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MDGs:
A case for pragmatism?
Ezra Mbogori
September 08, 2005
http://www.pambazuka.org/index.php?id=29379
For Ezra Mbogori,
writing off all southern debt, changing the trade regime and raising
the level of aid constitute three of the four major steps necessary
to achieve the Millennium Development Goals, and these are the responsibility
of the North, not the South. The fourth step is addressing issues
of governance. But behind the MDGs are larger moral and intellectual
implications for the North as well as the South, he believes, which
relate to finding out how lifestyles can be informed by the basic
principles of sustainability and social justice.
It’s become almost a commonplace to find fault with the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs): they are minimal in their ambitions; they
are based disproportionately on the views of the North rather than
the needs of the South; they reduce to statistical targets matters
of human aspiration and human need; they involve simply throwing
money at questions whose solution is not primarily a matter of money
– the list could go on. In spite of this, argues Ezra Mbogori of
MWENGO,1
they’re all we’ve got and they’re worth striving for.
There is no question, he feels, that the MDGs are not all that they
might be. They do not so much represent progress in the development
argument as a kind of holding of the line: "The Millennium
Development Goals are really for all intents and purposes minimum
development goals. They fall far short of development commitments
that were made in the past. But in our current situation, I think,
the MDGs do help those who want to maintain some sort of focus on
development to at least arrest the flight or regression … and they
enable us to start building up arguments again for being a little
more ambitious in pursuit of development."
A spirit of pragmatism
So while the MDGs are unambitious, "they do offer a starting
point". He believes that both developed and developing countries
are approaching the MDGs in a pragmatic spirit. He sees the need
for the South to make compelling arguments to reinflate the notion
of development, which had to some extent gone flat in the North.
In Mbogori’s view, this relates in part to more ambitious goals
having been missed in the past. He begins his resume of the recent
history of development with the ending of apartheid: "With
the dismantling of apartheid and the coming into the fold of the
community of states of South Africa, one of the biggest blights
to humanity was overcome. And the new enemy of humanity on the planet
was poverty … One doesn’t have to think too far back to remember
the demands for health and education for all by 2000. Then came
the year 2000 and none of those goals had been met. So I think that
as the Millennium Declaration was being signed, there were pragmatists
who thought, ‘Let’s not be too ambitious, let’s face it we’ve missed
targets we’ve set in the past. So let’s set some modest targets
that we can meet that will make a difference.’"
However, with terrorism becoming the top priority for northern countries
after September 11, he believes poverty and development initiatives
were sidelined. "The sudden shift of focus to terrorism tended
to shift the attention almost entirely from the development goals
that had been set, however modest they were. That’s why the MDGs
now appear like such a radical set of targets."
Moreover, while the MDGs are undoubtedly "less ambitious than
developing countries would go for", they do provide a framework
that touches on some of the aspirations of southern countries. "The
fact that they at least start to address some of the right questions
is important for many of us. It’s almost a question of saying they’re
better than nothing."
Who framed the MDGs?
Another point of criticism of the MDGs is that they are a largely
northern initiative that the South had no option but to go along
with. Without being quite so categorical, Mbogori agrees that, while
the Millennium Declaration was signed by leaders from both the South
and the North, "I think quite frankly that the leadership came
to a large extent from the North." This touches on the question
of the dynamics of power, about which he has much to say.
The heart of the matter
The dynamics are clearly reflected in the way the Goals are formulated,
he argues. "If you analyse the MDGs, you see that Goals 1-7
are all focused on what southern countries and southern governments
need to do."
However, he suggests, the real key to success is Goal 8: "Goal
8 is for me the real clincher. It’s to do with the resources that
are required and the structural shifts that need to happen, for
instance in the areas of trade and writing off debt. I continue
to get really frustrated," he adds, "at the thought that
if we were to write off all debt, and change the trade regime, and
double the amount of aid – or take it to the level of 0.7 per cent
of GNP that was agreed 35 years ago – the chances of meeting these
goals would be increased many fold."
For Ezra Mbogori, writing off all southern debt, changing the trade
regime and raising the level of aid constitute three of the four
major steps necessary to achieve the Goals, and these are the responsibility
of the North, not the South.
What about corrupt and inefficient governments in the South, many
northern commentators would ask at this point. However much aid
you throw at the problem, nothing will be done until governance
and efficiency are improved. The fourth step, he agrees, is addressing
issues of governance, "because that would have a direct impact
on the question of corruption and address accountability in relation
to application of resources."
He believes, though, that the common argument that unless governance
and efficiency improve, a good deal of aid will be wasted, is largely
an "escapist" one. In other words, it is advanced by people
who "want to find an excuse for not meeting their commitments
anyway".
Modest goals, massive challenge
Of course, the ambitiousness of any aim is proportionate to the
means available to its attainment. In the case of the MDGs, their
achievement is dependent on the existence of sufficient will and
means among the international community. Seen in this light, 2015
might actually be overambitious as a date for achieving them. Mbogori
cites economist Jeffrey Sachs, who claims that at the pace some
countries are moving, the MDGs "won’t be met by 2100 let alone
2015", especially in Africa. At the present rate, some goals
may be achieved only in 2150. The MDGs may seem minimal and inadequate,
but meeting them by 2015, Mbogori reminds us, would be a major achievement.
Nor does the apparent modesty of the Goals mean that they are not
worth pursuing in themselves. Take the example of moving from living
on $1 a day to $2 a day – considered in the light of what would
be an acceptable standard of living in the North, this aim is so
modest as to be offensive. But, he feels, "these sorts of measures
give you something to work with".
He tells a story that he came across during a piece of research
for the Commonwealth Foundation. A Malawian woman, asked if she
thought she lived in a good society, replied: "It is better
to be a dog in the North, in a place like America, than to be a
person here." "It’s in that light," says Mbogori,
"that I look at switching from living on $1 a day to $2 a day
to $3 a day. There’s a starkness about it."
Where do grantmakers come in?
What questions does this pose for grantmakers? Mbogori sees a challenge
particularly for those grantmakers who work primarily in the area
of social justice. The challenge for them will be to support efforts
to achieve the MDGs while continuing to maintain "their interest
and creativity around achieving structural changes".
But there is a bigger challenge still implicit in this, because
it is at this point, for Ezra Mbogori, that "one starts to
make connections between, for instance, the wasteful lifestyles
of the North and the ability of the planet to sustain these lifestyles.
If people were to say that development equates to similar kinds
of lifestyle for everyone, what would that mean for this world?
It requires a certain amount of creativity to begin to act in ways
that educate everybody on the planet to see that there is a need
for major structural changes. I think that’s a challenge for grantmakers."
So behind the MDGs are larger moral and intellectual implications
for the North as well as the South. "I think that there definitely
needs to be a change in lifestyles – I’m not saying a reduction
in standards, I’m saying a change in lifestyles. We have to recognize
that, for instance, fossil fuel supplies are not infinite. They
will run out at some point. So how do we ensure that our lifestyles
are informed by basic principles of sustainability and social justice?"
A beginning, not an end
As already stressed, it’s important to keep in mind that while the
MDGs can play an important part in development, they are still a
minimum. There will be no occasion for complacency on the part of
the international community if and when they are met. "I think
grantmakers have a role here too. It’s like watching a fairly emotional
movie, when the end is one that you feel good about. Now the challenge
I see for grantmakers is to bring everybody’s attention to the fact
that, even if the MDGs are achieved, it’s not going to be happy
ever after. There are still major challenges around sustainability.
We live in one world, one planet, and we have to make certain adjustments
in order for it to really be a happy ever after situation."
The role of southern NGOs
According to Mbogori, many southern organizations will already have
been through a good deal of soul-searching before deciding to support
the MDGs, and they will often have done so from a pragmatic conviction
that, while deficient in many respects, the MDGs are "what
there is".
But he raises a final point in this connection. In spite of their
willingness to throw their weight behind the MDGs, the contribution
southern NGOs can make towards the formulation and achievement of
development objectives is limited because they are on the wrong
end of the power equation. "I always go back to the question
of mutual respect and trying to create a platform on which we can
debate these things as equals, which is almost impossible because
of the power games that we’re playing all the time."
In any case, he stresses, it is almost impossible for NGOs to provide
any real support for the MDGs in a situation where they are struggling
to survive. "I just came back from a meeting in South Africa
where even as we tried to gear up the MDGs campaign, a lot of NGOs
are on their deathbeds simply because they don’t have the resources
to meet their basic operational needs on a day-to-day basis. One
NGO leader I spoke to hadn’t been paid for three months."
This is partly a matter of donors’ well-known reluctance to fund
core costs. "Donors continue to exercise this strange control,
where sometimes they agree to fund a programme but won’t fund any
core costs. We are just going to have to keep pushing donors,"
he says, "and telling them, look, for goodness sake, begin
to see our point of view, and start to support some of these basic
things. Even if it means getting out of your current mode and taking
risks and actually helping to build an infrastructure of civil society
organizations."
This is something that’s "at the top of my mind right now",
says Mbogori. "I’ve been looking at how much time I spend simply
worrying about whether I can meet my basic operating requirements
and how much more I could do if I didn’t need to worry about that.
I wonder if our northern partners ever really think about this.
And I constantly wonder, how can we get them to a table where we
can talk about it?"
A question of balance
The discussion has taken us a long way beyond the MDGs but for Ezra
Mbogori the progression is a logical one. His final message seems
to be that there is a balance to be struck in any view of the MDGs.
While they represent a very modest advance in some respects, in
other ways they are significant. Materially, limited though they
are, achieving them will constitute a great advance for people in
developing countries. Morally, they imply a rethinking of values
and lifestyles for the world in general.
In any case, we should guard against the danger of thinking that
their achievement – whether it happens sooner or later, and most
current forecasts seem to suggest that it will be later – is anything
more than a beginning. Development is a continuing process, not
an event or series of events. And it’s not just a matter of poor
people in poor countries. It concerns us all.
* Ezra Mbogori is Executive Director of Mwelekeo wa NGO (MWENGO)
in Zimbabwe. He can be contacted at ezra@mwengo.org.zw
This article
first appeared in the September issue of the Alliance Magazine and
is gratefully reproduced here with permission. Alliance is the leading
magazine on philanthropy and social investment across the world.
Published quarterly by Allavida, it tracks the latest trends and
developments providing expert analysis from northern and southern
perspectives. Visit http://www.allavida.org/alliance/alliancehome.html
Please send
comments to editor@pambazuka.org
1. MWENGO is one
of the focal points for the MDGs campaign in Southern Africa, supporting
the building of national coalitions in several countries in the region.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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