<http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/25/magazine/25wwlnidealab.t.html>
March 25, 2007
Idea Lab
Reverse Foreign Aid
By TINA ROSENBERG

For the last 10 years, people in China have been sending me money. I
also get money from countries in Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa
— really, from every poor country. I'm not the only one who's so
lucky. Everyone in a wealthy nation has become the beneficiary of the
generous subsidies that poorer countries bestow upon rich ones. Here
in the United States, this welfare program in reverse allows our
government to spend wildly without runaway inflation, keeps many
American businesses afloat and even provides medical care in parts of
the country where doctors are scarce.

Economic theory holds that money should flow downhill. The North, as
rich countries are informally known, should want to sink its capital
into the South — the developing world, which some statisticians define
as all countries but the 29 wealthiest. According to this model, money
both does well and does good: investors get a higher return than they
could get in their own mature economies, and poor countries get the
capital they need to get richer. Increasing the transfer of capital
from rich nations to poorer ones is often listed as one justification
for economic globalization.

Historically, the global balance sheet has favored poor countries. But
with the advent of globalized markets, capital began to move in the
other direction, and the South now exports capital to the North, at a
skyrocketing rate. According to the United Nations, in 2006 the net
transfer of capital from poorer countries to rich ones was $784
billion, up from $229 billion in 2002. (In 1997, the balance was
even.) Even the poorest countries, like those in sub-Saharan Africa,
are now money exporters.

How did this great reversal take place? Why did globalization begin to
redistribute wealth upward? The answer, in large part, has to do with
global finance. All countries hold hard-currency reserves to cover
their foreign debts or to use in case of a natural or a financial
disaster. For the past 50 years, rich countries have steadily held
reserves equivalent to about three months' worth of their total
imports. As money circulates more and more quickly in a globalized
economy, however, many countries have felt the need to add to their
reserves, mainly to head off investor panic, which can strike even
well-managed economies. Since 1990, the world's nonrich nations have
increased their reserves, on average, from around three months' worth
of imports to more than eight months' worth — or the equivalent of
about 30 percent of their G.D.P. China and other countries maintain
those reserves mainly in the form of supersecure U.S. Treasury bills;
whenever they buy T-bills, they are in effect lending the United
States money. This allows the U.S. to keep interest rates low and
Washington to run up huge deficits with no apparent penalty.

But the cost to poorer countries is very high. The benefit of T-bills,
of course, is that they are virtually risk-free and thus help assure
investors and achieve stability. But the problem is that T-bills earn
low returns. All the money spent on T-bills — a very substantial sum —
could be earning far better returns invested elsewhere, or could be
used to pay teachers and build highways at home, activities that bring
returns of a different type. Dani Rodrik, an economist at Harvard's
Kennedy School of Government, estimates conservatively that
maintaining reserves in excess of the three-month standard costs poor
countries 1 percent of their economies annually — some $110 billion
every year. Joseph Stiglitz, the Columbia University economist, says
he thinks the real cost could be double that.

In his recent book, "Making Globalization Work," Stiglitz proposes a
solution. Adapting an old idea of John Maynard Keynes, he proposes a
sort of insurance pool that would provide hard currency to countries
going through times of crisis. Money actually changes hands only if a
country needs the reserve, and the recipient must repay what it has
used.

No one planned the rapid swelling of reserves. Other South-to-North
subsidies, by contrast, have been built into the rules of
globalization by international agreements. Consider the World Trade
Organization's requirements that all member countries respect patents
and copyrights — patents on medicines and industrial and other
products; copyrights on, say, music and movies. As poorer countries
enter the W.T.O., they must agree to pay royalties on such goods — and
a result is a net obligation of more than $40 billion annually that
poorer countries owe to American and European corporations.

There are good reasons for countries to respect intellectual property,
but doing so is also an overwhelming burden on the poorest people in
poorer countries. After all, the single largest beneficiary of the
intellectual-property system is the pharmaceutical industry. But
consumers in poorer nations do not get much in return, as they do not
form a lucrative enough market to inspire research on cures for many
of their illnesses. Moreover, the intellectual-property rules make it
difficult for poorer countries to manufacture less-expensive generic
drugs that poor people rely on. The largest cost to poor countries is
not money but health, as many people simply will not be able to find
or afford brand-name medicine.

The hypercompetition for global investment has produced another
important reverse subsidy: the tax holidays poor countries offer
foreign investors. A company that announces it wants to make cars,
televisions or pharmaceuticals in, say, east Asia, will then send its
representatives to negotiate with government officials in China,
Malaysia, the Philippines and elsewhere, holding an auction for the
best deal. The savviest corporations get not only 10-year tax holidays
but also discounts on land, cheap government loans, below-market rates
for electricity and water and government help in paying their workers.

Rich countries know better — the European Union, for example,
regulates the incentives members can offer to attract investment. That
car plant will most likely be built in one of the competing countries
anyway — the incentives serve only to reduce the host country's
benefits. Since deals between corporations and governments are usually
secret, it is hard to know how much investment incentives cost poorer
countries — certainly tens of billions of dollars. Whatever the cost,
it is growing, as country after country has passed laws enabling the
offer of such incentives.

Human nature, not smart lobbying, is responsible for another
poor-to-rich subsidy: the brain drain. The migration of highly
educated people from poor nations is increasing. A small brain drain
can benefit the South, as emigrants send money home and may return
with new skills and capital. But in places where educated people are
few and emigrants don't go home again, the brain drain devastates. In
many African countries, more than 40 percent of college-educated
people emigrate to rich countries. Malawian nurses have moved to
Britain and other English-speaking nations en masse, and now
two-thirds of nursing posts in Malawi's public health system are
vacant. Zambia has lost three-quarters of its new physicians in recent
years. Even in South Africa, 21 percent of graduating doctors migrate.

The financial consequences for the poorer nations can be severe. A
doctor who moves from Johannesburg to North Dakota costs the South
African government as much as $100,000, the price of training him
there. As with patent enforcement, a larger cost may be in health. A
lack of trained people — a gap that widens daily — is now the main
barrier to fighting AIDS, malaria and other diseases in Africa.

Sometimes reverse subsidies are disguised. Rich-country governments
spent $283 billion in 2005 to support and subsidize their own
agriculture, mainly agribusiness. Artificially cheap food exported to
poor countries might seem like a gift — but it is often a Trojan
horse. Corn, rice or cotton exported by rich countries is so cheap
that small farmers in poor countries cannot compete, so they stop
farming. Three-quarters of the world's poor people are rural. The
African peasant with an acre and a hoe is losing her livelihood, and
the benefits go mainly to companies like Archer Daniels Midland and
Cargill.

Most costly to poor countries, they have been drafted into paying for
rich nations' energy use. On a per capita basis, Americans emit more
greenhouse gases into the atmosphere — and thus create more global
warming — than anyone else. What we pay to drive a car or keep an
industrial plant running is not the true cost of oil or coal. The real
price would include the cost of the environmental damage that comes
from burning these fuels. But even as we do not pay that price, other
countries do. American energy use is being subsidized by tropical
coastal nations, who appear to be global warming's first victims. Some
scientists argue that Bangladesh already has more powerful monsoon
downpours and Honduras fiercer cyclones because of global warming —
likely indicators of worse things ahead. The islands of the Maldives
may someday be completely underwater. The costs these nations will pay
do not appear on the global balance sheets. But they are the ultimate
subsidy.

Tina Rosenberg is a contributing writer for the magazine.
--
Yoshie

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