July 02, 2005

Have you signed?




Please go to Live 8 and sign the petition. All the right-wing think tanks are up in arms against dropping Third World debt and increasing aid, leaving no doubt in my mind that these are worthwhile and necessary objectives!

8 comments:

Man said...

No, dropping Third World debt is a big mistake. Give food and medicine and equipment but don't erase the debt.

Al S. E. said...

To Man: Your comment reminds me of this guy who tried to give some cigarettes to a homeless person. The homeless person simply told him “I don’t smoke.” It is simple logic that aid should be based on what the recipient needs to receive, and not on what the donor wants to give. For far too long, development assistance, and even disaster relief, has been directed towards restructuring Third World economies to turn them into (a) better markets for Western manufactured products, and (b) better suppliers of cheap raw materials for the West. This will have to stop, and one way to stop it is to take development assistance out of the hands of Washington-directed organizations such as the World Bank and the IMF. At the moment, the Third World demands (a) debt forgiveness, (b) increased development assistance, and (c) improved terms of trade. These are what they want, and, according to the above logic, these are what they should get. They should get debt forgiveness because the debt was created by the First World banks, governments, and international organizations to further the West’s own interests. They should get increased development assistance and better terms of trade to counter decades of exploitative colonial and post-colonial relations with the West.

Giving “food, medicine, and equipment,” as you propose, is a delicate matter that should be entrusted to progressive development organizations such as Oxfam and Doctors without Borders. Otherwise, it may end up doing more harm than good. For instance, food aid tends to harm the interests of local farmers, not to speak of the fact that it introduces alien food products into the country, creating long-term dependency on imported food items that cannot be grown locally. Similarly, medical assistance tends to undermine the work of local physicians, as happened in Sri Lanka in the wake of the recent tsunami. Giving “equipment” often has similar results.

DDO said...

I'd be conviced of this debt relief strategy if you could point out one or two instances where it has been employed successfully.
It's been my experience that money given unnaccountably to a group of people like that results in a degradation of culture and abuse of the system. Maybe make it interest free? Adjust it so that it's affordable? Anything but give it freely as if it has no value.
Regarding the medical aid and food I agree that we should provide this in any case, better yet have them provide it in some way - keep any outside involvement to a minimum.

porchwise said...

I agree with you except I think it should be a matter of selection. We've been in this world game long enough to know who will eventually be able to come forward and pay up and who will never be able to pay their debt. Our own debt (the U.S., that is) is being overwhelmed by daily interest, so first, we should consider relieving interest or soon we'll be in as bad a shape as the underdeveloped countries.

Fridjon said...

Read this Spiegel interview with african economics expert:
"For God's Sake, Please Stop the Aid!"

It puts some matters into perspective.

Al S. E. said...

Thanks for your input, Fridjon. The Wikipedia describes James Shikwati (i.e. the person you referred to) as a "libertarian economist" and a member of "Inter Region Economic Network." The latter organization's website describes it as an ultra-right libertarian think tank in Kenya—though not, obviously, in these terms! I know my argument is ad hominem, but, still, I think I know by now what such people stand for, and so I don't need to hear what they have to say. Their values and ideas are those of the right-wing of the US Republican Party, sans the religiosity.

I agree that there are different and conflicting perspectives on the issue of development aid. This does not mean, however, that all of them are valid. Some of them are valuable contributions to the debate, to some extent or other. The rest are, generally speaking, mere expressions of the class interests of the particular speaker.

Awesome Jim said...

Why provide aid for a bunch of people who hate us and blame all of their problems on us. They'll hate us either way, so let's take the cheapest way around the matter. Jeez.

Anonymous said...

Live8, although a great concert, will do nothing for their "cause".