-------- Original Message --------
Subject:        Patel / Tunnel Vista: On Bill Gates' Proprietary New 
Philanthropy in Africa / Feb 23
Date:   Fri, 23 Feb 2007 17:56:29 -0800 (PST)
From:   ZNet Commentaries <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Sustainers PLEASE note:

--> You can change your email address or cc data or temporarily turn off mail 
delivery via: 
https://www.zmag.org/sustainers/members

--> If you pass this comment along to others -- periodically but not repeatedly 
-- please explain that Commentaries are a premium sent to Sustainer Donors of 
Z/ZNet and that to learn more folks can consult ZNet at http://www.zmag.org 

--> Sustainer Forums Login:
https://www.zmag.org/sustainers/forums

Today's commentary:
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2007-02/17patel.cfm

==================================

ZNet Commentary
Tunnel Vista: On Bill Gates' Proprietary New Philanthropy in Africa February 
23, 2007
By  Raj Patel 

Microsoft has now launched its new operating system - Windows Vista. Within a 
year, 100 million computers will be running it. The code underneath the hood of 
the operating system is a tightly kept secret. There's no way to fix it if it's 
broken, other than to wait for Microsoft to come out with a patch. Indeed, most 
users won't have a choice about whether they want it - it'll come standard with 
new computers. Unlike free, open source software, Vista will depends for its 
adoption on market domination, heavy advertising, and unforgiving software 
license contracts that force businesses to upgrade to it. 

It's a business model that keeps the cash flowing into Microsoft's headquarters 
in Redmond, and thence into the pockets of Bill Gates, whose net worth is now a 
shade over $50 billion. Which begs the question: how do you spend that kind of 
money? 

To some extent, the decision was made for him. In the 1990s, when he faced a 
series of potentially serious lawsuits, Gates announced that he was going to 
give away large slabs of his money. As the jury deliberated, The Bill and 
Melinda Gates Foundation was launched. Today, it sits on an endowment of over 
$30 billion, a pile that includes some of Warren Buffet's loose change. 
Together, Buffet and the Gates' aim to fight hunger and poverty. Africa is in 
their sights. And they've promised to bring the same no-nonsense business 
approach to spending their money as they brought to earning it. 

This is why their Big Philanthropy is certain to do more harm than good. First, 
some back story. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has, in a recent series 
of articles, come under the scrutiny of the Los Angeles Times. Here's a snippet 
from one of the pieces, by Charles Piller, Edmund Sanders and Robyn Dixon, 
reporting from Nigeria:

"Justice Eta, 14 months old, held out his tiny thumb. An ink spot certified 
that he had been immunized against polio and measles, thanks to a vaccination 
drive supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. But polio is not the 
only threat Justice faces. Almost since birth, he has had respiratory trouble. 
His neighbors call it 'the cough.' People blame fumes and soot spewing from 
flames that tower 300 feet into the air over a nearby oil plant. It is owned by 
the Italian petroleum giant Eni, whose investors include the Bill & Melinda 
Gates Foundation."

The Los Angeles Times journalists found out that, in a number of cases, the 
Foundation's good works were being undermined by its support of corporations 
that do harm. How did the Gates' respond to this pointed, and serious, 
contradiction? In the Financial Times last week, Mr and Mrs Gates were quoted 
as saying, rather flatly, that "we do not anticipate any change in our 
approach". The logic, one that sums up the marketing of Microsoft's operating 
systems as much as the Gates Foundation's activities, is this: don't look under 
the hood, just look at what it's doing.

An ethical investment advisor, treading carefully so as not to alienate a 
potential client, responded to Gates like this: "This is a rather out-dated 
perspective. The evidence is that you can invest responsibly without damaging 
your financial returns."

At the end of the day, it doesn't much matter whether this is true. Even if it 
*isn't* possible to invest responsibly without taking a hit, you'd think a 
charitable foundation would be the first in line to shuck out a few bucks in 
exchange for the warm inner glow of fiscal probity. 

But the Gates' are almost pathologically reluctant to look and think 
holistically. Instead, there's a fixation on a narrow and harmful accounting of 
cost and benefit. Want to improve the lives of Africans? Then vaccinate against 
polio - an easy, guaranteed return on investment. Even if the source of that 
investment, the companies that do harm in communities in Africa, mean that the 
net suffering from other poverty-related diseases will be *more likely*. 

Of *course* polio needs to be eradicated. Of *course* there needs to be 
intervention to fund research into curing tropical diseases that the 
pharmaceutical industry avoids because its beneficiaries can't afford to pay. 
But India and Brazil have found ways around this problem - by licensing generic 
drug production (and legally brushing aside the intellectual property rights of 
the pharmaceutical giants), and by taxing the rich to heal the poor. It's a big 
picture solution, one that works efficiently and effectively, and one that 
demands a much broader vista than the Gates' seem to be capable of seeing.

It's an approach that is both myopic and revealing. In asking the public to 
accentuate the positive, and to ignore the context of his foundation's 
interventions, Bill Gates shrugs off one of the deepest flaws in his approach 
to solving hunger in Africa. 

The Foundation is behind a new push, known as the Alliance for a Green 
Revolution in Africa (AGRA). Together with the Rockefeller Foundation, the 
Gates Foundation will be investing $150 million in AGRA. And it's a recipe for 
disaster. It pins its hopes on a second generation of Green Revolution 
technologies, seemingly ignoring the disastrous lessons of the first Green 
Revolution. 

Peter Rosset, Miguel Altieri and Eric Holt-Gimenez over at Food First have 
enumerated "Ten Reasons Why the Rockefeller and the Bill and Melinda Gates 
Foundations' Alliance for Another Green Revolution Will Not Solve the Problems 
of Poverty and Hunger in Sub-Saharan Africa." It's not a catchy title, but 
their reasoning is sharp. 

The ten reasons are these:

1.      The Green Revolution actually deepens the divide between rich and poor 
farmers. 

2.      Over time, Green Revolution technologies degrade tropical 
agro-ecosystems and expose already vulnerable farmers to increased 
environmental risk. 

3.      The Green Revolution leads to the loss of agro-biodiversity, the basis 
for smallholder livelihood security and regional environmental sustainability. 

4.      Hunger is not primarily due to a lack of food, but rather because the 
hungry are too poor to buy the food that is available. 

5.      Without addressing structural inequities in the market and political 
systems, approaches relying on high input technologies fail. 

6.      The private sector alone will not solve the problems of production, 
marketing and distribution 

7.      Introduction of genetic engineering-the driving force behind AGRA 
initiative-will make smallholder systems more environmentally vulnerable in 
Sub-Saharan Africa. 

8.      The introduction of GE crops into smallholder agriculture will likely 
lead to farmer indebtedness. 

9.      AGRA's assertion that "There Is No Alternative" (TINA) ignores the many 
successful agroecological and non-corporate approaches to agricultural 
development that have grown in the wake of the Green Revolution's failures. 

10.     AGRA's "alliance" does not allow peasant farmers to be the principal 
actors in agricultural improvement. 

Note the common thread here. The problem of hunger isn't simply a lack of food 
being produced. It's not something that can be fixed quickly through a single 
technological intervention. The problem requires a systemic, holistic and open 
approach - one to which Gates' life experience has left him particularly poorly 
prepared.

Worse, the New Green Revolutionary technology that Gates is pushing has a 
pretty bad track record in Africa. Recently, a three year long project, 
trumpeted by the biotech industry as a showcase for its philanthropy and 
technology, produced a genetically modified (GM) sweet potato that was just as 
susceptible to a key virus, and returned lower yields, than an ordinary 
variety. According to the New Scientist magazine:

"The GM project has cost Monsanto, the World Bank and the US government an 
estimated $6 million over the past decade.[and] embarrassingly, in Uganda 
conventional breeding has produced a high-yielding resistant variety more 
quickly and more cheaply."

In short, the technology isn't up to much. Further, what matters more than the 
technology itself, no matter where it comes from or how good it is, is the 
social, political and economic context into which it is introduced. No 
technology is socially neutral. This is why Rosset, Holt-Gimenez and Altieri 
are right that GM crops will exacerbate the tensions between rich and poor 
farmers. 

Here's an example from some research I've had a hand in, on the effects of 
genetically modified cotton in South Africa. Since GM crops are more expensive, 
when seed companies introduce them, they have to introduce a means for farmers 
to pay for the seed. In South Africa, farmers took advantage of a madly 
generous loan scheme, one which bankrupted the local seed company.  The company 
went under when the farmers to whom it had loaned cash didn't repay their 
debts. The farmers themselves then became insolvent, after they found 
themselves living with unrepayable levels of debt, most of which has long been 
spent. 

The farmers who *can* crawl back out of debt tend to be rich. Hence the 
inequality-producing effects of the technology. And most farmers in the area 
where GM crops are most widely grown don't want to grow cotton at all. They'd 
rather grow sugar cane. But they don't have irrigation, and there isn't a way 
to get their crops to market. The only company nearby is a cotton company. So 
they grow cotton. 

To sum up, then. GM technology has yet to prove that it has much to offer poor 
African farmers. Introducing GM technology means hitching the welfare of entire 
communities to the provider of seeds - usually the GM company, but otherwise 
the local power-broker. Either way, this isn't a progressive way to build 
social change. 

In any case, the problem of hunger in Africa is often associated not with 
insufficient food production, but with conflict and drought. When there's 
drought, as eminent economist Amartya Sen has observed, it's not that food 
disappears - it's that it's hoarded, priced above the ability of the poorest to 
be able to afford it. Does the Gates intervention go any way to addressing 
this? It does not. 

And here's the rub. There are other ways of reducing hunger in Africa. They are 
ways that pay attention to the systemic problems facing the continent. Problems 
like war and conflict, problems like arms, diamond and natural resources trade 
(illegal or 'legal'), which create the conditions for so much misery. Systemic 
solutions see farmers as innovators, as survivors, as citizens, as leaders in a 
suite of interventions that are political, social and economic. 

The Gates solution ends up exacerbating the problems facing the poor, shoring 
up institutions and companies that scalp poor farmers. And then they offer a 
band-aid, one that helps the wound go septic. 

Philanthropy isn't meant to be like sausage-manufacturing - yet every step of 
the way in the Gates plan for Africa, from endowment investment to the 
agricultural spend, induces nausea. Perhaps we shouldn't be surprised. 
Microsoft's chief software architect has spent a career developing 
technological patches, and then patches for those patches, and so on. If one 
were uncharitable, we might see the Foundation itself as a patch for his 
falling personal stock in the 1990s. It does rather seem that Gates' generosity 
is charity in its worst form, a mode of self-aggrandizement. Such is the narrow 
vista, and greatest tragedy, of the world's richest man. 

*A fuller version of this article with links and references is available at 
www.stuffedandstarved.org, an online resource for activism around food, hunger 
and inequality in the world food system.





_______________________________________________
FRIENDS mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.sffreaks.org/mailman/listinfo/friends

Reply via email to