Disagreements over whether or not foreign aid is
responsible for Africa’s slumber are an unending question. But such is not
without bias of time, space, situation and affiliations but also depending on
whom it might mean sense or nonsense or whatever whoever may chose to call it.
With the least of emotions however, foreign aid has not changed the reality of
poverty, divestment, political instability and failed economies in not just
Africa, but including most countries of the Southern hemisphere. I absolutely
disagree with the unfounded prognosis that foreign aid in itself has
constituted the main setback to development in Africa.
Rightly in my opinion and in proven scholarship,
nations of Africa shot themselves in the legs. You might be able to eat your
cake and smell it but you cannot eat your cake and still have it. Aid money in
Africa has always been cake for its beneficiaries in spite that it was meant
for poverty alleviation, constructive economic development and policy reforms.
The question now is how many African nations since the beginning of foreign aid
policy, had any of its economies developed with the aid, or had its poverty
margin reduced or had in any way invested in constructive policy strategies
that can be proudly associated in real terms with development? The answer is
absolutely clear - none. I mean none because even countries like South Africa
who startled and achieved double digit development in the late nineties,
bounced back to business as usual. In fact, all aid money injected into these
economies and the poverty alleviation programs for which aid was meant for
became converted into poverty aggravation programs.
Without doubt, in no single African country has
foreign aid funds been judiciously utilized for its right objective rather a
larger percentage of the money got siphoned into private pockets by corrupt
public officials and their cronies.
The little that is claimed to have been invested was
invested in misguided elephant projects one of the apparent sources through
which diversion of funds became common. As a result; most of it got repatriated
through capital flight in three main ways.
One, most expertise and technical knowhow needed to
facilitate and manage capital projects in Africa were sorted for from the West.
This pool of expatriates had their way back to their home countries with huge
salaries and allowances which ought to have been reinvested in Africa supposing
the expertise for the projects were not sorted for from abroad. Though most
often, this policy was based on conditionality placed on aid money by the
contracting companies for all capital projects there were not based on coercion.
It was sheer absence of a fair negotiation by African aid seekers being that
they were not as interested in the best interest of what the funds will do for
their nations, as they were in what the funds will serve their personal
pockets. By so doing, they allowed a conduit pipe through which the aid got
itself trickled out to its very sources of origin – Western donors.
Two, the activities of the Multinational
Corporations (MNCs) in Africa were not and have not up till date, gotten a
clear line between what the African populace benefits from the return on
investment (ROI) and what amount and caliber of profits are allowable for
export to the parent countries of the MNCs. Coupled to that, much premium has
always been laid on expatriate personnel for the top jobs in these businesses than
indigenous personnel. This further widens the conduit pipe for expatriation of
capital much of which is aid money. Therefore, from Europe comes aid, and from
Europe comes the aid executors and back to Europe goes aid money but from
Africa is unending aid interest servicing. The reasons why these could be
ridiculous is not because the donor countries in any way imposed aid on its
African counterparts or did the donors not mind to strike a win-win deal with their
aid recipients but simply because, the recipients completely damn any
consequences, they got our whole patrimony entrapped in the hands a few
business men in the Paris’ Club and Briton woods.
And thirdly, wealth injected through foreign fell in
the hands of corrupt elites. All stolen funds from aid grants never were invested
in their home countries. Unfortunately, most of the funds were repatriated to
the West and stashed in western banks and investments societies from which no
interest yielded from it benefited any African country. Indeed, no value was
derived for investment in their home countries; but while in their accounts abroad
it created value for the donors who reinvested into Africa again through more
foreign aid which got siphoned and stashed in accounts abroad and the vicious
circle continued again and over again.
While African countries were busy borrowing money
and begging some, the Western tycoons were busy making interest from what they
gave as aid and reinvesting it to more enslavement of the former. The irony is
that the stupidity of borrowing started in the early sixties. Europe had barely
adjusted its economies from the shackles of the world depression and the Second
World War. Where did it get so much money to lend to African countries when it
was surviving on loans and aid from the United States for reconstruction is the
question every sane African should be asking?
To make a rather simple but honest case of the whole
paradox of aid and the underdevelopment of Africa, aid was and has always been
a means to an end for a few corrupt elites. But the misfortune of our self betrayal
is the cause for the mixed feelings about the efficacy of aid. Let me draw an
inference to my argument by citing the example of the Asian Tigers, (nations of
South East Asia), South Korea for instance, survived on foreign aid before and
after the Korean wars. Europe after the Second World War, they invested on
government policies that consolidated transparent frameworks, discipline and responsibility.
It was not until the early nineties that S. Korea repaid most of the debt it
owed the West to be precise the Breton Woods and Paris Club.
Without contradiction, we should not throw hail
stones at foreign aid and forget to acknowledge our collective failures. In actual
terms, foreign aid is not the problem and foreign aid is not the solution. The laissez-faire
and kleptomania of our ruling class is the problem and the contrary could be
part of the solutions.
Between 1960 and 2005, debt earned by African
countries alone amounted to a triggering 200 billion US Dollars. That is the
amount estimated to have reconstructed Europe after the Second World War. It is
a myth that foreign aid is responsible for Africa’s development predicament.
Thank you

1 comment:
The most perfect strategy to end poverty in in the next five years is to stop Corruption.
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