen
political incorrectness: `cut aid to Africa". Another well-placed
British reviewer continues the flattery: "Moyo cannot be dismissed
as a crank. Educated at Harvard and Oxford, she heads the Africa strategy
of a major bank. Nor can she be dismissed as a renegade who has rejected
her roots. She is deeply wounded by the lack of development in Zambia,
her home country".
Michela Wrong, (a former FT reporter) whose recent book-launch I attended
at SOAS, also thinks Moyos right. Her book Its Our Turn
to Eat: the story of a Kenyan Whistleblower is based on narratives
of her friend John Githongo, the former Kenyan Anti-Corruption Tsar
who sought sanctuary in Britain in 2005 after uncovering high-level
corruption in the post-Moi regime. Since its publication, Kenyan bookshops
have refused to stock or distribute it, citing fears of persecution
and prosecution by the incumbent Kibaki administration. Reviewing for
The Spectator (a right wing publication) Wrong said: "The
assumption that foreign aid is an unalloyed good runs so deep in the
guilt- ridden, post-colonial West, people are often shocked to discover
that many Africans, far from showing appropriate gratitude or begging
for more, regard these contributions with both distrust and suspicion".
Concluding: "no wonder this book is causing a stir". But should
Moyo be branded a star simply for causing a stir? Having read her submission,
(forgive me) I think not.
Truth, reality and objectivity, it is often argued, mark out the straight
road of knowledge and put us on our guard against all deviations. As
an analyst with a pan-african posture, whenever reading socio-political
texts on Africa, I often ponder on whether the writer managed to make
a correlation between Africas development and its accompanying
social and historical conditions. Thus Dead Aid was no exception. In
spite of her "impressive" statistics, Moyo makes no attempt
to neither mention nor entertain the possibilities as did Dr Walter
Rodney in his classic How Europe Underdeveloped Africa that exogenous
factors have and continue to hamper development in Africa. For instance
the conditionalities imposed on the so called "Aid" given
to Africa; the culture of protectionism practiced by U.S and EU and
safeguarded by the World Trade Organisation (W.T.O); the ongoing core
(Western world) and periphery (Africa) relations that constantly disadvantage
Africa; and last but certainly not least, the subsequent mind-set of
International Financial Institutions (I.F.Is) that subordinates Africa.
For many Africans, particularly women, children and those working in
the informal sector, the social impact of Structural Adjustment Programmes
(S.A.Ps) has been excruciatingly felt. Designed by the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank (WB), they have been the framework
for economic and social policy in Africa since the early 1980s. Instead
of reducing poverty, they have impoverished already poor Wanainchi (Africans)
both in the rural and urban areas. The donor communitys insistence
that African countries liberalise their markets through privatisation
of public enterprises and downsizing of the civil services have made
corruption endemic in Africa. According to a recent UN report, Western
business interests are at the heart of corruption in Africa, the report
estimated that government supported companies pay bribes worth $80 billion
a year in order to secure long and short term contracts and other concessions
from African governments and at the expense of the voiceless and already
poor mwanainchi.
With recent British broadsheets biblically citing Dead Aid and
continually amplifying statements such as: "having received almost
a $1 trillion in the past 60 years in foreign aid, yet Africans are
still worse off than they were during the independence years
",
one somehow gets the impression that Dead Aid has become a fitting kit
for the West to justify aid reduction to Africa. Moyos prime argument
that Africas culture of dependency is to blame for its woes (although
explicable) is simply not true. Because were we to reverse that argument
then one should expect the economies of countries such as Eritrea, Mauritania
and for the last 18 years anarchic Somalia, which have received virtually
no foreign aid at all, to have improved notably. This, needless to say,
has not been the case. Therefore aid in my view, is not the problem,
the way in which it is structured and delivered is the real problem.
The conditions imposed on the aid are so many and in most cases not
the right ones. That said, aid alone cannot solve Africas many
problems, it must go hand in hand with reforms of international trade
and financial rules in order to ensure that Wanainchi have a fair chance
of benefiting from the wealth of resources that Africa has aplenty.
The timing of Dead Aid is, to say the least, neglectful, especially
given the recent US and EU banking systems collapse and the inevitable
global financial crisis that has followed, the severity of which will
be felt more by nearly 40 million poor Wanainchi as they swell the ranks
of abject poverty. According to Action Aid, the crisis is likely to
cost Africa $400billion in the next three years alone. It is this reason
amongst others that drove most of us at a recent alternative G20 Summit
in London under the banner "Real Financial Fairness", to call
on richer Western nations to maintain their pledge to increase aid to
0.7 % of their respective GNIs as agreed by the U.N, (instead of the
current 0.2% that they occasionally give) in order to help poor wanainchi
in Africa cope with the impact of the current economic crisis. After
all, how about the immeasurable capital flight that has left and continues
to leave Africa everyday? Under the current circumstances, Samir Amins
"de-linking" hypothesis becomes more and more relevant and
appealing. African leaders ought to start entertaining this possibility
with a degree of seriousness if African economies are to become truly
independent of aid.
Ronald Elly Wanda MCIJ is a political Scientist based in London.
© Ronald Elly Wanda May 1st 2009
ronald2wanda at yahoo.co.uk
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