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Let
Africa fight its own devils
Franklin
Cudjoe, Op-ed to the Editor - The Times in London
October 09, 2004
Sir, in recent
weeks, my continent has attracted much media attention in the West
thanks to the likes of Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and Bob Geodolf.
Their aim is to rally international action for what to them has
become "a scar on the conscience" of the world. In that
vein, your editorial of October 8, 2004 titled, "Blair in Africa"
sought to give support to their cause. I have some comments regarding
your analysis.
You state: "The
solutions to Africa's problems have been well rehearsed over the
years. Developed nations must grant more aid and write off debt.
The US and the EU must cut agricultural subsidies and open their
markets. Pharmaceutical companies must make anti-retroviral drugs
cheaper and more readily available."
Your first recommendation,
like many in recent times, smacks of a misplaced idea of Western
guilt for the poverty of the third world and in particular Africa.
Before the Brandt Commission on Africa in the 1970s suggested this
lame duck approach, post independent African leaders such as Kwame
Nkrumah of Ghana and Julius Nyerere of Tanzania, virtually coerced
Western leaders into assuming responsibility for all the ills on
the continent. Perhaps for ideological reasons Western leaders went
for the bait with billions of dollars 'invested' and it has since
become big business. Alas, it is an unprofitable one with losses
in the form of the politicisation of life on the continent and many
failed states. Much of Western aid money went on financing the killing
machines of African governments while some was stashed away in Swiss
banks. The World Bank itself agrees that over US$200 billion poured
into the continent in the last three decades has returned negative
results. The Millennium Development Goals set by the UN will not
be achieved, not because I'm a cynic, but because history tells
me that no amount of foreign aid has ever solved the 'bedlam' in
Africa.
Ethiopia is in the news
today because foreign aid robbed that country off its ability to
feed itself and perhaps the rest of Africa. People are so emotive
about Ethiopia that they tend to forget that over 60 % of that country
is fertile yet only 10 per cent has been cultivated. The reason
is that when socialism replaced feudalism in 1975, state land redistribution
coerced everyone in to subsistence production with marketing boards
doing their worst with price controls. Farmers had no incentive
to grow food and famine resulted. Tons of food aid never got to
the famished people. Mengistu's thugs sold the food and purchased
arms to kill and maim his own people, yet the aid continued. Somalia
was the largest recipient of foreign aid in sub-Saharan Africa until
it imploded in 1990, yet it was also the food basket of the region.
Zimbabwe has, since independence in 1980, received billions of dollars
to finance its land redistribution programme but today more that
60 people die there daily due to hunger, yet before it was the food
basket of Southern Africa. There are many examples.
Do you forgive debt and
increase aid when over 70 percent of it would be used to finance
budget deficits perpetuating a vicious circle of unmanageable debt?
This approach has left many African countries with debts greater
that 100 percent of their incomes. Who bears the burden of repayments?
Not the governing elite, but the poor producers of export crops
such as cocoa, coffee, peanuts, palm oil, and in some cases local
labor employed in oil and other mineral extracting industries.
You have my full marks
for your second solution. The EU and the US must not only cut export
subsidies, they should remove all agricultural barriers that prevent
African agricultural products from entering their markets. While
this is a legitimate demand, you shouldn't be surprised to learn
that there are many more trade barriers between African countries
than exist with the US or EU. As the World Trade Organisation's
2001 statistics show, Africa's share of intra and inter regional
trade flows to Western Europe alone was 51.8 %, while it was a paltry
7.8% within Africa.
On pharmaceuticals and
anti-retroviral drugs, I think the desire has always been there
to reach as many patients as possible. But there is a need to incentivise
innovators in the pharmaceutical world so they are able to maximise
output and reduce prices in the long run. One effective way is to
recognise their intellectual property rights to the drugs. Unfortunately,
many in the NGO world see this as a means to make profit at the
expense of the poor with total disregard for where the investment
capital is to come from.
Finally you
say: "But Africa's only truly continental challenge is its
Aids pandemic, and yet another layer of foreign governmental oversight
is unlikely to speed the delivery of drugs to patients." Try
including the devastating effects of other diseases like Malaria
and TB and then ask yourself what the underlying cause really is.
I can but attribute all that to poverty even though some leaders
on the continent have failed to acknowledge this.
Africa's real devils
are the continent's own creatures who are busily harvesting the
proceeds of the toiling entrepreneurial masses and burdening them
with obstacles that defy economic rationality. Most of these obstacles
range from complex, obnoxious and unpredictable laws, the absence
of secured property rights, the rule of law and free markets. A
functionally corrupt leadership and civil service is enough to entrench
bureaucracy and fatten government at the expense of the citizens.
In my mind, significant institutional reforms are needed. It is
the only way innovation and entrepreneurship can be encouraged since
they empower ordinary people economically. As economies grow and
develop, people will be able to afford better technologies, clean
water, superior energy sources, better healthcare, and insurance.
This is what gives a fair chance to everyone to succeed, not aid.
Franklin Cudjoe
Director
Imani: The Centre for Humane Education
P.O.Box AT 411
Achimota-Accra
Ghana
Tel: +233 244 638 178
Email:lordcudjoe@yahoo.co.uk
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