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Africa Action Statement
on the Monterrey Conference on Financing for Development and
the
Bush Administration proposal for increased Aid to Poor
Countries
March 20, 2002
President Bush travels to Monterrey, Mexico
tomorrow to attend the International Conference on Financing
for Development, a global summit to discuss reducing world
poverty. The two key issues highlighted by the rich donor
countries are:
- how much aid should they provide poor
countries, and
- what they will require of poor countries
in terms of better governance.
We welcome the momentum toward realistic
levels of development assistance, and agree that governments
of both rich and poor countries should be held accountable.
But we are appalled that the priority concerns of African
countries have been largely sidelined.
The cancellation of Africa's illegitimate
foreign debts and the full funding of the UN Global AIDS Fund
are the essential first steps for saving millions of lives
lost each year in Africa to poverty and the closely linked
health crisis. These issues should top the agenda.
In Monterrey, Bush will present a new U.S.
initiative. On Thursday last week, the President announced a
proposed increase in U.S. assistance to developing countries.
But the proposal was so hastily prepared that the White House
has already had to issue corrections. As now described, the
White House proposes an additional $10 billion in aid to
developing countries over three years beginning in 2004. Named
the Millennium Challenge Account, the initiative offers
increased funding to countries who meet specific criteria
including economic policies and governance conditions defined
by Washington. Currently, most U.S. aid goes to two strategic
allies in the Middle East, not to fight poverty in Africa.
The Bush initiative requires closer
scrutiny. It reflects the White House's concern with criticism
at Monterrey and from groups like ourselves, pointing out the
fact that the richest country in human history is not
contributing its fair share. But it does not show serious
planning and commitment commensurate to the need.
The essence of the initiative is a bargain:
countries deemed to be well behaved will be rewarded with
greater U.S. funding. But the planned increase does not begin
until 2004, and the requirement for greater resources to fight
poverty is immediate, The promised increase is still well
below what the U.S. can and should provide immediately to
channels for effective delivery of resources that are
available now.
It has been clearly demonstrated, for
example, that public investment in health is effective in
reducing poverty and promoting economic growth. It is correct
to demand that resources are used effectively to achieve their
intended purposes, but the monitoring mechanisms should be
independent rather than unilaterally imposed by donors. These
investments by rich countries are an obligation and moral
responsibility, not an optional commitment.
The Bush proposal also fails to offer
anything new on debt cancellation. The U.S. contribution to
the Global AIDS Fund remains a meager pledge of $500 million
over two years. Bush's announcement may reap short-term public
relations dividends, but it fails to address today's most
desperate needs.
Similarly the summit taking place this week
in Monterrey has misplaced its priorities. The leaders of the
world's richest countries promote free trade and foreign
investment as the engines of development, supplemented by
small increases in aid. But the principal obstacles to
reducing poverty in Africa remain the hemorrhaging of some $14
billion in annual debt repayments to rich foreign creditors
and the AIDS pandemic and the larger health crisis it
represents.
This year is going to be critical in
determining how the U.S. and other rich countries respond to
Africa's economic challenges. In the aftermath of September
11th, they are being forced to address the widening divide
between rich and poor countries. New international efforts,
including those emerging from Monterrey, must be measured by
how they respond to Africa's greatest immediate challenges:
Debt and AIDS!
- - Africa Action
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