Posted on 02/13/2006 4:42:45 AM PST by mal
let's send them Jimmy Carter he can teach them to grow peanuts - he wants to be president somewhere else anyway.
Having run through Somolia during Restore Hope, I can say that financial aide won't help much - if anything, it goes into the belly of the dictators and thugs so they can screw up the continent even more.
IMO if the world had left South Africa alone with Apartheid that part wouldnt need saving. The world destroyed a feasible government that one day may have worked out its own problem and replaced it with starvation, land theft and genocide of both races. Does anyone think the blacks of South Africa are any freer now than they were,? They just have a black ruler instead of white ones.
This was printed in the Washington Post. How amazing! Thanks for sharing.
foreign aid to africa is a joke - i assume there is an understanding that a certain % will be used to buy goods from the loaning countries corporations and the rest is to be stolen. the goods also are to be resold on the black market.
another scam on western taxpayers.
The following elements are needed for a prosperous society:
1) Free Markets
2) Rule of Law
3) Honest courts and police to enforce contracts and put evil people in jail.
4)Secure boarders so that their country is not overwhelmed by refugees or foreign armies.
If these qualities exist citizens can accumulate and create wealth. Only Africans can to this for themselves. It requires good will among the people and this depends on the personal character, morals, and values of each individual.
The village concept and paleolithic culture are not suited to extremely large masses of people. The culture kills.
When the process kills off large numbers and the survivors allow cultural evolution there can be a shift toward prosperity.
This will not really happen. The blacks will die out and be replaced by Indians. The population explosion in India will migrate and replace black Africans. The superior Indian culture will push aside the inferior African culture and population.
If any money is put up it should be put in escrow with guide lines as to when the countries can receive the funds...if they start working towards the guide lines give them some of the money etc.
I think we should try to save Africa, but not by sending them money. Send them capitalism and democracy. Give them good trade relations. One or two model nations ought to get the ball rolling.
Don't leave out the right to private property without confiscation.
" The superior Indian culture will push aside the inferior African culture and population."
This will not happen. Black people are survivors and will even survive this crisis. Indian culture is not necessarily more superior than African culture. The problem with Africa, like other third world countries, is corruption and lawlessness. What needs to happen is the corrupt generation needs to die out and the new generation adopt values of love of education, sexual abstinence and value of life.
I agree, there is a strong base of Christianity in Africa, what a shame, if the whacko Muslims move in and kill all those people to get others to convert to Islam.
==============================
Jeffrey Sachs and Angelina Jolie toured the continent on behalf of MTV, with Jolie asking how we can stand by and let it be destroyed. The world's leaders gathered at the United Nations in September to further discuss ending poverty in Africa, apparently unfazed by yet another voluminous U.N. report highlighting the failure of the grand plans (the "Millennium Development Goals") to make any progress. They repeated a familiar refrain: If aid efforts aren't producing the desired results, then redouble those efforts. The year closed with the rock star Bono being named Time magazine's person of the year (along with the rather more constructive Bill and Melinda Gates) for his efforts to save Africa.
Meanwhile, for a Ghanaian man named Patrick Awuah, 2005 was the fourth year of running a successful private university that he started with his own money: Ashesi University, the "Swarthmore of Ghana." The university reserves half the spaces in its entering class for poor students on scholarship. "We want to train people as critical thinkers," Awuah says. One of his most satisfying moments came when a student sent him an e-mail: "Mr. Awuah, I am thinking now."
Awuah says that he could do more, but like some other enterprising individuals in Africa I know of, he has been turned away by official aid agencies. Everyone, it seems, was invited to the "Save Africa" campaign of 2005 except for Africans. They starred only as victims: genocide casualties, child soldiers, AIDS patients and famine deaths on our 43-inch plasma screens.
Yes, these tragedies deserve attention, but the obsessive and almost exclusive Western focus on them is less relevant to the vast majority of Africans -- the hundreds of millions not fleeing from homicidal minors, not HIV-positive, not starving to death, and not helpless wards waiting for actors and rock stars to rescue them. Angelina, the continent has problems but it is not being destroyed.
Kenyan Robert Keter, a former world-class runner, is busy investing the proceeds of the telecom venture CDR, which he co-founded in 2000 and ran profitably until the Kenyan government abruptly shut him down for no apparent reason. Keter was recruited into business by Monique Maddy, a Liberian entrepreneur with a Harvard MBA (who is now offering advice to Google on global anti-poverty programs). CDR was offering customers voice over Internet protocol long before the service was made mainstream by Skype and Vonage. The company did so well during its brief operation that Keter and his U.S.-based partners decided to raise money to help rebuild a school in his home village of Kericho, located in the tea-growing region of the Kenyan highlands. Keter also used part of his earnings to purchase a tea farm, where he employs more than 400 workers.
The West's focus on sensational tragedies obscures the achievements of people such as Patrick Awuah and Robert Keter, who are succeeding even against tremendous odds. Economic development in Africa will depend -- as it has elsewhere and throughout the history of the modern world -- on the success of private-sector entrepreneurs, social entrepreneurs and African political reformers. It will not depend on the activities of patronizing, bureaucratic, unaccountable and poorly informed outsiders.
Development everywhere is homegrown. As G-8 ministers and rock stars fussed about a few billion dollars here or there for African governments, the citizens of India and China (where foreign aid is a microscopic share of income) were busy increasing their own incomes by $715 billion in 2005.
This is not to say that all Western aid efforts in Africa are condemned to fail. Aid groups could search for achievable tasks with high potential for poor individuals to help themselves. To do so, they would have to subject themselves to independent evaluation and be accountable to the intended beneficiaries for the results. Such an approach would contrast with the prevailing norm of never holding anyone individually accountable for the results of traditional government-to-government aid programs aimed at feeding the hubristic fantasies of outside transformation of whole societies.
An example of such achievable and accountable programs can be found in western Kenya, where work by nongovernmental aid organizations to get meals and textbooks to schoolchildren raised attendance and test scores, according to careful subsequent evaluation. Perhaps these well-nourished and well-educated children will be tomorrow's leaders and entrepreneurs. Aid could also be used to support the efforts of promising local social and business entrepreneurs who already have a successful track record, people like Awuah, Keter and Maddy -- letting locals take the lead with their superior motivation and inside knowledge.
Dare one hope that in 2006, it will finally be understood that Africa's true saviors are the people of Africa, and that those who would help them in their task must also be accountable to them?
The writer is a professor of economics (a joint appointment with Africa House) at New York University and author of "The White Man's Burden: Why the West's Efforts to Aid the Rest Have Done So Much Ill and So Little Good," to be published next month.
We tried a "War on Poverty" - but poverty won.To "Make Poverty History" you must first Make War on HubrisTM
Only when you have government with a humble, servant attitude toward the people - including rich people of foreign origin, and poor people of local origin - poverty as Africa knows it will disappear within a generation or two.
But so long as you have paternalistic government in Africa, the people will be stuck in the same pattern which is all too routine. Just as China showed no signs of ever escaping its historical poverty until its government admitted that it could not develop China - and allowed China to begin to develop itself.
And of course we know that Africa is unlikely to attain a higher standard of living than America any time soon - and we know that Americans have shown their native genius at avoiding the end of poverty pimping by defining poverty upward to include fat bellies and color TV sets and air conditioning. It is impossible to "make poverty history" so long as politicians can profit by bewailing relative lack as if it were actual "poverty."
In fact, it was the western Europe that colonized Africa and made a big mess. If that didn't happen, it should have been a much more peaceful place, with countries divided by ethnicity.
The money will probably end up in an swiss bank account. What would be the best solution is to build towns under supervision from some world body. Let them build their economy instead of depending on hand outs.
The West has been trying to "save" Africa? O_O
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.