Global Policy Forum

World Leaders to Discuss Strategy for Aid to Poor

Print

By Joseph Kahn And Tim Weiner

New York Times
March 18, 2002
To fight global poverty, the United States and its allies have founded dozens of aid agencies, built thousands of dams, roads and schools and spent roughly $1 trillion since World War II.

But nearly half of the people in the world still live on less than $2 a day, and a fifth survive on $1 or less. Most people in Latin America, the Middle East and Central Asia are poorer than at the cold war's close, despite the fast economic integration of the 1990's. Africans live no longer and have no higher incomes than they did 40 years ago.


Now, world leaders say they plan to do something about the lack of success. President Bush and the leaders of 57 other nations will gather here this week to discuss how to help developing countries speed their economic growth.

Mr. Bush promised on Thursday to increase America's foreign aid budget by 15 percent a year or $5 billion over three years, the first real expansion in more than a decade.

Yet Bush administration officials, European leaders and poverty experts are deeply divided about what went wrong and what to do now. They do not agree about why so many countries remain poor, whether aid has helped or hindered progress or whether to increase aid or change the way it is used.

The debate may delay a solution for the "pre-eminent moral and humanitarian challenge of our age," in the words of a United Nations panel led by Ernesto Zedillo, the former president of Mexico, and including Robert E. Rubin, the former treasury secretary.

Britain and the World Bank want rich countries to double their foreign aid and begin what Gordon Brown, Britain's finance minister, calls a new Marshall Plan to fight poverty.

Kofi Annan, the United Nations secretary general, persuaded the industrialized countries to promise to cut poverty in half by 2015, a goal he says will require $50 billion a year or more, including tens of billions from the United States. Proponents of more aid have linked poverty to terrorism and contended that the security of rich nations depends on helping the poor.

"We will not create a safer world with bombs or brigades alone," said the World Bank president, James D. Wolfensohn.

Mr. Bush has also linked poverty and terrorism, saying that "failed states can become havens for terror." But he has taken a very different approach to aid. While backing huge increases in the military budget, his administration proposes devoting far smaller amounts to combat poverty and AIDS.

He promises to support more foreign aid eventually, but not until 2004, and then only if recipients meet many conditions. Treasury Secretary Paul H. O'Neill wants to revamp the World Bank and to measure the effectiveness of aid before spending more money.

"How do we create a situation so that people become engines of economic progress and not just objects of our pity?" Mr. O'Neill said. He contends that the money of American "plumbers and carpenters" is being squandered on aid, with "precious little to show for it."

Tensions have flared between the United States and Europe on the issue. Mr. O'Neill has held up money for the World Bank's main antipoverty fund until Europe agrees with his proposal to have the bank distribute more aid in the form of grants instead of loans. Mr. O'Neill sees that as a necessary step to make aid more effective. Europeans say they worry that it would eventually cripple the bank's finances.

Even so, some officials say they are optimistic that the threat of terrorism from undeveloped parts of the world has set the stage for the most significant effort to address world poverty since the Bretton Woods conference in 1944, when industrialized nations first committed major resources to help increase world economic growth and the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund were created.

"The rich countries have now clearly accepted that there is no worldwide trickle-down and you have to go out there and channel more resources to the poorer countries," said Jorge Castañeda, Mexico's foreign minister. "This is a very different attitude toward the development process."

Those taking part in the Monterrey conference have already agreed to create "a new partnership between developed and developing countries." The agreement commits poor nations to create and maintain strong legal systems, open markets, full rights for women and workers, low inflation and effective banking regulations — policies that the rich nations see as crucial for poorer ones to attract private investment and stoke economic growth.

Industrialized countries, in return, pledge to reduce barriers to imports from poor countries, notably farm products and textiles, while writing off more debt and increasing aid.

"Monterrey lays out a big global bargain," said Mark Malloch Brown, administrator of the United Nations Development Program. "If it succeeds it will put development at the heart of global politics."

Alan P. Larson, under secretary of state for economic affairs, said the agreement rightly emphasized the "national responsibility" of poor countries to mobilize their own savings and fix government policies to attract private investment. Domestic savings and international business investment are more important than foreign aid, he said.

The United States and its allies have been doling out aid to help poor nations develop faster since the end of World War II, when President Truman authorized big peacetime aid transfers, beginning with the Marshall Plan for Europe.

But American aid spending has stagnated at about $10 billion since the end of the cold war. As a percentage of the American economy, it has fallen from nearly 3 percent in 1946 to 0.1 perent today.

In Congress, aid is often criticized as "American taxpayer dollars sent to subsidize the corruption and mismanagement of foreign countries," in the words of the House Republican whip, Tom DeLay of Texas. But since Sept. 11, some leading Republicans have started to support more aid.

Senator Chuck Hagel, Republican of Nebraska, a senior member of the Foreign Relations Committee, praised Mr. Bush for taking the first steps on increasing aid. But he criticized "some in this administration" for assessing aid "based on some Harvard Business School idea of return on dollars."

"We are not going to get our arms around this terrorist threat," Mr. Hagel said, "if we get all bogged down in the swamp of what didn't work in the past."

President Truman said more than 50 years ago that it was intolerable that "more than half the people of the world are living in conditions approaching misery." But that remains relatively unchanged, with World Bank statistics showing that 2.5 billion people survive on $2 a day or less.

The Bush administration is not alone in worrying that aid itself is not the answer. Numerous studies have found no real correlation between aid levels and the economic performance of developing countries. China and India, among the most successful, have received little assistance relative to their economic output. African nations have gotten the most aid, but most performed dismally.

William Easterly, a longtime World Bank economist who left the institution last year after sharply criticizing its record of helping poor nations, says foreign aid has produced a gigantic, ever-expanding bureaucracy. "Foreign aid works for everyone except for those whom it was intended to help," Mr. Easterly said.

Mr. O'Neill echoes that criticism, and adds one. He has attacked the business model of the World Bank because it distributes aid mostly in the form of long-term, low-interest loans. Though some countries have grown out of poverty and repaid loans on schedule, others struggle to make payments, which can scare away private investors and force donors to grant debt relief. The bank's lending practices end up driving poor countries "into a ditch," Mr. O'Neill said.

But the World Bank says, and Mr. Bush agrees, that success stories in countries like Uganda and Mozambique, Vietnam and Poland, show that aid can help drive economic growth when developing countries have policies in place like open trade, low inflation and controlled government spending.

The bank says it has long since overhauled the way it grants aid, to favor nations that have good policies. It contends that most criticisms of its performance are outdated.

Jeffrey Sachs, director of the Center for International Development at Harvard University, also defends many types of aid as urgent and effective. He says the real culprits in mismanaging aid are national aid programs, which still account for about two-thirds of all assistance, not the World Bank.

European governments subsidize former colonies. The United States favors important allies, like Israel and Egypt. Japan has tied aid to its own exports. Those goals often conflict with the desire to promote long- term growth in the poorest countries, Mr. Sachs says.

There is also a growing consensus that rich countries have been stingy in the face of major disease epidemics. Mr. Sachs helped draft a World Health Organization study that concluded that spending $27 billion more each year to fight infectious diseases — like AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria — could save eight million lives a year in the developing world.

"America's long slumber" on aid, he said, is "absolutely shocking."

Go to the Graph


More Information on Social and Economic Policy
More Information on the Financing for Development Summit and Its Follow-up
More Information on Financing for Development

FAIR USE NOTICE: This page contains copyrighted material the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Global Policy Forum distributes this material without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. We believe this constitutes a fair use of any such copyrighted material as provided for in 17 U.S.C § 107. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.


 

FAIR USE NOTICE: This page contains copyrighted material the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Global Policy Forum distributes this material without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. We believe this constitutes a fair use of any such copyrighted material as provided for in 17 U.S.C § 107. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.