Bush’s Foreign-Aid Fraud
by
James Bovard
by James Bovard
President Bush has doled out
more than $70 billion in foreign aid and loan guarantees to foreign
governments, countries, and international organizations. He committed
billions in new aid in large part to get the endorsement of a rock
star and to garner applause at a United Nations summit.
Because a minuscule percent
of the aid will be paid out from a new program created to encourage
foreign politicians not to steal, Bush talks as if his aid is revolutionizing
the Third World. Yet, early in his first term, Bush and his top
aides were honest and blunt on the failure of foreign aid:
- Treasury Secretary Paul ONeill
denounced the World Bank and International Monetary Fund for driving
many poor nations into a ditch with excessive lending
that governments wasted.
- In an April 30, 2002, speech
on compassionate conservatism, Bush declared, The old way
of pouring vast amounts of money into development aid without
any concern for results has failed, often leaving behind misery
and poverty and corruption.
- A September 2002 White House
report declared that foreign aid has often served to prop
up failed policies, relieving the pressure for reform and perpetuating
misery.
Foreign aid fails in part because
of pervasive corruption. A 2003 report from a leading Bangladesh
university estimated that 75 percent of all foreign aid received
in that country is lost to corruption. Northwestern University political
economist Jeffrey Winters estimated that more than 50 percent of
World Bank aid is lost to corruption in some African countries.
President Olusegun Obasanjo of Nigeria announced in 2002 that African
leaders have stolen at least $140 billion from their people
in the decades since independence.
An African Union study pegged
the takings at a much higher rate, estimating Africas toll
from corruption at $150 billion every year. Lavish automobiles are
so popular among African government officials that a word has come
into use in Swahili wabenzi for men of
the Mercedes-Benz. Investment guru Jim Rogers, who recently
drove around the globe, declared,
Most foreign aid winds
up with outside consultants, the local military, corrupt bureaucrats,
the new NGO [nongovernmental organizations] administrators, and
Mercedes dealers. There are Mercedes dealers in places where there
are not even roads.
A Brookings Institution analysis
observed,
The history of U.S.
assistance is littered with tales of corrupt foreign officials
using aid to line their own pockets, support military buildups,
and pursue vanity projects. It is no wonder that few studies show
clear correlations between aid flows and growth.
A Heritage Foundation report
noted, Most recipients of U.S. development assistance are
poorer now than they were before first receiving U.S. aid.
Former World Bank senior economist William Easterly estimates that
World Bank and IMF loans actually boosted poverty worldwide
by a total of 14 million people.
Foreign aid breeds kleptocracies,
or governments of thieves. A 1999 National Bureau of Economic Research
study concluded that countries that receive more [foreign]
aid tend to have higher corruption. A 2002 American Economic
Review study by the same authors concluded that increases
in aid are associated with contemporaneous increases in corruption
and that corruption is positively correlated with aid received
from the United States.
Foreign aid can also spur civil
wars. As Nobel laureate economist P.T. Bauer noted,
The great increase
in the prizes of political power has been a major factor in the
frequency and intensity of political conflict in contemporary
Africa and in the rest of the less developed world.
Bushs comments on the
failure of foreign aid have been among his more astute utterances.
Since foreign aid is an indisputable failure, he resolved to start
a new foreign-aid program.
Bushs foreign-aid conversion
The propellant of Bushs
foreign-aid conversion was a UN summit on global poverty
in Monterrey, Mexico, in March 2002. Bush agreed to go and speak
to the meeting after being pressured by his buddy, President Vicente
Fox of Mexico. Because administration officials vocally criticized
foreign aid, White House aides feared Bush could receive a hostile
reception.
But Bush cleverly disarmed
critics by promising to greatly increase U.S. foreign-aid spending.
He arranged to have the Irish rock star Bono present for his March
14, 2002, announcement; the Washington Post noted that the
White House clearly craved Bonos support and that
Bono looked on approvingly as Bush promised four days
before the UN conference to boost foreign aid by $5 billion over
a three-year period.
The White House was chagrined
when Bushs proposal did not generate massive international
applause. So on the day before he left for Mexico, White House officials
revealed that there had been a glitch in the original announcement
and that Bush actually planned to give away more than twice as much
money under the new program. White House spokesman Ari Fleischer
said the mistake was simply a result of confusing math.
National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice explained, We didnt
want to go out there with essentially false or phony numbers.
The New York Times noted that skeptics said the White
House was just adding on billions to make sure that the president
was a hit in Monterrey.
Even before arriving in Monterrey,
Bush bragged about the money he was bringing. In a March 20, 2002,
interview with Peruvian radio, he declared, Im coming
with this, what we call the Millennium Challenge Fund, which is
$10 billion of new money. (The name was later changed to Millennium
Challenge Account, or MCA.)
At that time, the United States
was already the largest foreign-aid donor in the world. But many
foreign governments were miffed because the U.S. government did
not give away a higher percent of the U.S. gross national product.
The World Bank and other international organizations were beating
the drums to double the amount of foreign aid by the year 2015.
Perhaps the World Bank assumed that doubling foreign aid would finally
resolve, once and for all, whether all that money really was vanishing
into bottomless holes.
In his speech to the UN conference,
Bush piously informed world leaders that foreign aid could harm:
Pouring money into a failed status quo does little to help
the poor, and can actually delay the progress of reform. Since
the speech occurred after 9/11, Bush invoked anti-terrorism to justify
the largesse: We fight against poverty because hope is an
answer to terror. And, in a startling revelation that instantly
altered humanitarian efforts around the globe, he revealed, We
must do more than just feel good about what we are doing; we must
do good.
Less than three weeks after
he slapped high tariffs on steel imports, Bush lectured the world
that to be serious about fighting poverty, we must be serious
about expanding trade.... Trade brings expectations of freedom.
He portrayed market openings as panaceas: As one example,
in a single year, the African Growth and Opportunity Act has increased
African exports to the United States by more than 1,000 percent....
In reality, the value of African exports to the United States decreased
after the act was implemented (largely because of a fall in the
price of oil).
Bush said the aid provided
through the MCA would be devoted to projects in nations that
govern justly, invest in their people, and encourage economic freedom.
He assured the world that by taking the side of liberty and
good government, we will liberate millions from povertys prison.
He was confident that the new handouts and the new rhetoric gave
both him and America the moral high ground.
Bush was hailed by dignitaries
whose programs have long failed the worlds poor. The United
Nations Development Program chief, Mark Malloch Brown, gushed, There
could be no more potent spokesman for increased aid than George
W. Bush, the war leader.
The fraud of foreign aid
The White House did not bother
submitting legislation to Congress to establish the new program
until January 2003. Condoleezza Rice proudly declared in February
2004, The Millennium Challenge Account is revolutionizing
the way America provides aid to developing countries. At that
point, no MCA money had gone out and the State Department had not
even bothered to publish the standards by which applicants for the
money would be judged.
The State Department finally
released the MCA aid criteria on March 10, 2004. Among the 16 factors
by which applicants will be judged are political liberties, consumer-price
inflation, regulatory quality, and days to start
a business. Governments will also be judged by their performance
in ensuring the rights of people with disabilities.
The MCA is based on the revelation
that it is unsound policy to give money to foreign leaders who steal,
but the Bush administration is fastidiously avoiding applying the
MCA lesson to other U.S. foreign aid. The idea of bribing
foreign politicians to encourage honesty makes as much sense as
distributing free condoms to encourage abstinence. The United States
has doled out more than $500 billion in foreign aid since 1946,
and Washington is knee-deep in foreign-aid experts.
The State Department may rely
on Transparency International, an international nonprofit organization,
for assessing the corruption levels of governments that apply for
MCA aid. However, according to Transparencys ratings, the
U.S. government is already bankrolling many of the most corrupt
governments in the world, including Nigeria, Bangladesh, Haiti,
Tajikistan, Paraguay, Indonesia, Kenya, Azerbaijan, and Kyrgyzstan.
Bushs launch of the MCA does nothing to reduce the corrupting
effects of other existing aid programs.
Bush profits from U.S. foreign
aid regardless of how much damage the handouts inflict on the Third
World. Foreign aid is usually judged as an abstract idea and as
a moral ideal. All that matters is that an American politician cared
enough to give away Americans money abroad thereby
earning the praise of rock stars, of the media, and of foreign leaders
who have their hands in the till.
Bush
preaches that foreign politicians must prove their worthiness to
receive bonus U.S. aid. But there is no requirement for American
politicians to show that they have reformed, to prove that they
are worthy to dole out other peoples money to their foreign
friends and lackeys. Bush talks about foreign corruption, but it
is also corrupt for him to seize money from Americans and send it
abroad, especially when he knows the aid will finance corruption.
The louder Bush praises the
MCA, the more he damns himself for failure to end traditional U.S.
foreign aid. Since studies show that corruption is positively
correlated with receiving U.S. aid, the surest way to reduce
corruption is to end U.S. foreign aid.
October
25, 2005
James Bovard
[send him mail] is the author
of The
Bush Betrayal and Terrorism
& Tyranny: Trampling Freedom, Justice, and Peace to Rid the
World of Evil serves as a policy advisor for The
Future of Freedom Foundation.
Copyright ©
2005 Future of Freedom Foundation
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