This is a thought provoking article:
Sulaiman Kakaire
If you believe in stereotypes then, as an African from a country that last year received £97.9 million from Britain, I should have welcomed the news that the government will enshrine in law a commitment to spend 0.7 per cent of GDP on foreign aid.
And I should have been angered by Nigel Farage’s remarks that he would abolish all aid except for emergency relief.
The Ukip leader’s views and mine differ on many counts, but we have a surprising amount in common on this subject — I too believe that if the West ended foreign aid we would all be better off in many different ways.
The notion that aid will help Africa to develop is basically misconceived. Development cannot start at the edges of society where, being tied to specific projects, most aid to Africa is focused. Julius Nyerere, the former president of Tanzania, said that development starts within individual communities and then the nation offers “freedom from political, economic and social exploitation”. This is what Africans want.
In my country, Uganda, the priorities are agriculture, infrastructure, education and technology, but aid is not spent on these — only £15.1 million out of the £600 million of external finance in the budget is available for these priorities, while £584 million goes on project aid. Most of this is spent on expensive and inconsequential workshops and seminars; or is pocketed by the political elite.
In 2012 Uganda’s auditor general reported that at least ¤10 million from an EU aid programme had been channelled into the private accounts of officials in the office of the prime minister. Over the years this widespread embezzlement has been used for political patronage.
If aid to Africa stopped it would prompt African countries to plan according to their resources. When Britain and others suspended direct aid to Uganda because of the 2012 corruption reports, Uganda had to look for other ways to generate 81 per cent of its budget. Previously almost half was donor-funded.
Instead of aid the West can help Africa in trade — yet here there is much more reluctance to help. The EU is still not offering the fair trade terms and investment opportunities that will develop Africa’s economies and create more jobs for its people.
It's bacon baps week, year 6! 🥓 😋
This weather is getting me down. Is it May or March?



