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Africa
needs capitalism not more foreign aid
Walter E Williams
July
12, 2005
http://www.capmag.com/article.asp?ID=4310
British Prime
Minister Tony Blair is pressuring the rich nations of the world
to give more foreign aid to Africa - to the tune of $25 billion
a year by 2010. The United States already gave $3.2 billion last
year. In the wake of this pressure, we might ask ourselves whether
it's foreign aid that Africa needs most for economic development.
A standard myth
is there's a "vicious cycle of poverty" that makes economic development
virtually impossible for the world's poor nations. This myth holds
that poor countries are poor because income is so low that savings
cannot be generated to provide the kind of capital accumulation
necessary for economic growth. Thus, it is alleged, the only way
out of perpetual poverty is foreign aid.
Let's examine
the "vicious cycle of poverty" myth and whether foreign aid is a
necessary ingredient for economic development. The United States,
Britain, France, Canada and most other countries were once poor.
Andrew Bernstein of the Ayn Rand Institute wrote in an article titled
"Capitalism is the cure for Africa's problems" that pre-industrial
Europe was vastly poorer than contemporary Africa.
A relatively
well-off country, France, experienced several famines between the
15th and 18th centuries, as well as plagues and diseases that sometimes
killed hundreds of thousands. In France, life expectancy was 20
years, in Ireland it was 19 years and in early 18th-century London,
more than 74 percent of children died before reaching age 5.
Beginning in
the late 18th century, there was a dramatic economic turnabout in
Europe. How in the world did these once poor and backward countries
break the "vicious cycle of poverty" and become wealthy, without
what today's development experts say is absolutely necessary for
economic growth - foreign aid handouts, World Bank and International
Monetary Fund loans, and billions of dollars of debt forgiveness?
The answer is
simple: Capitalism started taking root in Europe. Capitalism is
an economic system where there's peaceable, voluntary exchange.
Government protects private property rights held in goods and services.
There's rule of law and minimal government regulation and control
of the economy.
Check out the
Heritage Foundation's "Index of Economic Freedom." Heading its list
of countries with the freest economic systems are those including
Singapore, Luxembourg, Estonia, Ireland and New Zealand. Bringing
up the rear as the countries with little or no economic liberty
are North Korea, Zimbabwe, Angola and Burundi. It's not rocket science
to conclude that economic liberty and the wealth of a nation and
it's peoples go together, n ot to mention greater human rights guarantees.
Some economic
development "experts" attribute Africa's troubles to its history
of colonialism. That's nonsense, because some of the world's richest
countries are former colonies, such as the United States, Canada
and Australia. In fact, many of Africa's sub-Saharan countries are
poorer now than when they were colonies, and their people suffer
greater human rights degradations, such as the genocide the continent
has witnessed.
The worst thing
that can be done is to give more foreign aid to African nations.
Foreign aid goes from government to government. It allows Africa's
corrupt regimes to buy military equipment, pay off cronies and continue
to oppress their people. It also provides resources for its leaders
to set up "retirement" accounts in Swiss banks.
What Africa
needs, foreign aid cannot deliver, and that's elimination of dictators
and socialist regimes, establishment of political and economic freedom,
rule of law and respect for individual rights. Until this happens,
despite billions of dollars of foreign aid, Africa will remain a
basket case.
* Walter
E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University
and a syndicated columnist
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