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Inside Europe’s savior complex

Those who give aid insist on a series of reforms that seek to turn the local state into a replica of the donor country and local elites into cadres of the new catechism of “good governance”. Here they demand recipient governments adopt particular institutions as in Western countries: separation of powers by having an independent judiciary and parliament; a multiparty system of government; certain procurement, trade and investment laws; a free press, etc. Today institutions have emerged that give scores on being a good student – the World Bank Doing Business Index, the World Economic Forum Competitiveness Index etc.  But the aim and effect of these reforms is largely to displace existing, or stifle the development of, local capital in favour multinational capital.

Like under colonial rule, the aim of foreign aid is not so much to develop the local economy as to open it for takeover by multinational capital. The spokespersons of these foreign interests: presidents, legislators, NGO activists, local business interests (largely commission agents that make money connecting multinational firms to local business opportunities, Marxists used to call them compradors), bureaucrats, pundits and journalists etc. dominate public policy debates and are feted in western capitals.

This local coalition defends foreign financial assistance, foreign direct investment and other forms of intrusion into Africa’s sovereignty such as promotion of human rights, democracy, and the ICC as international justice the cures of our ills. They make these arguments even though none of them can quote a single country that developed through foreign aid or foreign direct investment.

The aid industry is backed by billions of dollars in development spending. Its international and local agents form the most powerful voice on public policy. This is what makes foreign aid a difficult movement to fight, but it is hardly the only one. The use of the word “aid” appeals to our human sentiment for charity – who would say helping feed a hungry village, vaccinating a vulnerable community or educating the poor is a bad thing?

True some of the things foreign aid does help individuals and communities. But such charity is not the stimulant of development. This issue was raised by one of the panelists who claimed that Germany today is developed because it was assisted by the United States through the Marshal Plan – a huge financial aid program by America to Western Europe after World War Two.

The Marshal Plan funds were not given for the development of Germany. By 1945, Germany was the most industrialised country in Europe manufacturing cars, planes, tanks etc. and leading in nuclear, missile and rockets research. Indeed, it had higher manufacturing per capita than the USA. Its people’s norms, values, habits and mentalities were of an advanced capitalist society. World War Two destroyed physical infrastructure, not the skills – technical and organisational – that were already embedded in its people.  An injection of money in such a society would stimulate rapid recovery from the effects of war.

The African countries that receive international aid are still peasant societies with high levels of inter and intra community mistrust, low levels of the diffusion of technology and capitalist norms, values, habits and mentalities have not yet penetrated the social consciousness of the vast majority of people. Even if foreign aid was well intentioned – and it often is not – its effects cannot be like those of the Marshal Plan on Germany because of these differences.

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6 comments

  1. meaning development aid is colonialism or opening up the developing world for local capital development to die in favour of foreign capital? this is reminiscent of the India mindset in the 6 post world war decades. Could we get access to the paper so that we judge the uproar?

  2. Truth is truth!
    Thank you, Mr. Mwenda!

  3. Mwenda, you are so spot on. Please keep giving us the insights.

  4. Stateless African observer

    They outlawed traditional healing because it works against them.

  5. 1.Why does Africa always blame the 1st world for its failure?Most of Asia and Latin America were classified as 3rd world nations that alone worked them up;Now states like China,Brazil,India,South Korea are invited for dinner with the big boys this begs the questions why are African nations not worked up economically?
    2.What works in Africa may seem awkward to the 1st world but its very normal in Africa for example;Africans demand to be bribed during elections while the citizens in the 1st world just need policies explained to them before they cast their vote..
    3. States in Africa especially those situated in Southern and Eastern Africa will just have to catch up with the pace at which the world is developing and accept the new world order of blackmail of governments, threats of withholding Aid,issuing travel bans,ICC threats.They use those tactics coz you are not only their former colonies but your economics status is promising which for me is not a bad thing.
    4.The rich will always be treated in a special way just here in Uganda the presence of a rich man is always noted and felt you can not do any thing about it.
    5.Up coming pundits like Rajab and Ejakaait were recently struck by lightening because they owed people money.

  6. If the reaction of the audience surprised you then that is funny. I ,d think that if you preached the dangers of obesity to starving karamojong you would need protection. If you care to look at recorded European history you will note that colonialism is a recent thing and so is foreign development assistance. These guys have built their economy on layers of skilful trading. Think of the old East India DUtch company in the east indies.or even the sugar barons in the Caribbean islands. Near home the Cape colony of 1497.Here in Uganda up to1992 most schools were fed by WFP on imported fish milk maize beef, chicken all from Europe. The European farmer had a field day. In a policy shift the food was banned the reason was,fish was dying of old age in our lakes and maize was rotting in the fields. Today the fishermen and their families starve and the maize still rots in the field! Think if UPE had planned acup of milk per school child what would kill the milk farmers. Now it is news when our farmers travel to Europe to learn how to grow matooke or when a delegation of Dutch farmers meet the head of state. By the way is there a presidential advisor on peasant farming? And when are we getting new districts? All this time am certain on the President phone speed dial the IMF representative is on the first button then the pundit s can claim for their facilitation preaching to the hungry Masses about patriotism and the dangers of free food.thank you

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