Africa started developing when it was colonized 400 years ago as a bronze age 
society, and stopped developing when the colonial powers left 40 years ago.

 

B

 


08/16/2010 03:46 PM


Time for a Rethink


Why Development Aid for Africa Has Failed


A commentary by Kurt Gerhardt <mailto:[email protected]>  

Development aid to Africa has been flowing for decades, but the results have 
been paltry. Instead, recipients have merely become dependent and initiative 
has been snuffed out. It is time to reform the system.

Development aid to Africa is a blessing for all those directly involved -- both 
on the giving end and on the receiving end. Functionaries on the donor side, at 
least those abroad, earn good money. Many of those on the receiving end, for 
their part, know how to organize things in such a way that their own personal 
interests don't get short shrift.

There is no reason for these two groups to be interested in changing the status 
quo. Yet even so, some within their ranks are starting to suggest the situation 
as it stands cannot continue. The development aid of the past 50 years, they 
say, is hardly justifiable given the disappointing results. Even individual 
donors, who know little about how development aid works in practice, 
increasingly sense that something might be amiss.

They're right. The aid has failed to a large extent. 

We have taken on too much responsibility for solving African problems. We have 
essentially educated them to, when problems arise, call for foreign aid first 
rather than trying to find solutions themselves.

This attitude has become deeply rooted in Africa. This self-incapacitation is 
one of the most regrettable results of development cooperation thus far. Poorly 
designed development aid has made people dependent and accustomed them to a 
situation of perpetual assistance, preventing them from taking the initiative 
themselves. It is this situation which represents the greatest damage done, far 
worse than the enormous material losses engendered by failed aid projects. And 
there are many. Africa is strewn with idle tractors, ruined equipment and 
run-down buildings.

Deeply Rooted Misconceptions 

On our side, the view has taken hold that we are primarily responsible for 
developing Africa. At the 2nd Bonn Conference on International Development 
Policy in August 2009, then-German President Horst Köhler, an experienced and 
dedicated African development activist, spoke about an energy partnership 
established between Germany and Nigeria two years previously. His conclusion:

"I cannot discern that the amount of electricity in Nigeria has increased since 
then. And I find it shameful for the industrialized countries, as well as for 
those responsible in Nigeria, that this large country, rich as it is in 
resources essentially, can't advance its socio-economic development because it 
hasn't yet managed to bring electricity to its rural areas. I find this 
shameful for the entire development cooperation that has existed for decades." 

Here, the fact that Köhler mentions the industrialized countries before Nigeria 
when discussing responsibility for the failure is notable. More notable, 
however, is that he mentions the industrialized countries at all. Are we really 
the ones who should feel ashamed that one of the world's largest oil exporters 
isn't capable of providing its rural areas with electricity? Simply asking the 
question is enough to show how absurd the thought is -- and how deeply rooted 
the misconception.

This mothering mindset, widespread in industrialized countries for decades, is 
in direct violation of the subsidiarity principle. This principle states that 
providers of aid, whether private or governmental, should not assume any duties 
that could be carried out by the receiver country itself. Furthermore, it 
mandates that aid be given such that those providing it can cease giving as 
soon as possible.

Plenty of Lip Service 

The subsidiarity principle should have been key to designing this cooperation 
from the beginning. In reality, it has played far too small a role. 

The donor side is certainly not lacking in theories, clever strategies or 
concepts -- international development agencies have cabinets bursting with 
them. What's lacking is a basic understanding and clarity when applying 
principles. The realization that northern countries cannot develop the South -- 
that people and societies can only do so themselves -- is given plenty of lip 
service. In practice, however, the idea hardly plays a role at all.

Development experts sent to Africa come from societies that tend to value 
efficiency and speed to a greater degree than is generally found in Africa. 
Furthermore, foreign aid workers, as a rule, only spend a few years in a target 
country. Their desire to "achieve something" often leads them to do more than 
they should according to the subsidiarity principle. But by doing so, they 
inhibit Africa's own momentum and prevent it from growing stronger. 

A further breach of the subsidiarity principle is found in the existence not 
only of the immense national and international development agencies, from the 
German Society for Technical Cooperation (GTZ) to the World Bank, but also of 
myriad private organizations both small and large that cover the continent with 
their network of charitable works. 

Occupying Powers 

These are the de facto occupying powers of the post-colonial period.

The second tenet of the subsidiarity principle holds that aid should become 
dispensable as quickly as possible. In Germany alone, the livelihoods of up to 
100,000 people are dependent on the development aid industry. One can imagine 
the outrage that would result should someone seek to dismantle these agencies. 
But exactly that should ultimately be the raison d'etre of these agencies. 
After decades of providing aid, their continued existence is proof of their 
failure.

It is contrary to the logic of subsidiarity to give a person something that he 
or she could acquire or produce on their own. Yet in the hopes of doing good, 
we have done exactly that far too often in recent decades, whether it be a 
grain mill in a village or a council of GTZ experts for a government ministry. 
A considerable portion of Germany's bilateral aid, amounting to more than €1.5 
billion ($2 billion) per year, is given as grants -- in other words, as a gift. 
Indeed, all of the least developed countries tend to receive foreign aid in the 
form of grants. Two thirds of the countries in sub-Saharan Africa belong to 
this category.

These perpetual gifts have made partners into beggars, ones who no longer value 
the things they have been given and consequently have not maintained them well. 
Apart from a few exceptions, emergency aid being one example, free aid was and 
remains fundamentally wrong.

The Question of Money

Aid given with no strings attached robs the recipient of competence. The method 
has resulted in a divorce from reality in Africa, at all levels of society. 
It's time to accustom our partners to normalcy -- those who want to initiate a 
project but lack the necessary funds to do so, must take out a loan and pay it 
back. Indeed, this is where aid from abroad can make a significant 
contribution: by seeing to it that everyone committed to development has access 
to loans, and particularly by supporting microcredit programs.

The urge of foreign aid workers to quickly produce results promotes 
quantitative thinking and gives short shrift to efforts aimed at helping locals 
learn how to develop themselves. One example of this erroneous notion is the 
goal among donor companies, adopted 40 years ago, to donate 0.7 percent of GDP 
in the form of development aid. 

It makes no sense to establish amounts before discussing the projects that 
should be funded with that money. The worst thing about this discussion is that 
it, once again, is purely quantitative. It feeds the disastrous attitude that 
more money necessarily means more development. In this way, lessons learned 
over the past decades are completely ignored.

Instead, people like Bono and Bob Geldof are allowed open access to our 
governments, where they propagate the "more money" idea -- and where they 
become stumbling blocks to African development.

Nothing to Do with Development Aid 

It is easier to evaluate numbers than the qualitative effects of development 
aid. We cannot develop others. Only endogenous development -- what people and 
societies achieve themselves with the power of their own minds and hands -- 
deserves the name. No one can be developed from the outside.

Many would argue that when development aid brings water pipes and roads to 
Africa, it stimulates and strengthens local efforts. But perhaps the opposite 
is true, and the more we do, the more likely it is that our partners will sit 
back, because foreign aid is taking care of things to their satisfaction. 
Although the latter has proven to be true a thousand times over, development 
aid functionaries still overlook it with astonishing consistency.

Pouring further billions into funds for the climate, AIDS and other issues may, 
in fact, be necessary. But it has nothing to do with development aid. These 
payments will not cause political leaders in the Sahel countries, for example, 
to make more of an effort to combat soil erosion on their own. These countries 
could long ago have begun doing something on this issue -- they could even have 
used their masses of unemployed youth for the job. But so far, in cases where 
something has been done, it generally was the product of foreign initiative and 
not endogenous.

Our development aid has not lent enough support to the efforts of people in 
Africa themselves. Often it has even been an impediment, because our aid was 
focused too much on the object and too little on the subject. Too often the 
project or program, not the people, was the focus. The aid passed the people by.

The result has placed Africa in an undignified position -- and no amount of 
money from the enormous, globally organized network of aid organizations will 
free them. Only Africans themselves can accomplish that.

Translated from the German by Ella Ornstein





URL:


*       http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,712068,00.html 

 



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