This rings true. 

If we learn this lesson, maybe Afghanistan will have been worth it.

E



Opinion | How not to rebuild a war-torn nation like Afghanistan
https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opinion/20-years-after-afghanistan-invasion-lesson-how-not-spend-development-ncna1280899
(via Instapaper)

Over the course of the U.S. occupation of Afghanistan, which began with 
America’s invasion 20 years ago Thursday, the U.S. invested billions of dollars 
in major infrastructure projects — schools and hospitals, water and energy 
facilities and thousands of miles of roads. The United States also helped stand 
up a democratic government and then spent more than $88 billion training 
Afghani military and security forces in the hopes that they could secure the 
nation and enforce the rule of law.

The plan didn't work. Nor could it have.

Injecting large sums of cash into a country to remake it creates a huge 
incentive for desperate people to seek quick access to otherwise scarce money.

As the Taliban consolidates its hold over Afghanistan following the U.S. 
withdrawal, Americans are now left to reflect on why things went wrong — 
including the ways the country’s actions over the past two decades have 
destabilized Afghan society by hewing far too closely to a traditional 
international aid playbook.

However well intentioned the U.S. aid, it had the ironic effect of contributing 
to, rather than solving, the instability in Afghanistan's institutions and 
fueling, rather than rooting out, the corruption and misuse of funds that 
preceded the Taliban's return to power. The United States must learn the 
lessons of these mistakes so that it can better help war-torn nations recover 
in the future, as well as help hundreds of millions of people in low- and 
middle-income countries escape poverty today.

In our studies of development, we’ve seen that the instinct of many is to focus 
on building up infrastructure — like roads, bridges, institutions of 
government, the military and schools — and trying to stamp out corruption. This 
infrastructure-first theory may seem logical, but according to our research, 
it’s backward.

In our research, we define infrastructure as the most efficient mechanism 
through which a society stores or distributes value. By itself, infrastructure 
does not create much value. Rather, businesses that offer in-demand products 
and services to the local population, employ the local population and operate 
affordably within that community are what create value. They also create 
corresponding value chains that employ other individuals, which multiplies 
their positive impact in a community.

This is true for all common forms of infrastructure. Roads are the most 
efficient medium to distribute — or transport — vehicles, once those vehicles 
exist and there’s local demand for moving them from one location to another. 
Schools are the most efficient medium to distribute knowledge, once there’s 
demand for workers with knowledge and skills. Ports are the most efficient 
medium to store goods, once there is an ability and willingness to pay for 
those goods. In many countries, courts are the most efficient medium for meting 
out justice, once there is a thriving economy that benefits from the rule of 
law.


Gen. Milley calls Afghan war a 'strategic failure'

Sept. 28, 202110:38
Moreover, the value of what a piece of infrastructure stores or distributes 
must justify its construction and maintenance, so when the value is too low — 
because there isn’t viable demand for those goods, for example — the 
infrastructure becomes unsustainable.

In Brazil, a multimillion-dollar cable-car project meant to transport residents 
to a favela in Rio de Janeiro hasn’t functioned since 2016 because there 
weren’t enough riders to justify its maintenance. According to The Economist, a 
$3.2 billion Mombasa-Nairobi Standard Gauge Railway in Kenya “will probably not 
make enough money to repay its debts” because there aren’t enough goods to 
transport.

In Afghanistan, there was too much infrastructure and too little value, as the 
recent report from the Special Investigator General for Afghanistan 
Reconstruction makes clear. Many U.S.-funded schools fell into disrepair after 
they were built and were empty. A $335-million power plant was operating at 
less than 1 percent capacity. Two hospitals that cost $18.5 million to build 
operated at costs higher than what the Afghanistan government could sustain. 
Ryan Crocker, former U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan, said, “The biggest lesson 
learned for me is, don’t do major infrastructure projects” in Afghanistan.

Making matters worse is that the focus on infrastructure first can fuel 
corruption rather than stem it. In the absence of viable economic activities 
that allow people to have a stake in making a living through transparent and 
legal means, injecting large sums of cash into a country to remake it creates a 
huge incentive for desperate people to seek quick access to otherwise scarce 
money.

What would have worked? Although no country is identical to any other, South 
Korea’s story is helpful. South Korea was once very poor, severely corrupt and 
ruled by an authoritarian government. Many economists said the country was 
trapped in poverty and was an economic basket case.

South Korea escaped poverty to become a rich country not by investing in 
infrastructure up front, but by investing in market-creating innovations— 
innovations that transform complicated and expensive products into products 
that are simple and affordable so many more people can afford them. The 
market-creating innovations in turn produced jobs and tax revenue, which 
governments then used to fund and sustain infrastructure.

A more effective development policy than pouring cash into infrastructure is 
funding investments in local businesses — whether new or existing — that can 
provide valuable products and services for the local population.

Samsung, LG, Hyundai and Kia are all examples of this market-creating approach, 
as they have served as engines of development for South Korea by making 
products more affordable to millions in the country and then globally. The 10 
largest South Korean companies employ nearly 1 million Koreans and have 
cumulative annual revenues of almost $700 billion, which provides the tax 
revenue necessary for the government to sustainably develop the country’s 
infrastructure.

Over time, it’s also helped South Korea slowly start to root out corruption. 
Our research shows that corruption thrives when there’s scarcity. In poor 
countries, both employment and economic opportunity are scarce. As a result, 
many people resort to corruption to help them solve a problem.

There are in fact a few examples of investments in market-creating innovations 
in Afghanistan, such as Roshan, which was founded in 2003 as an Afghani 
telecommunications company. Today it has grown to serve over 6 million active 
subscribers and employ roughly 1,000 people in addition to the 30,000 jobs it 
has added indirectly to the Afghan economy through entities like retail stores.

Many more of these sorts of investments were needed, however. Rather than 
mandating that the U.S. Agency for International Development accept impossible 
goals for quickly building schools and hospitals, Washington should have 
focused far more than it did on investing in a portfolio of local businesses, 
either directly or through the Afghanistan government and on-the-ground funders.

As we reflect on the horrors unfolding in Afghanistan 20 years after America 
invaded, learning the right lessons from the shaky foundation on which the 
country was rebuilt is imperative to ending the predictable tragedies rooted in 
poverty that are playing out there every day, and in so many other places 
across the globe.



Sent from my iPhone

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