Transcript for Andrew Mwenda takes a new look at Africa
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I am very, very happy to be amidst some of the most -- |
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the lights are really disturbing my eyes |
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and they're reflecting on my glasses. |
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I am very happy and honored to be amidst |
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very, very innovative and intelligent people. |
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I have listened to the three previous speakers, |
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and guess what happened? |
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Every single thing I planned to say, they have said it here, |
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and it looks and sounds like I have nothing else to say. |
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(Laughter) |
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But there is a saying in my culture |
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that if a bud leaves a tree without saying something, |
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that bud is a young one. |
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So, I will -- since I am not young and am very old, |
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I still will say something. |
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We are hosting this conference at a very opportune moment, |
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because another conference is taking place in Berlin. |
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It is the G8 Summit. |
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The G8 Summit proposes that the solution to Africa's problems |
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should be a massive increase in aid, |
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something akin to the Marshall Plan. |
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Unfortunately, I personally do not believe in the Marshall Plan. |
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One, because the benefits of the Marshall Plan have been overstated. |
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Its largest recipients were Germany and France, |
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and it was only 2.5 percent of their GDP. |
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An average African country receives foreign aid |
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to the tune of 13, 15 percent of its GDP, |
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and that is an unprecedented transfer of financial resources |
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from rich countries to poor countries. |
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But I want to say that there are two things we need to connect. |
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How the media covers Africa in the West, and the consequences of that. |
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By displaying despair, helplessness and hopelessness, |
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the media is telling the truth about Africa, and nothing but the truth. |
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However, the media is not telling us the whole truth. |
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Because despair, civil war, hunger and famine, |
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although they're part and parcel of our African reality, |
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they are not the only reality. |
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And secondly, they are the smallest reality. |
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Africa has 53 nations. |
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We have civil wars only in six countries, |
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which means that the media are covering only six countries. |
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Africa has immense opportunities that never navigate |
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through the web of despair and helplessness |
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that the Western media largely presents to its audience. |
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But the effect of that presentation is, it appeals to sympathy. |
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It appeals to pity. It appeals to something called charity. |
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And, as a consequence, the Western view |
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of Africa's economic dilemma is framed wrongly. |
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The wrong framing is a product of thinking |
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that Africa is a place of despair. |
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What should we do with it? We should give food to the hungry. |
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We should deliver medicines to those who are ill. |
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We should send peacekeeping troops |
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to serve those who are facing a civil war. |
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And in the process, Africa has been stripped of self-initiative. |
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I want to say that it is important to recognize |
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that Africa has fundamental weaknesses. |
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But equally, it has opportunities and a lot of potential. |
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We need to reframe the challenge that is facing Africa, |
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from a challenge of despair, |
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which is called poverty reduction, |
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to a challenge of hope. |
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We frame it as a challenge of hope, and that is worth creation. |
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The challenge facing all those who are interested in Africa |
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is not the challenge of reducing poverty. |
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It should be a challenge of creating wealth. |
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Once we change those two things -- |
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if you say the Africans are poor and they need poverty reduction, |
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you have the international cartel of good intentions |
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moving onto the continent, with what? |
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Medicines for the poor, food relief for those who are hungry, |
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and peacekeepers for those who are facing civil war. |
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And in the process, none of these things really are productive |
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because you are treating the symptoms, not the causes |
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of Africa's fundamental problems. |
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Sending somebody to school and giving them medicines, |
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ladies and gentlemen, does not create wealth for them. |
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Wealth is a function of income, and income comes from you finding |
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a profitable trading opportunity or a well-paying job. |
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Now, once we begin to talk about wealth creation in Africa, |
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our second challenge will be, |
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who are the wealth-creating agents in any society? |
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They are entrepreneurs. [Unclear] told us they are always |
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about four percent of the population, but 16 percent are imitators. |
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But they also succeed at the job of entrepreneurship. |
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So, where should we be putting the money? |
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We need to put money where it can productively grow. |
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Support private investment in Africa, both domestic and foreign. |
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Support research institutions, |
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because knowledge is an important part of wealth creation. |
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But what is the international aid community doing with Africa today? |
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They are throwing large sums of money for primary health, |
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for primary education, for food relief. |
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The entire continent has been turned into |
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a place of despair, in need of charity. |
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Ladies and gentlemen, can any one of you tell me |
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a neighbor, a friend, a relative that you know, |
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who became rich by receiving charity? |
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By holding the begging bowl and receiving alms? |
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Does any one of you in the audience have that person? |
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Does any one of you know a country that developed because of |
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the generosity and kindness of another? |
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Well, since I'm not seeing the hand, |
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it appears that what I'm stating is true. |
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(Bono: Yes!) |
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Andrew Mwenda: I can see Bono says he knows the country. |
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Which country is that? |
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(Bono: It's an Irish land.) |
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(Laughter) |
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(Bono: [unclear]) |
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AM: Thank you very much. But let me tell you this. |
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External actors can only present to you an opportunity. |
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The ability to utilize that opportunity and turn it into an advantage |
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depends on your internal capacity. |
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Africa has received many opportunities. |
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Many of them we haven't benefited much. |
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Why? Because we lack the internal, institutional framework |
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and policy framework that can make it possible for us |
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to benefit from our external relations. I'll give you an example. |
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Under the Cotonou Agreement, |
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formerly known as the Lome Convention, |
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African countries have been given an opportunity by Europe |
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to export goods, duty-free, to the European Union market. |
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My own country, Uganda, has a quota to export 50,000 metric tons |
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of sugar to the European Union market. |
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We haven't exported one kilogram yet. |
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We import 50,000 metric tons of sugar from Brazil and Cuba. |
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Secondly, under the beef protocol of that agreement, |
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African countries that produce beef |
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have quotas to export beef duty-free to the European Union market. |
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None of those countries, including Africa's most successful nation, Botswana, |
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has ever met its quota. |
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So, I want to argue today that the fundamental source of Africa's |
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inability to engage the rest of the world |
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in a more productive relationship |
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is because it has a poor institutional and policy framework. |
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And all forms of intervention need support, |
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the evolution of the kinds of institutions that create wealth, |
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the kinds of institutions that increase productivity. |
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How do we begin to do that, and why is aid the bad instrument? |
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Aid is the bad instrument, and do you know why? |
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Because all governments across the world need money to survive. |
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Money is needed for a simple thing like keeping law and order. |
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You have to pay the army and the police to show law and order. |
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And because many of our governments are quite dictatorial, |
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they need really to have the army clobber the opposition. |
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The second thing you need to do is pay your political hangers-on. |
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Why should people support their government? |
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Well, because it gives them good, paying jobs, |
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or, in many African countries, unofficial opportunities |
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to profit from corruption. |
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The fact is no government in the world, |
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with the exception of a few, like that of Idi Amin, |
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can seek to depend entirely on force as an instrument of rule. |
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Many countries in the [unclear], they need legitimacy. |
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To get legitimacy, governments often need to deliver things like primary education, |
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primary health, roads, build hospitals and clinics. |
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If the government's fiscal survival |
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depends on it having to raise money from its own people, |
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such a government is driven by self-interest |
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to govern in a more enlightened fashion. |
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It will sit with those who create wealth. |
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Talk to them about the kind of policies and institutions |
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that are necessary for them to expand a scale and scope of business |
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so that it can collect more tax revenues from them. |
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The problem with the African continent |
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and the problem with the aid industry |
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is that it has distorted the structure of incentives |
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facing the governments in Africa. |
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The productive margin in our governments' search for revenue |
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does not lie in the domestic economy, |
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it lies with international donors. |
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Rather than sit with Ugandan -- |
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(Applause) -- |
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rather than sit with Ugandan entrepreneurs, |
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Ghanaian businessmen, South African enterprising leaders, |
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our governments find it more productive |
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to talk to the IMF and the World Bank. |
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I can tell you, even if you have ten Ph.Ds., |
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you can never beat Bill Gates in understanding the computer industry. |
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Why? Because the knowledge that is required for you to understand |
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the incentives necessary to expand a business -- |
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it requires that you listen to the people, the private sector actors in that industry. |
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Governments in Africa have therefore been given an opportunity, |
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by the international community, to avoid building |
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productive arrangements with your own citizens, |
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and therefore allowed to begin endless negotiations with the IMF |
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and the World Bank, and then it is the IMF and the World Bank |
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that tell them what its citizens need. |
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In the process, we, the African people, have been sidelined |
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from the policy-making, policy-orientation, and policy- |
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implementation process in our countries. |
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We have limited input, because he who pays the piper calls the tune. |
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The IMF, the World Bank, and the cartel of good intentions in the world |
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has taken over our rights as citizens, |
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and therefore what our governments are doing, because they depend on aid, |
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is to listen to international creditors rather than their own citizens. |
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But I want to put a caveat on my argument, |
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and that caveat is that it is not true that aid is always destructive. |
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Some aid may have built a hospital, fed a hungry village. |
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It may have built a road, and that road |
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may have served a very good role. |
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The mistake of the international aid industry |
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is to pick these isolated incidents of success, |
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generalize them, pour billions and trillions of dollars into them, |
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and then spread them across the whole world, |
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ignoring the specific and unique circumstances in a given village, |
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the skills, the practices, the norms and habits |
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that allowed that small aid project to succeed -- |
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like in Sauri village, in Kenya, where Jeffrey Sachs is working -- |
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and therefore generalize this experience |
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as the experience of everybody. |
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Aid increases the resources available to governments, |
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and that makes working in a government the most profitable thing |
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you can have, as a person in Africa seeking a career. |
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By increasing the political attractiveness of the state, |
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especially in our ethnically fragmented societies in Africa, |
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aid tends to accentuate ethnic tensions |
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as every single ethnic group now begins struggling to enter the state |
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in order to get access to the foreign aid pie. |
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Ladies and gentlemen, the most enterprising people in Africa |
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cannot find opportunities to trade and to work in the private sector |
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because the institutional and policy environment is hostile to business. |
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Governments are not changing it. Why? |
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Because they don't need to talk to their own citizens. |
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They talk to international donors. |
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So, the most enterprising Africans end up going to work for government, |
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and that has increased the political tensions in our countries |
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precisely because we depend on aid. |
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I also want to say that it is important for us to |
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note that, over the last 50 years, Africa has been receiving increasing aid |
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from the international community, |
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in the form of technical assistance, and financial aid, |
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and all other forms of aid. |
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Between 1960 and 2003, our continent received 600 billion dollars of aid, |
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and we are still told that there is a lot of poverty in Africa. |
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Where has all the aid gone? |
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I want to use the example of my own country, called Uganda, |
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and the kind of structure of incentives that aid has brought there. |
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In the 2006-2007 budget, expected revenue: 2.5 trillion shillings. |
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The expected foreign aid: 1.9 trillion. |
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Uganda's recurrent expenditure -- by recurrent what do I mean? |
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Hand-to-mouth is 2.6 trillion. |
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Why does the government of Uganda budget spend 110 percent |
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of its own revenue? |
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It's because there's somebody there called foreign aid, who contributes for it. |
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But this shows you that the government of Uganda |
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is not committed to spending its own revenue |
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to invest in productive investments, |
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but rather it devotes this revenue |
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to paying structure of public expenditure. |
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Public administration, which is largely patronage, takes 690 billion. |
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The military, 380 billion. |
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Agriculture, which employs 18 percent of our poverty-stricken citizens, |
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takes only 18 billion. |
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Trade and industry takes 43 billion. |
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And let me show you, what does public expenditure -- |
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rather, public administration expenditure -- in Uganda constitute? |
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There you go. 70 cabinet ministers, 114 presidential advisers, |
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by the way, who never see the president, except on television. |
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(Laughter) |
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(Applause) |
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And when they see him physically, it is at public functions like this, |
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and even there, it is him who advises them. |
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(Laughter) |
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We have 81 units of local government. |
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Each local government is organized like the central government -- |
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a bureaucracy, a cabinet, a parliament, |
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and so many jobs for the political hangers-on. |
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There were 56, and when our president wanted to |
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amend the constitution and remove term limits, |
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he had to create 25 new districts, and now there are 81. |
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Three hundred thirty-three members of parliament. |
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You need Wembley Stadium to host our parliament. |
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One hundred thirty-four commissions |
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and semi-autonomous government bodies, |
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all of which have directors and the cars. And the final thing, |
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this is addressed to Mr. Bono. In his work, he may help us on this. |
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A recent government of Uganda study found |
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that there are 3,000 four-wheel drive motor vehicles |
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at the Minister of Health headquarters. |
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Uganda has 961 sub-counties, each of them with a dispensary, |
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none of which has an ambulance. |
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So, the four-wheel drive vehicles at the headquarters |
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drive the ministers, the permanent secretaries, the bureaucrats |
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and the international aid bureaucrats who work in aid projects, |
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while the poor die without ambulances and medicine. |
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Finally, I want to say that before I came to speak here, |
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I was told that the principle of TEDGlobal |
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is that the good speech should be like a miniskirt. |
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It should be short enough to arouse interest, |
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but long enough to cover the subject. |
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I hope I have achieved that. |
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(Laughter) |
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Thank you very much. |
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(Applause) |