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The Annual Foreign Aid Rip-Off
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
This week,
Congress will vote to send more than 20 billion of your hard-earned
dollars overseas, when it passes the Foreign Operations Appropriations
bill for 2007. Our annual foreign aid bill is one of the most egregious
abuses of the taxpayer I can imagine. Not only is it an unconstitutional
burden on Americas working families, but this yearly attempt
to buy friends and influence foreign governments is counterproductive
and actually results in less goodwill toward the United States overseas.
Why is foreign
aid so bad? Isnt it our obligation to help those less fortunate?
What is not mentioned by proponents of foreign aid is that it very
seldom gets to those who need it most. Foreign aid is the transfer
of US dollars from the treasury of the United States to the governments
of foreign countries. It is money that goes to help foreign elites,
who in turn spend much of it on contracts with US corporations.
This means US tax dollars ultimately go to well-connected US corporations
operating overseas.
Foreign aid
distorts foreign economies and props up bad governments. It breeds
resentment among citizens of foreign countries, who see the United
States as keeping oppressive governments in power. Also, it is important
to remember that forced charity is not charity at all. While I believe
strongly in the moral value of helping the less fortunate, charity
must come voluntarily from the heart, not under threat from the
IRS.
This years
bill is even worse than last years bill. Aside from the almost
600 million dollar increase, the bill will spend half a billion
dollars on something called the Trade Capacity Enhancement
Fund. This is nothing but an enormous fund to bribe foreign
governments to liberalize their trade policies. As one
of the strongest proponents of free trade in Congress, I know well
that open and free trade is its own reward. Countries that trade
freely with each other are wealthier and far less likely to go to
war. We shouldnt kid ourselves: this new program is not about
free trade. Its purpose is to encourage countries to enter into
new so-called trade agreements with the US government. Government-to-government
trade agreements produce government-managed trade relationships,
which are not free trade at all. This fund is a colossal waste of
money that will result in less free trade worldwide.
Also, this
year Congress will nearly double funding for the monstrous Millennium
Challenge program. This is billed as a different kind of foreign
aid, in that it only goes to governments that pursue free
market economic and social reforms. Of course this is a waste
of money: governments that pursue wise economic policies will attract
much more in foreign private investment than the US government can
send them. The true reward for sound economic policies is increased
prosperity. Foreign aid does not purchase that prosperity but in
fact distorts internal markets and props up inefficient companies.
Americans
concerned about high taxes, out of control gas prices, and economic
downturn should think hard about what the US government is doing
with the money it takes from them. The greatest foreign assistance
we can give to other countries is to demonstrate to the rest of
the world that limited government and the rule of law ensure freedom
and prosperity.
June
6, 2006
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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