Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Francis Fukuyama reviews two books on the problems with development in Africa:

Natural resources, whether diamonds or oil or timber, have quickly turned into a curse, because they greatly raise the stakes of the political struggle. Ethnicity and tribe, social constructs of often dubious historical provenance, have been exploited by political leaders in their quests for power. The advent of democracy has not changed the aims of politics but simply shifted the method of struggle. Only thus can we explain a phenomenon like Nigeria, which took in some $300 billion in oil revenues over a generation and yet saw declining per capita income during that same period.

Also note this interesting piece, arguing that you should support small, and only small, NGOs.

1 comment:

Katie B said...

I like Scott MacLennan's simple argument:

Skip the audits and heavy-duty report writing and verify with a small team equipped with a camera. A picture is worth a thousand words (or reports) it's there or it isn't and the camera tells you. NGOs with barely enough budget to survive have little motivation and opportunity to corrupt the process.(You missed a great quote, so I thought I'd offer it here.)