On 2/17/2011 9:00 AM, ken hanly wrote:
>
> This seems to be a different Sachs from the one who was gung ho
> for Shock Treatment and neo liberal policies. When and why did
> this seeming conversion take place. By the way he does not seem to
> say much about U.S. imperial wars and defense spending. Cheers, ken
>
>

The Evolution of Jeffrey Sachs
By Robert Cole, AlterNet
Posted on May 18, 2005, Printed on February 17, 2011
http://www.alternet.org/story/22032/

President Bush's favorite philosopher Jesus Christ once declared, 
"The poor we will always have with us." Jeffrey Sachs is a man on 
a mission to prove him wrong.

The End of Poverty: Economic Possibilities for Our Time is an 
autobiography, a moral call to arms, and a technical blueprint all 
rolled up into one massive book dedicated to eradicating extreme 
global poverty by 2025. Here is what extreme poverty looks like 
today: over a billion people struggle to survive on less than a 
dollar a day, while another 1.5 billion exist on less than two 
dollars per day. Some 114 million children are denied any 
education whatsoever, even as six million children die of 
malnutrition before the age of five each year.

Sachs' book is a natural extension of his present tenure as 
director of both the UN Millennium Project and Columbia 
University's Earth Institute. In the former position he serves as 
special advisor to UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, guiding the 
pursuit of that project's Millennium Development Goals. These 
eight MDGs, which are now formally supported by all of UN member 
states, range from eradicating extreme poverty -- defined as 
living on less than one dollar per day -- to creating a global 
partnership for development, with concurrent plans to ensure 
universal primary education and promote gender equality. (These 
targets were originally set for 2015, though the eradication of 
severe poverty has since been pushed back to 2025.)

Miracle Worker or Reckless Visionary?

The high-profile guru of global development, recently included on 
Time magazine's current list of the world's 100 most influential 
people, has a long and controversial track record in curing the 
world's economic woes. Sachs received his Ph.D. from Harvard 
University when he was barely 26. Within two years, he had already 
received tenure at Harvard's economics department, where he 
established his reputation as an expert on international finance 
and inflation.

Sachs soon became famous as a macroeconomic miracle worker when 
Bolivia hired him to cure the nation's rampant inflation. Within 
seven weeks, the good doctor had rescued the ailing Bolivian peso, 
stopping the country's hyperinflation in its tracks. Sachs never 
looked back, soon becoming the most sought-after economic adviser 
to the developing world.

Over the past two decades, Sachs has treated over a hundred such 
"patients," from Latin America through Eastern Europe to Asia. 
Along the way, he's garnered a degree of celebrity rare for an 
economist, rubbing shoulders with popes and presidents, royalty 
and rock stars. Fame has brought with it greater scrutiny, and 
inevitably criticism.

After Bolivia, the summer of 1989 found Sachs in post-communist 
Poland, urging a crash course in market transformation. Heeding a 
Solidarity leader's request, he and colleague David Lipton held an 
all-night drafting session that produced a specific timeline of 
policy reforms, including the immediate removal of price controls 
and privatization of state enterprises. This tactic of rapidly 
injecting free-market reforms into stagnant economies came to be 
known as "shock therapy" (a label Sachs rejects).

Despite warnings from Polish economists who feared that their 
country lacked the experience to absorb such quick, radical 
change, the Sachs-Lipton brief became the nation's official 
economic policy on Jan. 1, 1990 -- and to disastrous effect, at 
least in the short run. In the absence of government controls, 
unemployment rates spiked, prices skyrocketed, and thousands lost 
their personal savings. Poland's woes inspired a firestorm of 
criticism that Sachs later dismissed, arguing that his strategy 
did in fact work in the long run. He pointed to the dramatic 
increase in per capita income by 2002 in Poland, which also 
enjoyed the highest rate of economic growth among post-communist 
nations during the same period.

Sachs' defense of his prescription, however, rings less convincing 
in the case of Russia. When Boris Yeltsin rose to power in the 
autumn of 1991, Sachs prescribed a similar dose of shock therapy 
to revive the moribund economy. However, not only did Russia 
endure economic disruption and unrest like Poland, the reforms 
also enabled the rise to power of a Mafia-like oligarchy who 
seized control of much of the country's newly privatized resources.

In Sachs' track record with post-communist economies, his critics 
see a man eager to advance grandiose visions of social engineering 
irrespective of their costs. So it's hardly surprising that his 
latest plan to eradicate poverty has more than its fair share of 
skeptics.

The Evolution of Aid Policy

In many ways, the evolution of Sachs own economic philosophy has 
mirrored that of development aid. Western nations have adopted 
various strategies to tackle global poverty over the past 50 
years, and with varying degrees of sincerity and wisdom. Be it 
John Galbraith's liberal dream of balancing private and public 
sector wealth, Nixonian anti-Marxist programs of financial and 
military assistance, or cynical Reagan-era "structural adjustment" 
policies, the results have not been heartening.

Structural adjustment failed so miserably as a development tool 
that the IMF and World Bank abandoned it by the mid-90s. The net 
effect of these policies set back African development by years and 
widened Latin America's income disparity. In fact, the two nations 
that did witness major reductions in extreme poverty in the '80s 
and '90s were China and India, both of which rejected structural 
adjustment schemes.

Clearly, Western political and imperial agendas heavily tainted 
the last two eras of development aid -- agendas that Sachs himself 
may have served, knowingly or otherwise. Some economists claim, 
for example, that Sachs merely repackaged structural adjustment as 
shock therapy, and therefore ended up with exactly the same results.

While Sachs is not one to admit past errors in judgment, he does 
acknowledge changing his mind: "It has taken me 20 years to 
understand what good development economics should be, and I am 
still learning." He is careful today to distance himself from 
old-school development policies: "For a quarter-century, the main 
IMF prescription has been budgetary belt-tightening for patients 
much too poor to own belts -- finally, however, that approach is 
beginning to change."

Or as he puts it in his book, "It is no good to lecture the dying 
that they should have done better with their lot in life."


The New War on Poverty

Though he remains a free-market evangelist, Sachs' philosophy has 
gradually evolved to embrace a strong belief in the power of 
collective governmental action. Not surprisingly, topping the list 
of his urgent prescriptions is a demand that Western donors -- 
chiefly the United States -- honor their long-standing pledge to 
give 0.7 percent of their GNP to global development programs, a 
promise they've failed to deliver on for many years.

In End of Poverty, Sachs challenges the widely held myth that the 
U.S. government spends too much on foreign aid. The actual amount, 
as he reveals, is only 0.15 percent per year, or 15 cents for 
every $100 dollars of our GNP -- the lowest percentage of all 
donor nations. Even if private donations were added to that 
figure, total U.S. giving would still amount to just 0.2 percent 
of its $12 trillion GNP.

Sachs argues that raising the level of aid is easily affordable. 
For example, the Bush administration's 2005 tax cuts just for 
those earning more than $500,000 are sufficient to meet America's 
aid commitments.

Sachs' vision, however, is most powerful and compelling in its 
call for holistic approach toward economic development -- an 
approach, he dubs, "clinical economics," a phrase he derives from 
pediatrics. Clinical economics views entrenched poverty as a 
complex phenomenon, created by the interaction of a host of 
important factors -- such as geographic isolation, lack of 
infrastructure, environmental degradation, rampant untreated 
disease, and lack of education -- which combine to create 
entrenched poverty. UNICEF's Carol Bellamy calls this "the perfect 
storm" afflicting Third World nations like Malawi. Sachs argues 
that addressing just one or two of these problems at a time will 
not cure the disease. What is required is both a multi-pronged and 
unique strategy tailored to the needs of each nation. 
"One-size-fits-all" programs cannot, and rarely ever did, treat 
the underlying pathology of poverty.

According to Sachs, a required step toward creating effective 
development policy is to reverse the traditional top-down 
structure of aid delivery. Rather than leave the planning in the 
hands of Western governments and NGOs, the countries themselves 
should outline detailed strategies with specific investment 
targets and clear monitoring standards to put forward to donor 
nations. In some instances aid wouldn't necessarily require money, 
but donation of medicines, malarial bed nets, nitrogen-producing 
trees, and the like.

In requiring recipient nations to articulate their own needs in 
concert with the expertise of UN development specialists, Sachs 
approach also has the added benefit of assuaging traditional Third 
World fears about losing their sovereignty in the guise of 
international aid programs. It would ideally also ensure more 
focused, and thus effective, application of resources. It's 
ostensibly a village-up rather than World Bank-down model.

Another important component of Sachs' model is technological 
know-how, where advances in farmland reclamation and superior seed 
stock, renewable energies, cheap and effective medicines, and 
improved transportation and communication services become tools in 
changing the economic dynamic. Sachs sees technological innovation 
as a means to offer relatively simple and affordable solutions to 
endemic problems. Anti-malarial bed nets, for example, cost around 
five dollars apiece and can last for years. That's a small 
investment per person when compared with the incalculable toll of 
stressed family structures, lost productivity, and malarial 
treatment costs for a single infected person.

The bottom line, according to Sachs, is that the West can 
permanently lift the extremely poor out of hopelessness by 
committing to long-term investment in the essential components of 
economic growth: safe drinking water, irrigation, affordable 
health care, roads, power and telecommunications, among others. 
Beyond being a matter of global security, it's an obvious moral 
imperative, now more urgent than ever.

While Sachs' prescriptions can seem a little naive in minimizing, 
for instance, the daunting challenges of government corruption, 
self-serving superpower politics, and bureaucratic inertia, his 
over-arching message is abundantly worth heeding. He offers a new, 
more thoughtful, even radical way of seeing poverty and its 
solutions. For progressive movements, he offers a way to move past 
empty moralizing toward effective action.

Robert Cole is a freelance writer and historian living on Beaver 
Island, Michigan.
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