By Timothy Cox | Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Aid Watch reports on a letter featured in last week’s Sunday Telegraph from African commentators decrying the need for UK budgetary support to African governments.

As Andrew Mwenda et al. claim, removing protectionist legislation like the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy would be of far greater benefit to ordinary African’s looking to expand their trading opportunities than any amount of foreign aid:

      SIR – The parlous state of the public finances in Britain provides the perfect opportunity for British taxpayers to end their half-century-long experiment with "development aid", which has, since its inception, stunted growth and subsidised bad governance in Africa.

As Africans, we urge the generous-spirited British to reconsider an aid programme they can ill afford, and which we do not want or need. A real offer from the British people to help our development would consist of the abolition of the Common Agricultural Policy, which keeps African agricultural exports out of the European marketplace.

It is that egregious policy, combined with the weight of regulations, bad laws and stifling bureaucracy, subsidised by five decades of development aid, which prevents Africans from lifting themselves out of poverty.

Andrew Mitchell, the Secretary of State for International Development, speaks about a "moral imperative" to combat poverty around the world. We could not agree more. The British have a unique opportunity to cut the deficit and help Africa: please, ask your new government to stop your aid.


It’s time for the politicians in the UK, Europe and everywhere else to start listening to the actual needs of the world’s poorest, rather than continuing the folly of throwing yet more money at their governments.

By Timothy Cox | Friday, August 20, 2010

Leaked plans to redirect government spending to the foreign aid budget are condemnable, but hardly surprising.

While the coalition government has decided to increase foreign aid spending to 0.7 per cent of national income each year, almost all other departments are having to cut spending by an average of 25 per cent. No wonder civil servants are engaging in “budget juggling”.

In fact, the 0.7% spending target for foreign aid makes no sense: the actual needs of the world’s poorest bears no relation to the size of the UK economy. If the government is serious about development it should abandon arbitrary targets, and appraise each case for aid independently with the interests of those suffering at the fore.

Wasteful spending should be cut in the foreign aid budget, just as it is being in other government budgets. 

By Alec van Gelder & Timothy Cox | Wednesday, August 18, 2010

The thirtieth anniversary of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) is a stark reminder of just how ineffective the current network of African regional trade groupings is.  Despite years of deal brokering and millions of dollars having been spent on trade facilitation, intra-African trade remains stifled. Less than ten per cent of African exports are destined for other African economies and the continent’s share of global trade has steadily fallen since the end of World War II. Today, France exports more merchandise than the whole of sub-Saharan Africa collectively.

Part of the problem is to be found in the prescription. Africans have zealously embraced European style political integration without much serious effort concentrated on boosting regional trade. The result is a tangled web of regional economic communities (RECs), all with overlapping memberships, separate policy provisions and independent institutional support.  Of the 53 African countries, 27 are members of two RECs, 18 belong to three, and a couple are members of four. Only a handful of countries have maintained membership in one community.

Many of these groups, including SADC, are inherently weak. Bourne out of protracted negotiations, the final agreements that underpin these groups are watered down and are ill-suited to address the obstacles to trade that face African businesses. The vast majority of these barriers are found in the domestic regulations that make it prohibitively expensive to trade across borders, open business or even pay taxes. These are extensively documented by indices such as Doing Business, or the Logistics Performance Index, but they can only be dealt with at the national level. 

Membership in regional economic communities has proven popular, but Africa governments would do their constituents the biggest favour by abandoning these do-nothing clubs and concentrating on these more important domestic priorities. 

So while delegates in Windhoek enjoy the latest boondoggle and celebrate “30 years of progress”, it’s worth remembering that Africa’s many “high-profile” summits stand very little chance of addressing the real barriers to African prosperity.

By Timothy Cox | Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Our daily round-up of what other think-tanks and commentators are saying on the big issues:

Kieron Ryan: how the “blood diamonds” scare is a 24-carat disaster for Africa.

Tragedy of the wildlife commons in the US explained. 

By Timothy Cox | Monday, August 16, 2010

Our daily round-up of what other think-tanks and commentators are saying on the big issues:

Brink Lindsey: Five books on traditional and liberal conservatism.

Steve Davis and Jonathan Woetzel: Chinese aid to Africa can be force for good.

By Alec van Gelder | Monday, August 16, 2010

Scott Gilmore says:

"It’s possible that one of the global leaders in aid is beginning to move away from the mantra of 'Spend More!' which dominated the last twenty years, and is moving towards the idea of 'Spend Better.'"

But we're not so sure. 

That would indeed be a welcome development and it may be what Andrew Mitchell wants us to believe but the devil lies in the detail, not in leaks to the Observer. DfID has not only promised to “ring-fence” aid spending, they have pushed to have a 0.7 per cent of GDP aid spending target enshrined in law. This would actually increase aid spending by a non insubstantial £2bn per year. Given that this was among their top priorities coming into Government, it’s not easy to believe “spending better before we spend more” rhetoric, much as we wish it were true.

We are particularly disappointed that the Coalition has decided how much to spend before the review into DfID’s current spending programmes has delivered its conclusions. Only a “top-down” aid agency could decide how much to spend before understanding which projects are worthy of UK taxpayer support.

The current debate in the UK re. aid appears to along the following lines: projects receiving DfID support are sporadically discussed by the media and then one of two things happen: 1) DfID rightly announces that funding to said project will be discontinued, mainly because of UK public outrage; or 2) DfID comes out in defence of the project it funds. With nothing seemingly thought through from the perspective of the aid recipients, it’s hard to take government claims to a commitment to “spend better” at face value.

By Matthew Ridley | Monday, August 16, 2010

Recently at IPN we talked about the misguided policies of Hugo Chavez’s regime and why Oliver Stone was so dreadfully wrong to recommend them for the US. Since then, there have been further  illustrations of just how badly Venezuela’s economic system is performing.

Thor Halvorssen informs us that Venezuela’s “disastrous food policy”, combined with electricity rationing, has led to a shocking 120,000 tons of food being left to rot at Puerto Cabello, a recently-nationalised port near Venezuela’s capital. Meanwhile the attempt by the Venezuelan government to provide food for the poor has been predictably corrupted by those within the political elite. Ricardo Fernandez, a businessman with close ties to the Chavez family, is estimated to have amassed a personal fortune over $1.5bn through the state-owned food chain, Mercal. And Fernandez is just one example of corruption that has become a way of life throughout Venezuela. Chavez claims to be establishing “21st-century socialism”, but the results are already proving as disastrous as its twentieth-century predecessor.  

Problems of this type are not unique to Venezuela, but are common to any country with a planned, socialist economy. This is inevitable when politics and economics become too closely intertwined. Without market mechanisms and the information they discover and disseminate, the people in charge are blind to the real needs of consumers and workers and vulnerable to corruption by special interests.

Evidently concerned that Venezuelans are becoming dissatisfied with his regime, Chavez continues to tighten his grip on the media and eliminate opposition to his rule. But it doesn’t have to be this way. Left-of-centre politicians- such as the former president of Chile, Michele Bachelet- can accept the institutions of the free market and the need for fiscal responsibility, while at the same time advancing the causes of social liberalism and social justice. Chile now has one of the best performing and richest economies in South America.

If Hugo Chavez wants to be a truly progressive leader, he should look there for guidance instead of continuing his “experiment” in South American socialism at the expense of his people. 

By Stuart Bramwell | Monday, August 16, 2010

The Nigerian-based International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) has recently discovered a way to cure ‘Xanthomonas Wilt’, a disease that has rendered over half a billion dollars worth of damage to the agricultural industry in East and Central Africa.  This development could help increase agricultural productivity in a region highly prone to food shortages.

However, betraying their fervent ideological commitment to the anti-GMO cause, Friends of the Earth Nigeria (FotEN) has recently denounced this development as an attempt by the biotech industry to colonise Uganda’s local food supply and negate their food sovereignty. 

This is not the first time FotEN has resorted to emotive anti-colonialist rhetoric to add weight to their arguments.  They previously denounced biotech tests on the Cassava shrub as “trading away our food future to modern colonialists that hide under the cover of agricultural biotechnology.”  Such rhetoric is strategically employed to make FotEN out to be on the right side of the debate.

But this doesn’t change the fact that their prescriptions will almost certainly undermine progress in a continent that desperately needs it. That the EU gave FotE’s European subsidiary EUR 813,721 in 2009 should be a source of embarrassment for those looking to promote development practices that actually work.   

By Stuart Bramwell | Friday, August 13, 2010

Antony Ward, head of hedge-fund Armajaro, has been maligned recently for buying up 7% of the world’s cocoa bean production. The tabloid press, quick to jump on the banker-bashing bandwagon, have started referring to him as “Chocfinger”.  This move has prompted further calls for protectionist policies to prevent further speculation from the anti-poverty group World Development Movement.

Such policy prescriptions are irrational and unhelpful.  As The Economist explains, Ward has predicted that cocoa bean production will slump quicker in the Ivory Coast (the world’s largest supplier of the commodity) than has been generally acknowledged.  A sudden shortage of cocoa supply will raise prices on the international market.

Such an eventuality could be avoided provided that there are already reserves waiting to be sold if production falls.  By buying up such a large quantity of cocoa and storing it in refrigerated warehouses, this is precisely what Ward has aimed to do.  Providing his calculation is correct, the result is a win-win situation where he makes a profit and prices remain relatively stable as supply levels are maintained to meet demand for the commodity.

Furthermore, the claim that speculation is the cause of price volatility is getting things the wrong way around.  Price volatility is caused by many factors including the inherent unpredictability and time lags involved with growing cocoa, but also the fact that the vast majority of the world’s cocoa is grown in some of the world’s least business friendly environments, which stifle the incentives to invest and can make production much more irregular than it would otherwise be.  For instance, around 40% of the price paid on the international marketplace for cocoa goes directly into the pockets of Ivory Coast’s government, which regulates pesticides and undermines the property rights of cocoa farmers.  These counter-productive policies only make supply more irregular and thus the speculators are drawn in. 

Let us be clear: speculators react or try to pre-empt price fluctuation but they aren’t responsible for it.

By Timothy Cox | Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Our daily round-up of what other think-tanks and commentators are saying on the big issues:

The Adam Smith Institute on horrible, ghastly, going-ons in the carbon market.

The Economist on the latest US/China trade figures and the importance of keeping cool over the Yuan revaluation dispute.

By Stuart Bramwell | Wednesday, August 11, 2010

A recent Newsweek article has castigated the recent drop in aid expenditure. Melodramatically describing it as “the death of generosity” their thesis is based on the dual observation that,

(1)    there has been a reduction in foreign aid spending from Western governments since the 2008 financial crisis
(2)    G8-participating countries are not on track to meeting their commitments with regards to aid expenditure

The issue with this is that generosity is being measured by a country’s ability to spend as much money as possible along with its ability to meet arbitrary international spending targets.  As has been shown, a "donor-centric" view of foreign aid disbursement is economically illiterate and does not take into account the needs of its recipients. 

Whilst giving money to those less fortunate, such as the victims of natural disasters, is certainly generous, it is very much in doubt as to whether long-term budget support for developing countries actually aids development. The assumption that more money must be good and therefore generous is deeply flawed.

Another striking feature of the article is the unqualified lauding of the campaigns of Geldof and his entourage of (as William Easterly sarcastically notes) “other expert-development-economists,” as bastions of generosity.  This is misguiding.  Putting aside the self-promotional nature of much of their work, the way they have engaged with some of their critics has been very ungenerous to say the least.  Economist Dambisa Moyo claims she was the victim of a smear campaign from Geldof and Bono’s organisation, One:

“...they were calling organisations ahead of my meetings and media appointments and sent letters to African NGOs...basically painting me as a genocidal maniac, trying to kill African babies so, in other words, trying to get Africans [to be] against me.”

We owe it to the world’s poorest to have open and constructive debate on international development. Attempting to paper over the cracks of previous aid failures by blindly increasing spending, or by smearing dissenting voices, is counterproductive and risks harming further those Geldof et al. proclaim to be helping.