|
True Foreign Aid
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
A recent Hudson
Institute study found that, last year, American citizens voluntarily
contributed three times more to help people overseas than did the
United States government. This should not surprise us at all, as
Americans are generous to those in need, whether here or abroad.
There are so many moral, religious, and human reasons to help our
fellow men and women in need. It is only when government gets in
the way and tries to crowd out private charity that problems arise.
There are good
reasons why the US Constitution does not allow our government to
send taxpayer money overseas as foreign aid. One of the best is
that coerced charity is not charity at all, but rather
it is theft. If someone picks your pocket and donates the money
to a good cause it does not negate the original act of theft.
There are also
practical reasons to oppose governmental foreign aid. Though it
may be given with the best intentions, government agencies simply
cannot do the kind of job that private charities do in actually
helping people in need. Government-to-government assistance seldom
helps those really in need. First, because it comes from governments
it usually has political strings attached to it, and as such is
really a cover for political interventionism. Take our own National
Endowment for Democracy for example. The aid money it
spends is usually spent trying to manipulate elections overseas
so that a favored foreign political party wins democratic
elections. This does no favor to citizens of foreign countries,
who vote in the hope that they may choose their own leaders without
outside interference.
Likewise with
the so-called Millennium Challenge Account, which sends US aid to
countries that meet US-determined economic reform criteria. The
fact is, countries that enact solid economic policies will attract
many times the amount of private foreign investment on international
capital markets than they receive through the Millennium Challenge
program.
Another problem
is that when a government gives aid to another government there
are so many layers of middlemen involved that by the time the actual
aid trickles down to those in need it is a small fraction of the
original amount given. Not to mention that much of this aid finds
its way into the pockets of corrupt foreign leaders.
Private assistance
organizations, on the other hand, are more subject to market forces
and thus much more effective. When Americans feel motivated to part
with their hard-earned money to help someone overseas, they want
to make sure it goes only to the most effective charities. Bad news
travels fast, and private charities are unlikely to send their resources
where they are likely to be wasted because their contributions would
soon dry up. We all recall what happened several years ago when
it was revealed that the top management of a major charity organization
was paid extremely high salaries: people stopped sending money.
The problem corrected itself.
Sadly, this
does not happen when government aid is mismanaged. More often than
not, the very government agencies that mismanaged the assistance
in the first place come back to Congress for a budget increase to
solve the problem they created.
So
we should be happy to hear that Americans are willing to give so
much to help those less fortunate in foreign lands. And we should
think hard about all the good we could do both at home and abroad
if our government did not take so much from us for its ineffective
and wasteful foreign aid priorities. True charity is never coerced.
May
2, 2006
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
Ron
Paul Archives
|