Christian
Science Monitor - 12.13.2001
Christian
Science Monitor
Boost
US Foreign Aid, Big-Time
By
Helena Cobban
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. - A quick quiz for this holiday season: What
portion of our country's gross national product might it be appropriate
for Americans to devote to helping poor countries develop? One percent?
Maybe a third or a half of that?
Here's
the actual portion for 1999: one-tenth of 1 percent.
This
is tiny, but not anything new. It's the end point of a decades-long
process of congressional cutbacks - with successive administrations
going along. In 1970, aid was three-tenths of 1 percent. In 1990,
two-tenths.
Now,
as an urgent part of our antiterror campaign, Congress and the executive
must work quickly to jack aid up considerably. The United Nations is
asking rich countries to allocate 0.7 percent of their GNP to overseas
development aid. We should aim at getting close to that goal - fast!
Our
aid's 30-year decline has not served American interests well. The
shockingly low level of aid throughout the 1990s prepared the ground for
the kind of chaos and social despair in which the Taliban, Al Qaeda, and
their ilk have flourished. This is not to excuse those groups' actions.
But their operatives were able to organize their hate-filled acts
undisturbed while living in communities that didn't feel like they had
much stake in a world system that seemed to treat them so poorly.
President
Bush is right to pledge that the United States will not "walk
away" from the needs of Afghanistan's people, as it seemed to in
the early '90s. But the problem is far broader than Afghanistan.
Hundreds of millions of people live in failed and failing states around
the world. Many feel they have little stake in the stability of the
world system. If we want to prevent those countries from continuing to
incubate desperation and cruelty, we need to think soberly about how to
give those people such a stake.
That
will take, among other things, a sustained investment in overseas
development aid. The needs seem most pressing in Afghanistan, which
could fall back into warlordism, opium production, and terrorism if we
and other donors turn our backs again. But it is also urgent in 15 to 20
other countries. Many are in Africa; some are already accused of having
links to Al Qaeda.
Regarding
Afghanistan, UN development chief Mark Malloch Brown has stressed that
aid donors need to prepare for a long-term commitment to national
rebuilding - as well as "instant" donations to meet urgent
needs. After a recent visit to Afghanistan, he said, "I have a
sense of a great national U-turn at the grassroots level; of ordinary
Afghans rejecting the cycle of war and decline, and wanting to seize
this moment to make a nation where their kids - girls and boys - can go
to school; where mothers and fathers can go to work in the mornings and
expect to come home in the evening ... without threat of violence."
Mr.
Malloch Brown listed four priorities in Afghan rebuilding: security,
agriculture, community-based programs, and the return of displaced
persons. He said the UN would present a five-year recovery plan to a
donors' conference in Tokyo in January - and he noted that the latter
years of that program would be the more expensive ones. Development
experts warn that the US and other donors must be ready to stay the
course in Afghanistan - and that the funds for this must not come out of
those already earmarked for Africa.
Can
the UN "deliver" on organizing rebuilding programs in failed
and failing states? Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill has cast doubt on
the effectiveness of development aid. I wonder if he's ever been to a
country like, say, Mozambique, a very poor country that is still
recovering from a long and brutal civil war that ended in 1992. That war
killed a million of Mozambique's 16 million people, displaced 5 or 6
million more, and caused massive infrastructure degradation that led to
long years of drought and famine.
I
was in Mozambique last August. Eight years into a UN-led rebuilding
effort, it's still poor. But I saw how much its people have already
benefited from programs similar to what Malloch Brown is proposing for
Afghanistan. In addition, the UN ran special programs to reclaim roads
and arable land from land mines, and to support the demobilization and
reintegration into civilian life of former combatants. (Afghanistan
could benefit from programs like that, too.)
Is
Mozambique a reported haven for global terrorists? No. Do most
Mozambicans feel they have a stake, however small, in global stability?
Probably so.
I'll
admit, there have been failures in UN rebuilding efforts, as well as
successes. Turning from war to peace and stability has to be a people's
choice. But if we structure the incentives wisely - which we did far too
rarely during the "stingy '90s" - most folks around the world
will make the right decision. Just as they did in Western Europe, in the
late 1940s, when the Marshall Plan invested one-fourth of 1 percent of
US GNP, every year for four years, in postwar recovery and
reconstruction.
Now
we must plan once again to invest seriously in peace.
It's
true, our economic prospects look murky. But we're still a rich country.
All the world's other rich countries invest a considerably larger
portion of their GNP in overseas aid than we do. There are scores of
ways our budgeters could find the money to bring our aid figures up -
including deferring tax cuts or paring back some of the planned growth
in military spending.
If
the starving, war-ravaged Afghans can make a U-turn toward peace, can't
we Americans support them and the world's other very-low-income folks by
making our own U-turn on aid? The time to do that is now.
Helena
Cobban is a veteran journalist, and author of five books on
international issues.