As you prepare for and look forward to careers in international
development, I am compelled to issue a warning. With the hindsight
of someone who spent five years in the development business, I'm
going to tell you that the development industry hurts people in
the developing world. Its greatest success has been to provide good
jobs for Westerners with graduate degrees from institutions like
this one. I don't expect that any of you will take my advice and
start looking for careers elsewhere. AndI'm in no position to criticize
you for going ahead and working in development even after you hear
me out. You see, I had a pretty wonderful career in the aid business.
I can't remember ever having more fun. In fact, I was having so
much fun that I didn't want to stop, even after I realized that
our programs were hurting the very people they were supposed to
help.
In 1980, when I was twenty-five
years old, I was hired by Catholic Relief Services (CRS) to administer
food-for-work programs--programs that feed people in exchange
for their work on local development projects--in Kenya. I was
given a beautiful garden apartment in a nice neighborhood in Nairobi,
a brand-new Land Cruiser, a great office, and almost a million
dollars in a U.S. Agency for International Development (AID) grant
to oversee the programs. As I began the job, shiploads of U.S.
government surplus rice were leaving a port in Texas and heading
to Mombasa. Meanwhile, CRS notified the country's parish priests
and government officials that this rice was available. All they
had to do to receive it was fill out a one-page application describing
their proposed project and specifying the number of "recipients"--the
number of the project's workers who would receive sacks of rice
in exchange for their labor. Thousands of applications were submitted.
I took some of
the U.S. AID money and customized the Land Cruiser, adding extra-large
fuel tanks and a really nice stereo system, and then I set off
across Kenya to inspect the proposed projects. It was a dream
come true. I was driving absolutely free across one of the world's
most beautiful landscapes. I was so awestruck by my own good luck
that sometimes I'd stop in the middle of a huge empty wilderness,
or beside a herd of giraffes or elephants, and just yelp with
delight.
I was having so
much fun running around starting food-for-work projects--water
projects, agriculture projects, forestry projects--that I completely
overlooked the most obvious problem: I knew nothing about agriculture,
forestry, road building, well digging, dam building, or any of
the projects I was approving. But nobody seemed to care. Only
once did anyone in authority at CRS ever go and look at a project.
When I'd return to Nairobi every few weeks, my boss, who let me
work completely unsupervised, had only one question: How many
more recipients did you sign on? More recipients meant more government
grant money, which meant we could buy more vehicles and hire more
assistants.
When I slowed
down for a moment to consider what was happening, it became clear:
aid distribution is just another big, private business that relies
on government contracts. Private voluntary organizations (PVOs)
such as CRS are paid by the U.S. government to give away surplus
food produced by subsidized U.S. farmers. The more food CRS gave
away, the more money they received from the government to administer
the handouts. Since the securing of grant money is the primary
goal, PVOs rarely meet a development project they don't like.
Of all the aid
programs, those involving food delivery are especially prized
by PVOs because they generate income, are easy to administer,
and are warmly received by the public. Yet most food aid has little
to do with need and everything to do with getting rid of surplus
food. Kenya was not a country facing starvation when I worked
there. Many of the projects I started were in the rich agricultural
land of the central and western parts of the country. In fact,
around the world, only about 10 percent of food aid is targeted
at emergency situations. PVOs publicize situations such as the
one in Somalia in order to raise money from the public, but most
of their work is done in areas where there is plenty to eat, because
there are simply not enough starving people to absorb all of our
surplus food. Also, it's easier to distribute large quantities
of food in more developed areas.
Harmless as this
might at first sound, sending food to areas where there is already
food creates serious problems. It decreases demand for locally
produced commodities, subsidizes the production of cash crops,
and fosters dependence among those who receive the aid. Since
PVOs can only operate with the approval of the host government,
they typically end up supporting the government leaders' political
goals, rewarding the government's friends, punishing its enemies,
and providing fodder for a vast system of political patronage.
That's exactly
what happened in Somalia, where the government and the generals
had been playing games with food aid for more than a decade before
the Marines arrived. I was working for U.S. AID in Somalia in
1981, when we started pumping food into that country. It was clear
to many of us, even then, that the program was working to prop
up a corrupt dictator and turn nomads into relief junkies. Refugees
poured over the borders and into camps, where they were fed day
after day, year after year, by PVOs, while little effort was made
to break their growing dependence. In 1987 a World Food Program
report stated that Somalia had actually produced a surplus of
food that year, yet PVOs continue to distribute free food and
collect U.S. government money for administering the delivery.
Inevitably, indigenous food-distribution networks withered and
died. The country's economy adapted to foreign aid--not to production.
Meanwhile, the PVOs and corrupt government officials got fat and
rich.
No one questions
private voluntary organizations. Not the U.S. government, which
needs to get rid of the food and wants to keep its aid bureaucracy
functioning. Not the host government, whose officials often profit
from the aid racket. Not the public, which sees aid workers as
so many Mother Teresas. And not the press--especially not the
press--which has, in recent years, become an integral part of
the aid system.
The press's role
in that system is to convey to the West the PVOs' view of Africa.
And because the distribution of food aid is first and foremost
a business, it is not surprising that the priorities of aid organizations
dominate the West's image of the continent--an image of helpless
nations in need of our support.
This is not a
new phenomenon. Aid workers are simply the latest in a series
of recent western vanguards in Africa, each of whom put forward
the image of Africa that best suited its own interests. The first
Europeans to form a vanguard in Africa were the naturalists. Because
of them, early European views of Africa emphasized the continent's
natural history. Later, as missionaries began to outnumber explorers,
Europe began to see the continent through the eyes of those who
were out to save its soul. And as Europe developed political and
mercantile interests in Africa, merchants and traders were at
the vanguard. At that time, Europeans were concerned with turning
Africans into loyal subjects, workers, producers, and citizens
of empires. No one really worried about feeding them.
Historically,
the press has been willing to uncritically accept whatever image
of Africa the western vanguard has been selling. In the case of
the PVOs, the press has bought their line because reporters are
as dependent on aid organizations as the organizations are on
them. It would have been impossible, for example, for the press
to cover Somalia without the assistance of PVOs. There's no Hertz
counter at the Mogadishu airport, and no road maps available at
gas stations. If a journalist arrives in Africa from Europe or
the United States and needs to get to the interior of the country,
PVOs are the only ticket. journalists sleep and eat with PVO workers.
When they want history and facts and figures, they turn to the
PVOs. In press coverage of Somalia or almost any other crisis
in Africa, it is always the PVOs who are most often quoted and
are regarded as the neutral and authoritative sources--as if they
have no vested interest in anything but the truth.
A typical example
of the connection between journalism and the aid system is this
analysis from a February 22, 1993, story about Africa in the New
York Times:
The greatest danger now to
Mozambique's tranquillity, almost everyone agrees, is Mozambique's
tranquillity.
Lacking scenes of carnage
and starvation to disturb Western television audiences, Mozambique
is having trouble competing for attention with Somalia and the
former Yugoslavia.
The article goes on to quote numerous CARE officials whose primary
concern is to raise more money to give more aid to Mozambique. The
article never considers any alternatives to aid. No aid worker raises
the possibility, for example, that Mozambique's economy might improve
if the country focused on exporting goods. No one mentions that
in the absence of carnage, Mozambique might be a good place to invest.
No one is talking about creating permanent employment for Africans.
The only discussion is about raising more money to send experts
there and preserve the jobs of expatriates and create more jobs
for graduate students from programs like this one. The people who
are called upon to diagnose and comment on Africa's problems are
the very people who stand to profit from the diagnoses.
I know that you don't want to
be part of this problem. You'll tell me that you can change all
of this, that you want to work within the bureaucracy to reform
the bureaucracy. But in a couple of years you're going to be in
Ouagadougou or Gaborone making a very good salary. The years will
pass and you'll find yourself with two kids in an expensive private
school in New England, and you're going to have perfected skills
that aren't very useful outside of the Third World. You're going
to think about quitting, about raising hell, but you won't be
able to. Because by then you, too, will have become part of the
never-ending cycle of aid.
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