Rewarding good behavior is all the rage these when it comes to dealing with developing countries. But good behavior can be in the eye of the beholder.
The Bush administration has backed the creation of the Millennium
Challenge Account, which conditions U.S. bilateral aid on good
governance in some of the poorest countries in the world. Key to
success overall is less government interference in the economy,
except in areas like education and healthcare.
Last week brought the news that the European Union has produced its
own conditionality to lower trade barriers on developing nations.
The offer as articulated by EU Trade Commissioner Pascal Lamy,
however, had nothing to with making their economies more
self-sustaining and competitive. Instead, it had everything to do
with making them accept a European agenda that emphasizes
government intervention in labor markets and environmental
regulation, and a political agenda that includes obedience to
international treaties.
Ironically, the very same policies that have promoted growth in the
United States and hampered it in Europe are now
playing themselves out again in the field of development policy.
These policies encapsulate the principles of the free market vs.
government intervention -- or translated into American terms, of
Republicans and Democrats respectively.
What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander, could have
been the subtitle of a new important work on economic development,
"The Road to Prosperity: The 21st Approach to Economic
Development," edited by Marc A. Miles, director of the Center for
International Trade and Economic of the Heritage Foundation. In it,
the authors argue precisely that there are no separate sets of
economic laws that govern rich and poor countries.
Now, this flies in the face of much traditional thinking on how to
improve the lot of developing countries. Foreign aid, just like
domestic welfare, has for half a century been considered simply a
transfer of funds from richer to poorer, either bilaterally or
through the IMF and the World Bank.
"Need based transfers such as welfare and unemployment require
people to remain in the needy state to receive benefits . . .. The
resulting disincentives discourage people from following their
natural desires to improve the lot of their families and
themselves," writes Mr. Miles.
Not much consideration was traditionally given to whether the
recipient was positioned to spend aid money constructively. Foreign
aid, government-to-government transfers often resulted in giant
infrastructure programs, many of which fell into disrepair the
moment the funding stream ended. And that could be the best-case
scenario. At worst, they simply fed corruption of government
officials.
The 21st century approach to economic development is
fundamentally different. It eliminates the distinction between
"developing" and "developed" countries. Rather than poverty itself
being the criterion for assistance, the right policies to escape
from poverty become the test.
In "The Road to Serfdom," Frederick von Hayek argued against
placing too much power and too many resourced in the hands of
government, as it would stifle economic progress and individual
freedom. In "The Road to Prosperity," a distinguished group of
authors, that includes Arthur Laffer, Hernando de Soto, and Adam
Lerrick, argue that returning economic power and rights to
individuals is the way to economic development. Some of the
stations on the roadmap to prosperity include open markets and free
trade; property rights; price stability; lower and equitable taxes;
and liberalization of capital flows.
Consider what foreign aid can do: The 10 largest recipients of World Bank aid have experienced a rise in standard of living of 0.2 percent in the past 40 years. More than 40 recipient nations mostly in sub-Saharan Africa show a per capita income of less than $1, and are growing poorer by the day.
Now consider by contrast what economic growth will do for a
country: In 1960, the Central African Republic had a per capita GDP
of $2,180 (constant 1996 dollars). The comparable figure for Taiwan
was $1,430 that year. Today, the figures are an amazing $1,120 and
$18,700 respectively. The Central African Republic is still a
recipient of development aid. Taiwan is a major international
donor.
Today, one could only call Taiwan as a "developing
country" if we redefine what that means. As Arthur Laffer writes,
"In effect all economies are developing economies. No country
should ever stop developing. There is not one set of rules for rich
countries and another set for others." Regulatory burdens and
confiscatory taxation will drag any economy down. Therein lies a
lesson for us all.
Helle Dale is director of Foreign Policy and Defense Studies
at the Heritage Foundation. E-mail: [email protected].
First appeared in The Washington Times