http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7740652.stm
By Sorious Samura
BBC Panorama reporter

*Where I come from in West Africa, we have a saying: "A fool at 40 is a fool
forever", and most African countries have now been independent for over 40
years.*

Most are blessed with all the elements to help compete on a global stage -
abundant natural resources, a young population and the climate and
conditions to be a major agricultural force.

And yet today, my continent, which is home to 10% of the world's population,
represents just 1% of global trade. I have no doubt we have to take
responsibility for our failures. We can't afford to keep playing the blame
game.

But when 50 years of foreign aid has failed to lift Africa out of poverty,
could corruption be the reason?

Could that really be all there is to it?

*Causes of corruption*

The symptoms of corruption are easy to spot.

Teachers demand bribes from their students because they cannot get by on
their wages. Government officials, doctors and nurses steal drugs meant for
their patients to sell on the black market. African leaders have property
portfolios across the globe, while their citizens live on $1 a day or less.

[image: Sorious Samura at his old school]It is in the classroom that many
get their first taste of corruption

But searching for the causes, I had to ask myself some difficult questions.

People often say a nation gets the government it deserves. And we Africans
have certainly made some bad choices in terms of leaders, but all too often
Western aid has ended up bankrolling them.

Aid has offered legitimacy to corrupt and autocratic regimes, allowing them
to hang on to power even when they have lost popularity with their own
citizens.

While we were filming inside Uganda's largest hospital, Mulago hospital,
these thoughts came sharply into focus.

We saw dozens of mothers with their newborn babies lying on the
blood-splattered floor next to disposed needles.

Victims of road accidents were hauled into hospital by relatives because
there are few porters, few trolleys and even fewer ambulances. Some patients
were even left to bleed on the floor.

These are images I have seen repeated all over Africa and it left me
wondering, why we Africans cannot demand greater accountability from our
leaders.

Why do they keep getting away with this level of neglect? But I was quickly
reminded of the proverb taught as a nursery rhyme to African children - he
who pays the piper calls the tune.

[image: Woman washing clothes in Freetown river]Despite huge aid efforts for
the very poorest Africans little has changed

Many sub-Saharan African countries have had high levels of aid dependence -
in excess of 10% of gross domestic product, or half of government spending -
for decades.

When half the government budget comes from aid, African leaders find
themselves less inclined to tax their citizens.

As a result, governments that are highly dependent on aid pay too much
attention to donors and too little to the actual needs of their own
citizens.

And unfortunately donors have their own objectives which are not always the
same as the citizens of African countries.

*'Rewarding failure'*

Building new schools and clinics in record numbers looks good on paper and
makes politicians look good in front of voters back home. But when these
clinics lack the most basic facilities and there are not enough teachers in
the classroom, it is the ordinary Africans who get a raw deal.

Another criticism of aid increasingly voiced by Africans, but rarely heard
in the West is that it sponsors failure, but rarely rewards success.

[image: Children in Freetown, Sierra Leone]One fifth of children in Sierra
Leone will not see their fifth birthday

While I was filming in Uganda, local newspaper editor Andrew Mwenda took me
and my crew to his home village near the town of Port Loco in the west of
the country. There he introduced us to two men, one in his sixties and one
aged 26.

"This man represents the tragedy of aid," he said pointing to the older of
the two. "While this man represents the potential of aid," he said
indicating the younger man.

Mr Mwenda explained that the sexagenarian was the chairman of the local
parish council who had spent most of his life living off aid money,
supervising projects meant to benefit the community.

Today he is an alcoholic who still lives with his mother.

*Dysfunctional lifestyle*

The younger man started selling potatoes in the village square at the age of
17.

Less than 10 years later he owns the largest and busiest store in the
village. He has not received one penny from aid, yet he has bought himself
land and has built a house.

"So you see," Mr Mwenda said. "If aid were to offer this young man support
in the form of low interest credit he could not only expand his business
offering employment opportunities and a valuable service to his community,
he could also eventually pay the money back."

[image: Injured man lying on floor]In Mulago hospital injured people lay on
the blood-spattered floor

But instead of funding innovation and creativity, aid has funded the
chairman's dysfunctional lifestyle.

Prolonged aid programmes also have wider implications for developing
economies. Thirty years of aid dollars flowing into the Ugandan economy has
left the country suffering from what economists refer to as the "Dutch
disease".

Large inflows of foreign currency push up the value of the Ugandan shilling
making its agricultural and manufactured goods less price competitive.

This results in fewer exports and less home-grown, sustainable earnings for
the country.

Local entrepreneurs such as coffee growers and flower exporters should be
cashing in on rising food and commodity prices across the globe at the
moment, but they are finding themselves crowded out of their own economy by
foreign aid dollars.

*Graduates lost*

Small African producers also have to compete with heavily subsided products
from Europe and North America.

[image: Mother and child on labour ward floor]And in the labour ward mothers
and their newborns are often without a bed

Uganda's cotton industry is capable of exporting almost half a million bales
per year, but so far in 2008 the country has only managed 160,000 bales.

High government subsidies for North American cotton farmers prevent Ugandan
producers from offering competitive prices in international markets.

In their glossy pamphlets and on the pages of their high-spec websites,
donors tend to wax lyrical about the importance of trade to Africa's future,
yet very little progress has been made on opening up international markets.
African producers still represent just 1% of global trade.

And at least 70,000 skilled graduates abandon the continent every year,
often trained by Western aid, but unable to stay in the market because
salaries are so low.

Until these gifted and enterprising people can be attracted to return, most
of the world's peacekeeping efforts, on the continent, and certainly most of
its aid, will have little effect.
-- 
Bobby Kunhu http://community.eldis.org/myshkin/Blog/

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