international aid

$100 million is a lot of money

antarchi's picture
If the point of 'international aid' is empowerment, in other words the transfer of some of the power (resources?) from those who have too much, to those who have none at all, then what a pathetic job most (international) ngo-businesses are doing. They build themselves up, every year winning more and more projects, more and more funding which they pile into 'reserves', core funding, new employees, more airfares, or increased salaries for managers directing the projects from a London base. For those same salaries, and for the cost of maintaining that London base they could have given employment, work experience, trust, and the possibility to direct their own affairs to goodness knows how many people for whom that funding was originally intended.

the value of being an expert

antarchi's picture

I earn £41 (about €59) a day for coaxing along 30 underprivileged and often damaged 7-year old children. I can earn £241 a day (€350) if I continue to work as a ‘consultant’ internationally, teaching groups of 15 to 20 young Georgians what the text books written in the west tell us about human rights and advocacy, playing games with them and lapping up the Georgian culture.

Of course €350 is not a particularly well paid consultant, as any consultant will tell you. Many charge up to €1,000 for teaching those whose rights are being violated that their rights are being violated. Some will charge even more. If you are a lawyer talking about human rights, I dread to think how many euros you can manage to squeeze out of the international coffers. Ask Cherie Blair.

DFID fighting extreme poverty

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'The Department for International Development (DFID) is the part of the UK Government that manages Britain's aid to poor countries and works to get rid of extreme poverty.'

  • DFID works directly in over 150 countries worldwide, with a budget of nearly £4 billion in 2004.

But just to give us an idea of how most of that 'aid' is really spent, the (previous) Secretary of State has broken down1 some of the figures for Iraq:

  • Between April 2003 and December 2005, DFID spent £210,000 preparing DFID civil servants and consultants for deployment to Iraq. This covers pre-deployment hostile environment training, plus necessary equipment such as satellite phones, body armour, flak jackets and helmets...
  • DFID civil servants working on the Iraq programme in this period have cost £4.4 million. This includes salaries, overseas allowances, transfer costs and travel. Of this amount, £3 million was disbursed on salaries...
  • The total cost to DFID of all consultancy contracts in Iraq during this period was £31.4 million... Consultants receive fees rather than salaries, so it may be helpful to know that the average fees paid for a consultant working for DFID in Iraq are between £700 to £1,250 a day.
* * *

Helpful indeed: selfless souls, those international aiders.

How could anyone, let alone British citizens, take a fee of any sort, let alone £1,200 a day, from funds (paltry as they are) intended to assist - if that were ever possible - those millions of Iraqis (not yet dead) now suffering from the entirely foreseeable consequences of an unprovoked war of aggression; a war prepared, launched and carried through with the utmost guile, duplicity, and callousness by this British Government - the very government that now pretends to compensate the victims who have not yet had their lives cut short by the invading powers. How could you take their money with a clear conscience to 'help' Iraqis, of all people?

The mind absolutely boggles.

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1. From questions to Parliament, March 2006

no comment

antarchi's picture

"...criticising the lack of sincerity of those in power or of the secular priesthood should be done with precision: the problem is not that they are lying or that they are consciously hiding their real aims, but that they spontaneously adopt a distorted view of the world and history that enables them to profit from their privileged position with a perfectly clear conscience. This is a phenomenon that can be observed in daily life: generous words and speeches about values often go hand in hand with an analysis of reality that conveniently makes it possible to identify personal interest with moral imperatives. Genuine sincerity is not simply a matter of believing what one says, but of honestly asking whether the actions one undertakes really serve the noble aims one claims to pursue"

From Humanitarian Imperialism, by Jean Bricmont

morally relevant salaries

antarchi's picture

There is a fairly generally held belief in the richer world that what someone earns is not a morally relevant fact. In the business world, that is true almost without exception. But it is held to be true in the so-called non-profit sector as well, even if not quite unconditionally (and perhaps not universally). The fact that ‘western’ consultants are paid at a daily rate exceeding the monthly rate of locals is rarely thought to be troublesome, even if the relative living costs differ by much less; and that the chief executives of Oxfam, Action Aid or Save the Children take home more in a year than most of the people they are supposed to be helping can hope to see in a lifetime is not, for most people, a morally significant issue.

Why not? I suspect that the average worker in sub-Saharan Africa, struggling to feed a family on 50 cents a day would find it morally relevant. So where is the flaw in our more expensive reasoning?

This is what I think we would hear from the chief executives and the roaming consultants:

1. ’The cost of living in sub-Saharan Africa is incomparably less than it is in London / New York / Strasbourg / Brussels: we need more to live off here’.

Yes it is, and yes they do. That, incidentally, raises the question of how far it is justified to have a well-staffed, recently renovated, state of the art headquarters in London, of all places, given the enormous rents; but even supposing it is justified – do these people ‘need’ $500-odd dollars a day, 7 days a week, 52 weeks of the year? That is a heck of a lot more than others need to live off in the same place.

2. ’We are paid at the market rate: if we were not worth it, the market would not pay so much.’

Never mind what the market thinks: the market is a cruel, amoral beast. I wonder if you, the recipients of 6 figure salaries believe you are worth roughly 500 times more than someone who works the same hours, under much more difficult conditions, with no perks, no pension, no international glory – just sweat-shop conditions, day in, day out, for 18 hours per day.

Is the market the best judge of what people are 'worth', and is the market anyway the most appropriate judge for the world of international aid?

3. ’We do a hard job, subject to enormous stresses and strains and burdened by great responsibility. We should be well compensated for this.’

Yes... but so should others for their labour, no less stressful and incomparably worse compensated. Given that any money raised by Oxfam / SCF / Action Aid etc is raised on the understanding that it is going to be used to best effect to help those really in need – is this an honest way of raising the money, let alone an ethical way of spending it?

4. ’If we worked in the business world with the same responsibility and the same number of employees we would be paid far better’.

And if you were a footballer or successful porn star you would be paid even better. Why should that be thought to be a relevant consideration? The money for business executives is not raised on the understanding that it is going to those in need; and anyway – their enormous salaries are hardly benchmarks for good behaviour.

5. ’If I had fewer skills and was less able to run this organisation efficiently, we would help far fewer people around the world’.

I wonder… I wonder, first of all, whether huge ngo-businesses are really the most efficient use of resources. But even if they are, I wonder whether people who are ready to work for less would necessarily be any worse at managing them. Just conceivably, they may be, given the business practices that mostly govern ngo-businesses today. Maybe Oxfam and Save the Children would do even better if they hired real business executives to manage their empires.

Let us anyway do the sums and see: let us see what else, and how else we could spend the money raised for those in need. I am sceptical that $150,000 can not be spent in a way that would be more useful to the starving millions. Since the money is rightfully theirs – perhaps we should give them the chance to decide.

6. ’If I did not take this salary, someone else would take it instead. The money would not go to sub-Saharan Africa.’

!!!??? And if I did not shoot this Iraqi / vote for war / torture this prisoner / support the occupation / invade Afghanistan / sell arms to Suharto …. someone else would do it instead. It may be true (or it may not) but it does not absolve me from moral blame for being the one that actually carries out the act.

7. ‘I cannot be held responsible for not saving more lives: I do far more than most to limit the number of casualties around the world.’

Consider: I am in a position where I could save 10 people or I could save 100 people. I shall survive (and live comfortably) whether I do the first or the second. If I do the first, I shall live not just comfortably, but about 4 times better than the average British citizen, and at least 500 times more comfortably (if comfort can be measured in numbers) than the average sub-Saharan African. The money raised to pay for my additional comfort is intended to go towards improving the lot of the sub-Saharan African. But I cannot be held responsible if I use it instead to pay for my additional comfort.

(to be continued)

developing nations support UK banks

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According to figures from the Bank of England, in 2006, money from developing countries deposited in UK banks surged by over $124 billion - around $10 billion more than in 2005 - lifting total deposits to $514 billion. In 2006, nef revealed that in spite of the UK Government's commitment to increasing its aid budget, another barely noticed trend, the rise in money from developing nations deposited in UK banks, cast questions over the nation's financial role in relation to developing countries. Overall, a range of factors will be influential but, generally, the removal of controls over the movement of money around the world, and 'capital flight' are both likely factors.

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