Paul Coullier goes on to say that ," The 21st century world of material comfort, global travel and economic interdependence will become increasingly vulnerable to these large islands of chaos, which may become havens for terrorism or destabilising civil war. Bean-counting poverty simply misses the point. Even if poverty declines in these societies the conditions for social explosion will mount unless the current situation is reversed. That is the coming challenge of development: rescuing – or containing – a group of countries that for 40 years have been shearing off from the rest of us and must start to catch up.
Africa has been a hot topic at all major international discussions and conferences, interviews, books and recently concerts all geared towards creating awareness about the unfortunate plight of Africa."
Rescuing or Containing - a group of countries that for 40 years have been shearing off from the rest of us and must start to catch up.????
Jeffrey D. Sachs, the director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University and the author of “The End of Poverty.” thinks that what Africa needs is assistance in the form of aid to be able to achieve the millenium development goals. Mr. Sachs feels that Mr. Shikwati's anti-aid arguments “have slowed life-saving interventions.” Peter Smerdon, a spokesman for a United Nations food program, said Mr. Shikwati’s policies would “kill millions of people.” Irungu Houghton, an Oxfam official in Nairobi, said they would consign poor Africans to “a major death sentence.”
William Easterly's “White Man’s Burden” lampoons Sachs as a modern version of a 19th-century utopian — that the elimination of African poverty can be achieved through 75 billion US dollars a year in Western aid and state planning where all governments have to improve agricultural technology, provide antimalaria bed nets, treat diseases like hookworm and distribute antiretroviral treatments to the H.I.V.-infected.
What will work in Africa: Aid or Trade?
The answer to me is clearly "Trade."
ReplyDeleteNo country has ever amounted to any thing off of handouts. If economic history has taught us anything it is that only through ones own enterprising industriousness and productivity can a nation, or group of nations, ever build them selves up.
It is true that Africa suffers from an extremely unfair trade relationship with the rest of the world but then again most/all African country are also very bad at opening up their own markets to outside competition.
I take on your last point that Africans are aslo very bad at opening up their own markets to outside competition: Do you think that this is the reaspn as to why there has been gross underdevelopment in Africa?
ReplyDeleteSTill on that, will the United States of Africa provide any better prospects if it sees the light of day:
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