Andrew Mwenda: Let's take a new look at African aid

108,948 views ・ 2007-09-04

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:26
I am very, very happy to be amidst some of the most --
0
26000
4000
00:30
the lights are really disturbing my eyes
1
30000
2000
00:32
and they're reflecting on my glasses.
2
32000
2000
00:34
I am very happy and honored to be amidst
3
34000
4000
00:38
very, very innovative and intelligent people.
4
38000
3000
00:41
I have listened to the three previous speakers,
5
41000
3000
00:44
and guess what happened?
6
44000
2000
00:46
Every single thing I planned to say, they have said it here,
7
46000
3000
00:49
and it looks and sounds like I have nothing else to say.
8
49000
5000
00:54
(Laughter)
9
54000
1000
00:55
But there is a saying in my culture
10
55000
3000
00:58
that if a bud leaves a tree without saying something,
11
58000
5000
01:03
that bud is a young one.
12
63000
3000
01:06
So, I will -- since I am not young and am very old,
13
66000
5000
01:11
I still will say something.
14
71000
2000
01:13
We are hosting this conference at a very opportune moment,
15
73000
5000
01:18
because another conference is taking place in Berlin.
16
78000
2000
01:20
It is the G8 Summit.
17
80000
3000
01:23
The G8 Summit proposes that the solution to Africa's problems
18
83000
7000
01:30
should be a massive increase in aid,
19
90000
3000
01:33
something akin to the Marshall Plan.
20
93000
2000
01:35
Unfortunately, I personally do not believe in the Marshall Plan.
21
95000
4000
01:39
One, because the benefits of the Marshall Plan have been overstated.
22
99000
5000
01:44
Its largest recipients were Germany and France,
23
104000
3000
01:47
and it was only 2.5 percent of their GDP.
24
107000
3000
01:50
An average African country receives foreign aid
25
110000
3000
01:53
to the tune of 13, 15 percent of its GDP,
26
113000
6000
01:59
and that is an unprecedented transfer of financial resources
27
119000
3000
02:02
from rich countries to poor countries.
28
122000
3000
02:05
But I want to say that there are two things we need to connect.
29
125000
3000
02:08
How the media covers Africa in the West, and the consequences of that.
30
128000
6000
02:14
By displaying despair, helplessness and hopelessness,
31
134000
3000
02:17
the media is telling the truth about Africa, and nothing but the truth.
32
137000
6000
02:23
However, the media is not telling us the whole truth.
33
143000
4000
02:27
Because despair, civil war, hunger and famine,
34
147000
4000
02:31
although they're part and parcel of our African reality,
35
151000
4000
02:35
they are not the only reality.
36
155000
2000
02:37
And secondly, they are the smallest reality.
37
157000
2000
02:39
Africa has 53 nations.
38
159000
2000
02:41
We have civil wars only in six countries,
39
161000
3000
02:44
which means that the media are covering only six countries.
40
164000
4000
02:48
Africa has immense opportunities that never navigate
41
168000
4000
02:52
through the web of despair and helplessness
42
172000
2000
02:54
that the Western media largely presents to its audience.
43
174000
5000
02:59
But the effect of that presentation is, it appeals to sympathy.
44
179000
4000
03:03
It appeals to pity. It appeals to something called charity.
45
183000
5000
03:08
And, as a consequence, the Western view
46
188000
3000
03:11
of Africa's economic dilemma is framed wrongly.
47
191000
5000
03:16
The wrong framing is a product of thinking
48
196000
4000
03:20
that Africa is a place of despair.
49
200000
3000
03:23
What should we do with it? We should give food to the hungry.
50
203000
3000
03:26
We should deliver medicines to those who are ill.
51
206000
3000
03:29
We should send peacekeeping troops
52
209000
2000
03:31
to serve those who are facing a civil war.
53
211000
2000
03:33
And in the process, Africa has been stripped of self-initiative.
54
213000
5000
03:38
I want to say that it is important to recognize
55
218000
3000
03:41
that Africa has fundamental weaknesses.
56
221000
3000
03:44
But equally, it has opportunities and a lot of potential.
57
224000
4000
03:48
We need to reframe the challenge that is facing Africa,
58
228000
4000
03:52
from a challenge of despair,
59
232000
2000
03:54
which is called poverty reduction,
60
234000
4000
03:58
to a challenge of hope.
61
238000
2000
04:00
We frame it as a challenge of hope, and that is worth creation.
62
240000
4000
04:04
The challenge facing all those who are interested in Africa
63
244000
3000
04:07
is not the challenge of reducing poverty.
64
247000
2000
04:09
It should be a challenge of creating wealth.
65
249000
3000
04:12
Once we change those two things --
66
252000
3000
04:15
if you say the Africans are poor and they need poverty reduction,
67
255000
5000
04:20
you have the international cartel of good intentions
68
260000
4000
04:24
moving onto the continent, with what?
69
264000
3000
04:27
Medicines for the poor, food relief for those who are hungry,
70
267000
3000
04:30
and peacekeepers for those who are facing civil war.
71
270000
5000
04:35
And in the process, none of these things really are productive
72
275000
4000
04:39
because you are treating the symptoms, not the causes
73
279000
2000
04:41
of Africa's fundamental problems.
74
281000
3000
04:44
Sending somebody to school and giving them medicines,
75
284000
3000
04:47
ladies and gentlemen, does not create wealth for them.
76
287000
5000
04:52
Wealth is a function of income, and income comes from you finding
77
292000
4000
04:56
a profitable trading opportunity or a well-paying job.
78
296000
4000
05:00
Now, once we begin to talk about wealth creation in Africa,
79
300000
3000
05:03
our second challenge will be,
80
303000
2000
05:05
who are the wealth-creating agents in any society?
81
305000
3000
05:08
They are entrepreneurs. [Unclear] told us they are always
82
308000
4000
05:12
about four percent of the population, but 16 percent are imitators.
83
312000
4000
05:16
But they also succeed at the job of entrepreneurship.
84
316000
5000
05:21
So, where should we be putting the money?
85
321000
3000
05:24
We need to put money where it can productively grow.
86
324000
5000
05:29
Support private investment in Africa, both domestic and foreign.
87
329000
4000
05:33
Support research institutions,
88
333000
3000
05:36
because knowledge is an important part of wealth creation.
89
336000
4000
05:40
But what is the international aid community doing with Africa today?
90
340000
4000
05:44
They are throwing large sums of money for primary health,
91
344000
3000
05:47
for primary education, for food relief.
92
347000
3000
05:50
The entire continent has been turned into
93
350000
2000
05:52
a place of despair, in need of charity.
94
352000
3000
05:55
Ladies and gentlemen, can any one of you tell me
95
355000
2000
05:57
a neighbor, a friend, a relative that you know,
96
357000
3000
06:00
who became rich by receiving charity?
97
360000
4000
06:04
By holding the begging bowl and receiving alms?
98
364000
3000
06:07
Does any one of you in the audience have that person?
99
367000
3000
06:10
Does any one of you know a country that developed because of
100
370000
5000
06:15
the generosity and kindness of another?
101
375000
3000
06:18
Well, since I'm not seeing the hand,
102
378000
2000
06:20
it appears that what I'm stating is true.
103
380000
3000
06:23
(Bono: Yes!)
104
383000
2000
06:25
Andrew Mwenda: I can see Bono says he knows the country.
105
385000
2000
06:27
Which country is that?
106
387000
1000
06:28
(Bono: It's an Irish land.)
107
388000
1000
06:29
(Laughter)
108
389000
2000
06:31
(Bono: [unclear])
109
391000
2000
06:33
AM: Thank you very much. But let me tell you this.
110
393000
4000
06:37
External actors can only present to you an opportunity.
111
397000
4000
06:41
The ability to utilize that opportunity and turn it into an advantage
112
401000
5000
06:46
depends on your internal capacity.
113
406000
2000
06:48
Africa has received many opportunities.
114
408000
2000
06:50
Many of them we haven't benefited much.
115
410000
3000
06:53
Why? Because we lack the internal, institutional framework
116
413000
5000
06:58
and policy framework that can make it possible for us
117
418000
3000
07:01
to benefit from our external relations. I'll give you an example.
118
421000
3000
07:04
Under the Cotonou Agreement,
119
424000
2000
07:06
formerly known as the Lome Convention,
120
426000
3000
07:09
African countries have been given an opportunity by Europe
121
429000
3000
07:12
to export goods, duty-free, to the European Union market.
122
432000
5000
07:17
My own country, Uganda, has a quota to export 50,000 metric tons
123
437000
6000
07:23
of sugar to the European Union market.
124
443000
3000
07:26
We haven't exported one kilogram yet.
125
446000
2000
07:28
We import 50,000 metric tons of sugar from Brazil and Cuba.
126
448000
9000
07:37
Secondly, under the beef protocol of that agreement,
127
457000
3000
07:40
African countries that produce beef
128
460000
2000
07:42
have quotas to export beef duty-free to the European Union market.
129
462000
5000
07:47
None of those countries, including Africa's most successful nation, Botswana,
130
467000
4000
07:51
has ever met its quota.
131
471000
3000
07:54
So, I want to argue today that the fundamental source of Africa's
132
474000
5000
07:59
inability to engage the rest of the world
133
479000
2000
08:01
in a more productive relationship
134
481000
3000
08:04
is because it has a poor institutional and policy framework.
135
484000
4000
08:08
And all forms of intervention need support,
136
488000
3000
08:11
the evolution of the kinds of institutions that create wealth,
137
491000
4000
08:15
the kinds of institutions that increase productivity.
138
495000
3000
08:18
How do we begin to do that, and why is aid the bad instrument?
139
498000
4000
08:22
Aid is the bad instrument, and do you know why?
140
502000
2000
08:24
Because all governments across the world need money to survive.
141
504000
4000
08:28
Money is needed for a simple thing like keeping law and order.
142
508000
4000
08:32
You have to pay the army and the police to show law and order.
143
512000
2000
08:34
And because many of our governments are quite dictatorial,
144
514000
4000
08:38
they need really to have the army clobber the opposition.
145
518000
4000
08:42
The second thing you need to do is pay your political hangers-on.
146
522000
5000
08:47
Why should people support their government?
147
527000
1000
08:48
Well, because it gives them good, paying jobs,
148
528000
2000
08:50
or, in many African countries, unofficial opportunities
149
530000
4000
08:54
to profit from corruption.
150
534000
2000
08:56
The fact is no government in the world,
151
536000
3000
08:59
with the exception of a few, like that of Idi Amin,
152
539000
2000
09:01
can seek to depend entirely on force as an instrument of rule.
153
541000
5000
09:06
Many countries in the [unclear], they need legitimacy.
154
546000
3000
09:09
To get legitimacy, governments often need to deliver things like primary education,
155
549000
6000
09:15
primary health, roads, build hospitals and clinics.
156
555000
5000
09:20
If the government's fiscal survival
157
560000
2000
09:22
depends on it having to raise money from its own people,
158
562000
4000
09:26
such a government is driven by self-interest
159
566000
2000
09:28
to govern in a more enlightened fashion.
160
568000
2000
09:30
It will sit with those who create wealth.
161
570000
3000
09:33
Talk to them about the kind of policies and institutions
162
573000
3000
09:36
that are necessary for them to expand a scale and scope of business
163
576000
4000
09:40
so that it can collect more tax revenues from them.
164
580000
3000
09:43
The problem with the African continent
165
583000
2000
09:45
and the problem with the aid industry
166
585000
1000
09:46
is that it has distorted the structure of incentives
167
586000
3000
09:49
facing the governments in Africa.
168
589000
3000
09:52
The productive margin in our governments' search for revenue
169
592000
3000
09:55
does not lie in the domestic economy,
170
595000
3000
09:58
it lies with international donors.
171
598000
2000
10:00
Rather than sit with Ugandan --
172
600000
2000
10:02
(Applause) --
173
602000
4000
10:06
rather than sit with Ugandan entrepreneurs,
174
606000
3000
10:09
Ghanaian businessmen, South African enterprising leaders,
175
609000
6000
10:15
our governments find it more productive
176
615000
3000
10:18
to talk to the IMF and the World Bank.
177
618000
3000
10:21
I can tell you, even if you have ten Ph.Ds.,
178
621000
4000
10:25
you can never beat Bill Gates in understanding the computer industry.
179
625000
5000
10:30
Why? Because the knowledge that is required for you to understand
180
630000
4000
10:34
the incentives necessary to expand a business --
181
634000
2000
10:36
it requires that you listen to the people, the private sector actors in that industry.
182
636000
6000
10:42
Governments in Africa have therefore been given an opportunity,
183
642000
3000
10:45
by the international community, to avoid building
184
645000
3000
10:48
productive arrangements with your own citizens,
185
648000
2000
10:50
and therefore allowed to begin endless negotiations with the IMF
186
650000
6000
10:56
and the World Bank, and then it is the IMF and the World Bank
187
656000
3000
10:59
that tell them what its citizens need.
188
659000
2000
11:01
In the process, we, the African people, have been sidelined
189
661000
4000
11:05
from the policy-making, policy-orientation, and policy-
190
665000
4000
11:09
implementation process in our countries.
191
669000
2000
11:11
We have limited input, because he who pays the piper calls the tune.
192
671000
4000
11:15
The IMF, the World Bank, and the cartel of good intentions in the world
193
675000
4000
11:19
has taken over our rights as citizens,
194
679000
3000
11:22
and therefore what our governments are doing, because they depend on aid,
195
682000
3000
11:25
is to listen to international creditors rather than their own citizens.
196
685000
4000
11:29
But I want to put a caveat on my argument,
197
689000
2000
11:31
and that caveat is that it is not true that aid is always destructive.
198
691000
8000
11:39
Some aid may have built a hospital, fed a hungry village.
199
699000
7000
11:46
It may have built a road, and that road
200
706000
2000
11:48
may have served a very good role.
201
708000
2000
11:50
The mistake of the international aid industry
202
710000
2000
11:52
is to pick these isolated incidents of success,
203
712000
4000
11:56
generalize them, pour billions and trillions of dollars into them,
204
716000
5000
12:01
and then spread them across the whole world,
205
721000
2000
12:03
ignoring the specific and unique circumstances in a given village,
206
723000
5000
12:08
the skills, the practices, the norms and habits
207
728000
3000
12:11
that allowed that small aid project to succeed --
208
731000
3000
12:14
like in Sauri village, in Kenya, where Jeffrey Sachs is working --
209
734000
3000
12:17
and therefore generalize this experience
210
737000
3000
12:20
as the experience of everybody.
211
740000
3000
12:23
Aid increases the resources available to governments,
212
743000
5000
12:28
and that makes working in a government the most profitable thing
213
748000
4000
12:32
you can have, as a person in Africa seeking a career.
214
752000
3000
12:35
By increasing the political attractiveness of the state,
215
755000
4000
12:39
especially in our ethnically fragmented societies in Africa,
216
759000
4000
12:43
aid tends to accentuate ethnic tensions
217
763000
3000
12:46
as every single ethnic group now begins struggling to enter the state
218
766000
6000
12:52
in order to get access to the foreign aid pie.
219
772000
3000
12:55
Ladies and gentlemen, the most enterprising people in Africa
220
775000
5000
13:00
cannot find opportunities to trade and to work in the private sector
221
780000
5000
13:05
because the institutional and policy environment is hostile to business.
222
785000
3000
13:08
Governments are not changing it. Why?
223
788000
2000
13:10
Because they don't need to talk to their own citizens.
224
790000
5000
13:15
They talk to international donors.
225
795000
2000
13:17
So, the most enterprising Africans end up going to work for government,
226
797000
5000
13:22
and that has increased the political tensions in our countries
227
802000
3000
13:25
precisely because we depend on aid.
228
805000
3000
13:28
I also want to say that it is important for us to
229
808000
4000
13:32
note that, over the last 50 years, Africa has been receiving increasing aid
230
812000
4000
13:36
from the international community,
231
816000
2000
13:38
in the form of technical assistance, and financial aid,
232
818000
3000
13:41
and all other forms of aid.
233
821000
2000
13:43
Between 1960 and 2003, our continent received 600 billion dollars of aid,
234
823000
10000
13:53
and we are still told that there is a lot of poverty in Africa.
235
833000
3000
13:56
Where has all the aid gone?
236
836000
3000
13:59
I want to use the example of my own country, called Uganda,
237
839000
4000
14:03
and the kind of structure of incentives that aid has brought there.
238
843000
5000
14:08
In the 2006-2007 budget, expected revenue: 2.5 trillion shillings.
239
848000
6000
14:14
The expected foreign aid: 1.9 trillion.
240
854000
3000
14:17
Uganda's recurrent expenditure -- by recurrent what do I mean?
241
857000
4000
14:21
Hand-to-mouth is 2.6 trillion.
242
861000
4000
14:25
Why does the government of Uganda budget spend 110 percent
243
865000
5000
14:30
of its own revenue?
244
870000
1000
14:31
It's because there's somebody there called foreign aid, who contributes for it.
245
871000
5000
14:36
But this shows you that the government of Uganda
246
876000
2000
14:38
is not committed to spending its own revenue
247
878000
4000
14:42
to invest in productive investments,
248
882000
2000
14:44
but rather it devotes this revenue
249
884000
2000
14:46
to paying structure of public expenditure.
250
886000
4000
14:50
Public administration, which is largely patronage, takes 690 billion.
251
890000
5000
14:55
The military, 380 billion.
252
895000
2000
14:57
Agriculture, which employs 18 percent of our poverty-stricken citizens,
253
897000
5000
15:02
takes only 18 billion.
254
902000
3000
15:05
Trade and industry takes 43 billion.
255
905000
4000
15:09
And let me show you, what does public expenditure --
256
909000
4000
15:13
rather, public administration expenditure -- in Uganda constitute?
257
913000
4000
15:17
There you go. 70 cabinet ministers, 114 presidential advisers,
258
917000
6000
15:23
by the way, who never see the president, except on television.
259
923000
3000
15:26
(Laughter)
260
926000
3000
15:29
(Applause)
261
929000
5000
15:34
And when they see him physically, it is at public functions like this,
262
934000
5000
15:39
and even there, it is him who advises them.
263
939000
4000
15:43
(Laughter)
264
943000
2000
15:45
We have 81 units of local government.
265
945000
3000
15:48
Each local government is organized like the central government --
266
948000
2000
15:50
a bureaucracy, a cabinet, a parliament,
267
950000
2000
15:52
and so many jobs for the political hangers-on.
268
952000
3000
15:55
There were 56, and when our president wanted to
269
955000
3000
15:58
amend the constitution and remove term limits,
270
958000
3000
16:01
he had to create 25 new districts, and now there are 81.
271
961000
4000
16:05
Three hundred thirty-three members of parliament.
272
965000
2000
16:07
You need Wembley Stadium to host our parliament.
273
967000
2000
16:09
One hundred thirty-four commissions
274
969000
2000
16:11
and semi-autonomous government bodies,
275
971000
5000
16:16
all of which have directors and the cars. And the final thing,
276
976000
4000
16:20
this is addressed to Mr. Bono. In his work, he may help us on this.
277
980000
4000
16:24
A recent government of Uganda study found
278
984000
2000
16:26
that there are 3,000 four-wheel drive motor vehicles
279
986000
4000
16:30
at the Minister of Health headquarters.
280
990000
2000
16:32
Uganda has 961 sub-counties, each of them with a dispensary,
281
992000
5000
16:37
none of which has an ambulance.
282
997000
2000
16:39
So, the four-wheel drive vehicles at the headquarters
283
999000
3000
16:42
drive the ministers, the permanent secretaries, the bureaucrats
284
1002000
3000
16:45
and the international aid bureaucrats who work in aid projects,
285
1005000
3000
16:48
while the poor die without ambulances and medicine.
286
1008000
6000
16:54
Finally, I want to say that before I came to speak here,
287
1014000
4000
16:58
I was told that the principle of TEDGlobal
288
1018000
4000
17:02
is that the good speech should be like a miniskirt.
289
1022000
3000
17:05
It should be short enough to arouse interest,
290
1025000
2000
17:07
but long enough to cover the subject.
291
1027000
2000
17:09
I hope I have achieved that.
292
1029000
1000
17:10
(Laughter)
293
1030000
1000
17:11
Thank you very much.
294
1031000
1000
17:12
(Applause)
295
1032000
2000
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7