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Reality of Aid Africa edition 2003/4
African Forum and Network on Debt and Development (AFRODAD)
June 03, 2004

"Without good governance, we cannot eradicate poverty; for no corrupt government is interested in the eradication of poverty; on the contrary, and as we have seen in many parts of Africa and elsewhere, widespread corruption in high places breeds poverty".
- Julius Nyerere, Former President of Tanzania


What is the Reality of Aid?

The Reality of Aid is: that despite decades of development aid to Africa poverty has continued to deepen.

The Reality of Aid is: that the World Bank and the IMF remain the dominant drivers and gatekeepers of donor policy in Africa. Their assigned position has given them an added role as instruments of governance at the global level, even when this has no legitimacy. They continue to put pressure on African development through their conditionalities, using development aid as a lever to impose the neo-liberal paradigm of privatisation, liberalization and the markets. The power relations in the WTO suggest it plays an important role in global governance. Pressure from the United States on some countries, using development aid as a lever to secure agreement in the WTO, is a clear link between the trade agenda and development aid.

The Reality of Aid is: that African countries have a keen interest in fully participating in the multilateral global trading system. They see trade as an engine of growth with the potential to increase incomes and liberate them from dependency on development aid, whose conditionalities have undermined their rights by failing to stimulate development.

The Reality of Aid is: that the current aid regime undermines governance at the national level and violates human rights because of the conditionalities imposed. Africa must of necessity find a way out of this constricting relationship with the rich countries and their institutions and instead participate in the global economy on the stronger basis of trade.

The Reality of Aid is: that Africa has to pay more attention to trade as an alternative to development aid. Africa generates less than 2% of global trade. If open trade is the most profitable business in the world today, then trade could give Africa what development aid has failed to provide - sustainable development. Access to markets must therefore be the imperative language of all development discussions.

The Reality of Aid is: that "if the aid that went to Zambia between 1961 -1994 had gone to promote investment and if the investment had been as important to growth as initially predicted, the country's per capita income would have been more than $20,000 in 1994 and not $600". The fact is that the majority of Zambian people have become poorer (per capita income of $1,000 in 1964).

The Reality of Aid is: that it is important to know why development aid cooperation is not being more effective in reducing poverty in Africa.

The Reality of Aid is: that there is a financial gap of about US$64 billion per year between what African countries can raise, and what they need to spend on development. Closing the leakages of financial outflows from Africa, estimated at more than US$75 billion, could easily fill that gap. These include terms of trade losses of over US$ 60 billion, illegitimate debt of US$10 billion and barriers to markets of US$5.4 billion per year.

The Reality of Aid is: that since the AGOA enactment in 2000 US imports from Sub- Sahara Africa have increased by over 60%, making the US the largest single market for the region accounting for 27% of exports. AGOA's development impact seems to be promising.

  • Kenya is reported to have established and reopened at least nine factories, which have generated at least 20,000 jobs.
  • In Lesotho, 11 new factories and the expansion of eight additional ones have resulted in 15,000 new jobs allowing manufacturing sector employment to exceed government employment for the first time.
  • Malawi is reported to have created 4,300 new jobs as a result of AGOA
  • US$ 78 million of investments have been attracted to Mauritius with the consequent increases in employment.

Notwithstanding the problems surrounding AGOA, this new reality gives hope for Africa's transformation and a possible exit strategy from development aid that has trapped Africa into debt and conditionalities. It offers new realities that will increase employment and incomes and create a sustainable environment in which it will be possible to realise good governance and people's rights.

The Reality of Aid is: that neo-liberal policies on which the current reality hinges and which define current international cooperation have failed to spur economic growth and reduce poverty.

The Reality of Aid is: that Africa should focus on the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and should assess how best these can be attained without confining itself to the development aid framework which has so far failed to provide an exit route to poverty but continues to undermine national governance and violate human rights.

The Reality of Aid is: is an independent assessment of the nature and performance of development aid. The project aims to contribute to more effective strategies to eliminate poverty, based on principles of solidarity and equity, by analysing international aid and development cooperation and lobbying for changes in north/south systemic relationships in aid practices. The fundamental question therefore remains as to whether Africa needs Aid or not? If so what aid should it be, and how should it be managed and for whom should it be? If not, what are the real and tangible alternatives to development aid?

The Reality of Aid, Africa Edition 2003/4 is: targeted at policymakers in Africa, particularly Heads of States, African Finance Ministers, Ambassadors to the United Nations and other agencies.

It is also aimed at enlisting wider support of CSO groups both in the South and North to stimulate discussions with their constituencies on issues raised.

The Reality of Aid, Africa Edition 2003/4 is: a culmination of various workshops and meetings between AFRODAD affiliates and organisations working on debt and aid in Kenya, Zambia, Tanzania, Zimbabwe as well as contributions from other African countries, which allowed for a truly African perspective of the issues.

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