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The
new colonialists
Michael
A. Cohen, Maria Figueroa Küpçü, Parag Khanna, Foreign
Policy Magazine
July/August
2008
Even on their
best days, the world's failed states are difficult to mistake
for anything but tragic examples of countries gone wrong. A few
routinely make the headlines - Somalia, Iraq, Congo. But alongside
their brand of extreme state dysfunction exists an entirely separate,
easily missed class of states teetering on the edge. In dozens of
countries, corrupt or feeble governments are proving themselves
dangerously incapable of carrying out the most basic responsibilities
of statehood. These countries - nations such as Botswana, Cambodia,
Georgia, and Kenya - might appear to be recovering, even thriving,
developing countries, but like their failed-state cousins, they
are increasingly unable, and perhaps unwilling, to fulfill the functions
that have long defined what it means to be a state.
What - or who
- is keeping these countries from falling into the abyss? Not so
long ago, former colonial masters and superpower patrons propped
them up. Today, however, the thin line that separates weak states
from truly failed ones is manned by a hodgepodge of international
charities, aid agencies, philanthropists, and foreign advisors.
This armada of nonstate actors has become a powerful global force,
replacing traditional donors' and governments' influence
in poverty-stricken, war-torn world capitals. And as a measure of
that influence, they are increasingly taking over key state functions,
providing for the health, welfare, and safety of citizens. These
private actors have become the "new colonialists" of
the 21st century.
In much the
same way European empires once dictated policies across their colonial
holdings, the new colonialists—among them international development
groups such as Oxfam, humanitarian non-governmental organizations
(NGOs) like Doctors Without Borders, faith-based organizations such
as Mercy Corps, and megaphilanthropies like the Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation - direct development strategies and craft government
policies for their hosts. But though the new colonialists are the
glue holding society together in many weak states, their presence
often deepens the dependency of these states on outsiders. They
unquestionably fill vital roles, providing lifesaving healthcare,
educating children, and distributing food in countries where the
government can't or won't. But, as a consequence, many
of these states are failing to develop the skills necessary to run
their countries effectively, while others fall back on a global
safety net to escape their own accountability. Have the new colonialists
gone too far in attempting to manage responsibilities that should
be those of governments alone? And given the dependency they have
nurtured, can the world afford to let them one day walk away?
A shift
of money and power
Dependency
is not a new phenomenon in the world's most destitute places.
But as wealthy governments have lost their appetite for the development
game, the new colonialists have filled the beach. In 1970, seven
of every 10 dollars given by the United States to the developing
world came from official development assistance (ODA). Today, ODA
is a mere 15% of such flows, with the other 85% coming from private
capital flows, remittances, and NGO contributions. Nor is this trend
strictly an American phenomenon. In 2006, total aid to the developing
world from countries of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation
and Development (OECD) amounted to $325 billion. Just a third of
that sum came from governments.
The expanding budgets
of humanitarian NGOs are indicative of the power shift taking place.
During the 1990s, the amount of aid flowing through NGOs in Africa,
rather than governments, more than tripled. Spending by the international
relief and development organization CARE has jumped 65% since 1999,
to $607 million last year. Save the Children's budget has
tripled since 1998; Doctors Without Borders' budget has doubled
since 2001; and Mercy Corps' expenditures have risen nearly
700 percent in a decade.
The shift is
equally apparent on the receiving end. When aid reaches developing
countries, it increasingly bypasses the host governments altogether,
often going straight into the coffers of the new colonialists on
the ground. In 2003, the USAID Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance
distributed two thirds of its budget through NGOs rather than affected
governments. Between 1980 and 2003, the amount of aid from OECD
countries channelled through NGOs grew from $47 million to more
than $4 billion. One reason for the shift is the growing reluctance
of rich countries to route aid through corrupt foreign officials.
That has created an increasing reliance on new colonialists to deliver
assistance - and produce results.
But the new colonialists
are doing far more than simply carrying out the mandates of wealthy
benefactors back home. They often tackle challenges that donors
and developing-country governments either ignore or have failed
to address properly. International Alert, a London-based peace-building
organization, monitors corruption in natural-resource management
in unstable countries such as the Democratic Republic of the Congo
and serves as an early warning system to Western governments about
impending conflicts. The Gates Foundation, which has spent more
in the past decade on neglected-disease research than all the world's
governments combined, has been so dissatisfied with existing international
health indexes that it is funding the development of brand-new metrics
for ranking developing-world health systems.
Seeing jobs that need
to be done, the new colonialists simply roll up their sleeves and
go to work, with or without the cooperation of states. That can
be good for the family whose house needs rebuilding or the young
mother who needs vaccinations for her child. But it can be a blow
to the authority of an already weak government. And it may do nothing
to ensure that a state will be able to provide for its citizens
in the future.
The
power behind the throne
The responsibilities
the new colonialists assume are diverse - improving public health,
implementing environmental initiatives, funding small businesses,
providing military training, even promoting democracy. But whatever
the task, the result is generally the same: the slow and steady
erosion of the host state's responsibility and the empowerment
of the new colonialists themselves.
The extent of the new
colonialists' influence is perhaps best illustrated in Afghanistan.
The government possesses only the most rudimentary control over
its territory, and President Hamid Karzai has made little progress
in combating corruption and narcotics trafficking. The result is
a shell of a government, unable to provide basic services or assert
its authority. Today, 80 percent of all Afghan services, such as
healthcare and education, are delivered by international and local
NGOs. According to its own estimates, the Afghan government administers
only a third of the several billion dollars of aid flowing into
the country each year. The rest is managed directly by private contractors,
development agencies, and humanitarian aid groups. Major donors
such as Britain only briefly include the Afghan government in their
aid agendas: Although 80 percent of Britain's $200 million
in annual aid to Afghanistan is dedicated to state ministries, as
soon as the money arrives, it is swiftly handed over to NGOs like
Oxfam or CARE for the actual construction of schools and hospitals.
The transfers simply reflect many donors' lack of confidence
in Afghan ministries to distribute funds competently and implement
aid mandates on their own.
Many of the gains that
Afghanistan has made since the fall of the Taliban can undoubtedly
be attributed to the efforts and largesse of the many thousands
of NGOs that have set up shop in Kabul. But not everyone is thankful
for their labour. Karzai has derided the wasteful overlap, cronyism,
and unaccountability among foreign NGOs in Afghanistan as "NGOism,"
just another "ism", after communism and Talibanism,
in his country's unfortunate history. In 2005, Ramazan Bashardost,
a parliamentary candidate in Kabul, sailed to electoral victory
by running on an anti-NGO platform, threatening to expel nearly
2,000 NGOs that he claimed were corrupt, for-profit ventures providing
little service to the country.
Many NGOs understandably
resent such criticism, particularly as it lumps together a diverse
lot - private contractors, international aid agencies, local NGOs
- and ignores the important contributions some have made. But none
of these groups is anxious to perform so well that it works itself
out a job. No matter how well-intentioned, these new colonialists
need weak states as much as weak states need them.
This kind of perverse
dependency is on display in Georgia, where new colonialists have
come to wield an inordinate amount of influence since the country
emerged from Soviet rule. Today, its pro-Western president is supported
by a steady dose of financial and political aid from abroad, and
many state functions are financed and managed by outside help. In
advance of the country's Rose Revolution, foreign political
consultants advised the opposition's campaign strategy. The
American consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton has been hired to help
rebuild state ministries from the ground up, recruiting new staff
and retraining bureaucrats. These foreign technocrat-consultants
participate in the day-to-day decision-making on critical national
matters, such as political reform and intelligence sharing. But
in Georgia, as well as other countries where these consultants operate,
as they help mould state functions and prioritise development policies,
they also write the complex grant applications that their home governments
consider - grants that effectively extend their own positions
of influence. The result is a vicious cycle of dependency as new
colonialists vie for the contracts that will keep them in business.
That isn't
to say that the new colonialists don't get results -
many do. And in few areas are the efforts of the new colonialists
more impressive than in the public health arena. When Cambodia emerged
from more than a decade of civil war in 1991, the public health
care system was nonexistent. Since 1999, the government has outsourced
much of the country's healthcare to international NGOs such
as HealthNet and Save the Children. Today, it is estimated that
1 in 10 Cambodians receives healthcare from such groups, which run
hundreds of hospitals and clinics throughout the country and often
provide far better care than government institutions. So reliable
are these NGOs in providing quality care that it is difficult to
imagine the government taking over responsibilities anytime soon
- if ever.
Many aid organizations
will say that their ultimate goal is to ensure that their services
are no longer needed. But aid organizations and humanitarian groups
need dysfunction to maintain their relevance. Indeed, their institutional
survival depends on it. Although aid groups occasionally have pulled
out of countries because of security concerns or to protest the
manipulation of aid, it is difficult to find examples where these
groups have pulled up stakes because the needs they seek to address
are no more. And as these groups deepen their presence in weak states,
they often bleed the country of local talent. The salaries they
offer are not only better and the work more effective, but there
are often no comparable opportunities for well-educated locals in
their country's civil service or private sector. The new colonialists
may depend on this talent to ensure their legitimacy and local expertise,
but it further weakens the host government's ability to attract
their own best and brightest, ensuring that they remain reliant
on new colonialists for know-how and results.
An unbroken
circle
There is no
single global clearinghouse that coordinates, or even tracks, how
these actors behave around the world. If new colonialists only pay
lip service to local ownership and democracy, there is little to
suggest that the circle of mutual dependence will ever be broken.
And if that is the case, the new-colonialists crutch may enable
corrupt governments to continue to avoid their responsibilities
in perpetuity.
Of course, there is
another disturbing possibility that many observers do not like to
countenance: Without the new colonialists, today's weak states
could be tomorrow's basket cases. It speaks to the ubiquity
of the new colonialists that this prospect seems remote. Nor can
weak states successfully resist their influence. When Cyclone Nargis
struck Burma in May, the governing military junta initially resisted
outside assistance. But state incapacity, corruption, and incompetence
often make a defiant stance impossible. After several weeks, the
regime's leaders had little choice but to accept the help
of aid workers who were clamouring to gain access to the people
in greatest need.
How then should the
international community respond to the increasing influence of the
new colonialists? Some observers argue that the market should take
the lead in solving development challenges. Unfortunately, new investment
often avoids failing states, and aid groups can rightly say that
they do the work no one else is willing to do. Other observers think
it is time to restore the centrality of the United Nations, at least
as a coordinating force among these actors. But globalisation resists
the centralization of power, and the United Nations lacks the support
of member states to take on such ambitious and expensive goals.
The fundamental
challenge in this messy new landscape will be to establish a system
of accountability. To earn a place at the table of global governance,
the new colonialists will have to keep their promises not only to
their donors and benefactors but to the citizens of failing states
themselves. Competition among aid groups might actually serve to
improve this accountability in the future. In many ways, the new
colonialists are building a genuine global constituency, and, for
better or worse, they may be the first - and last - line of defence
for states sliding toward failure.
Find out who
runs the show in the world's weakest states with a list of
the world's most powerful NGOs at ForeignPolicy.com/extras/newcolonialists
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