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Author Topic: POVERTY REDUCTION OR POVERTY REINFORCEMENT?  (Read 6205 times)
Tyehimba
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« on: December 21, 2003, 10:03:46 AM »

PRSPS: POVERTY REDUCTION OR POVERTY REINFORCEMENT?
Demba Moussa Dembele

Under pressure from world public opinion, especially from the Jubilee 2000 movement for debt cancellation, the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) proposed the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) Initiative in 1996.
In 1999, the Initiative was revised to include more countries that were left out in its first phase.

But another important characteristic of the “enhanced” Initiative was the addition of a new conditionality, called Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs), which all eligible countries were required to submit in exchange for “debt
relief”. The PRSP requirement was an implicit recognition on the part of the two institutions of the utter failure of structural adjustment policies (SAPs), which, for more than two decades, had been imposed on developing countries,
in exchange for loans.

The PRSPs, we are told, represent a “major departure” from SAPs, in that they are “nationally-owned” and aim at “reducing poverty”, according to the two institutions. But what is the reality behind the rhetoric?

The myth of “national ownership”

If we are to believe the IMF and the World Bank, the PRSPs are “country-driven” and reflect the priorities of each country in its fight against poverty.Accordingly, the PRSPs are drafted after a large “participatory process”, involving the government, civil society organisations (CSOs) and even the
private sector. But in reality, “national ownership” is more theoretical than real.

For one thing, the PRSPs should follow a framework proposed by the International Financial Institutions. That framework, spelled out in a voluminous document called the PRSP Sourcebook published by the IMF (Ames et al., 2001)
proposes “sound macroeconomic policies” to HIPC countries in drafting theirPRSP. It is consistent with the conditionalities attached to the IMF Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGF), the new name of the Enhanced Structural
Adjustment Facility (ESAF).

The compliance with PRGF conditionalities makes the basic macroeconomic framework non negotiable: fiscal austerity; trade and investment liberalization; deregulation of labour and goods markets; emphasis on export-led growth; privatisation of utilities and State-owned enterprises are at the heart of
PRSPs.

So, African governments and civil society organisations (CSOs) are left with only one option: identify areas where safety nets are most needed to “alleviate poverty”. For this reason, African governments tend to put in their PRSPs
what the IMF and the World Bank would like to see in those documents, rather than what their development priorities are.

On the other hand, CSOs have been frustrated by the PRSP process. They found out that they were used more as alibi than considered as true partners whose opinions are valued and taken seriously. In several countries, including
Uganda, Mauritania, Senegal, Tanzania and Mali, CSOs have found themselves as the “guinea pigs” of the PRSP process.

Moreover, democratically-elected bodies, such as National Parliaments, have been ignored by the Bretton Woods Institutions (BWIs). Finally, we know that the final say belongs to the Boards of the two institutions, which should
give their seal of approval to any PRSP before its implementation. Under these circumstances, talking about 'national ownership' is a bit disingenuous, to say the least.

The myth of “pro-poor” policies

It is even more disingenuous on the part of the BWIs to claim that PRSPs contain “pro-poor policies”. As indicated above, the basic macroeconomic framework is the same as the one that underpinned the failed and discredited SAPS. For
this reason, there is a big gap between policies that are in the interests of the poor and most of the recommendations contained in the PRSPs. For instance, low-income and poor groups call for cheaper and more affordable prices of
staple goods and for free access to basic services. This is in contradiction with the delivery of such services by the market, as recommended by the BWIs.

The privatisation of essential services, like water and electricity and the deterioration or privatisation of public services, such as health and education, have never been in the interests of the poor. For instance, the imposition
of user fees on health care or education has led to a sharp drop of hospital attendance and school enrolment from poor or low-income families and increased the gender gap, since girls and women are the main victims of those
policies.

In Senegal, where water is privatised, poor and low-income groups in urban areas pay three to four times more than rich groups. Still in Senegal, the liberalization of the groundnut sector, imposed by the IMF and the World Bank against the will of the government, cost at least 400 jobs following the dissolution of one State-owned enterprise and led millions of peasants and their families to the brink of famine. The Government had to draw up an Emergency Relief Plan worth more than $23 million to avoid a national catastrophe.

On the other hand, price deregulation and the elimination of subsidies have led to the collapse of the purchasing power of average citizens, in particular of low-income groups. This explains, inter alia, why in Senegal more than 64 % of people surveyed in the PRSP document said that their situation has
worsened between 1995 and 2002, a period of so-called “high growth rates”.

Still in Senegal, the liberalization of the groundnut sector, evoked above, led to a sharp fall in agricultural production in 2002. This, in turn, resulted in a more than 50 percent decline in economic growth, from 5.6 % in 2001 to 2.4 % in 2002, according to early estimates. The difference is an annual
income loss of roughly $200 million for a country where two out of three citizens live under the poverty line.

How, in the world, can the IMF and the World Bank claim that such policies aim at “reducing poverty” and are “pro-poor”?

Another example is Zambia, where in less than 10 years, the textile industry was wiped out as a result of sweeping trade liberalization undertaken under the Chiluba regime. The Zambian textile industry fell from 140 units to 8,
shedding in the process more than 90 % of the workforce. In several other countries, local industries have been destroyed by cheap imports of poor quality, in the name of “free trade” imposed by the IMF and the World Bank.

But it is widely documented that trade liberalization is one of the main causes of the widespread poverty experienced in the world as well as the widening gap between the rich and the poor. The latest UNICEF Report, the State of the
World's Children, indicates that in some developing countries more than 90 percent of children under 5 are in absolute poverty. Trade liberalization, deregulation and privatisation are among the factors behind that catastrophic
situation, according to the Report, which was released in October.

Trade liberalization has worsened Africa's terms of trade. A study by the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) in 2001 indicates that if Africa's terms of trade had remained at their 1980 level: - the continent’s share in world trade would have been double its current
share; - average per capita income would have been 50 percent higher; - annual economic growth would have been 1.4 percent higher than.

In light of this, it is clear that trade liberalization has been costly to Africa. It has led to the collapse of the continent's commodity prices, increased its external dependency and destroyed many local industries. The same UNCTAD
study has indicated that Africa's de-industrialization has accelerated since the 1980s.

Still according to that study, capital flight has worsened as a result of financial liberalization. This flight, combined with debt service, has resulted in net financial outflows from Africa to developed countries over the last 20 years. In other words, the poorest continent is financing the richest countries. This is one of the most glaring achievements of the IMF and the
World Bank.

Indeed, more trade and investment liberalization, more deregulation, more privatisation and a further weakening of the State are more likely to generate more poverty than promote economic and social well-being. No wonder in
Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) about 500 million live on less than $2 a day, according to the World Bank. This number is projected to rise to more than 600 million in 2015, despite all the fuss about the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

Therefore, so long as the PRSPs, like the now discredited and failed SAPs, are within the framework of the neolberal model, they will generate more poverty than “reduce” it. And like SAPs, the PRSPs will ultimately fail.

Conclusion

After spreading poverty at an unprecedented scale in Sub-Saharan Africa and in other developing countries, the IMF and the World Bank are trying to mislead world opinion, especially in the North. They make people believe that they are really committed to “reducing poverty.” But the truth is that this has
never been their intention. Their real mission is to promote the interests of global capitalism, by opening Africa's economies to multinational corporations and financial speculators and by transforming them into markets for Northern countries' goods and services.

The true mission of the BWIs in Africa and elsewhere should have been clear to everyone, especially to NGOs familiar with their philosophy and policies..
Yet, some African NGOs, which have been among the leading critics of SAPs and in the forefront of the struggle for debt cancellation, have been misled by the BWIs' rhetoric on PRSPs. These NGOs have found some “merits” to the PRSPs
and think that with the emphasis on more spending for social sectors, like education, health and nutrition, the PRSPs could help “alleviate poverty”.

This is a big mistake. One cannot trust the BWIs to reduce poverty in Africa or elsewhere. So long as they avoid challenging the unequal power relations that define the unfair rules of the international financial and trading system, these institutions will never be in a position to “help” Africa or other
developing countries. In reality, what the IMF and World Bank try to achieve with the PRSPs is to:- create the illusion of “poverty reduction” while pursuing the same failed
and discredited policies, with even more conditionalities;
- promote a superficial “national consensus” on short-term “poverty reduction” programs at the expense of a serious and deep reflection on long-term development policies;
- drive a wedge between “reasonable” and “radical” civil society organisations in Africa;- shift the blame to HIPC countries' governments and citizens for theinevitable failure of the PRSPs.

* Demba Moussa Dembele is Director of the Forum for African Alternatives.
Click on the link below for references to this article.

* Please send comments on this editorial - and other events in Africa - to
editor@pambazuka.org.
Further details: http://www.pambazuka.org

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Tyehimba
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« Reply #1 on: December 21, 2003, 10:15:23 AM »

Thanks  to  Demba Moussa Dembele   for starkly   spelling things out in  his article  "POVERTY REDUCTION OR POVERTY REINFORCEMENT? It cannot get much clearer than that.  All our leaders should have a copy of the article firmly stapled onto their foreheads and forced to read it.

The article gives a moral tale.  If you participate in a process, systems, institutions  or a game, that is not of your own making, and did not contribute or influence the rule  making process. What would you expect. Your interests WILL NOT be reflected and things may be done in  a way that is not   consistent with your  needs, core values and philosophy.

As club members, you do what you are told to do, in order to maintain membership and to receive  it's 'ALLEGED BENEFITS'.
Surely we must now see  that a lot of these benefits are not 'REAL', They are always at the expense of something we hold dear. Like our  sovereignty. The ability to define what we want,  prioritise our problems, formulate our solutions, and  determine the results we need or want.

Yes,  there are  existing  world institutions and ways of doing things. But do they work for us?  Not now,  not  50 years down the line! Despite clear evidence  from over time  (enslavement, colonialism, neocolonism, debt payments, outright theft by foreign multinational / supra nationals the main beneficiaries of  neo liberal policies  and now WTO  with their  friggin free trade rhetoric)  and yet  we still persist in playing in some else's game and than wonder why the outcome is not so favourable to our needs and interests.

We were not involved in the  construction of  'the framework',  not involved in the creation of the rules,  not involved in determining the logic behind the schemes,  and not involved in the rule changes when modification is
required. We participate (as if there is no other choice), become earnest members of the 'club', because we may receive aid, grants and are 'country friendly' enough to attract investment. it seems that is the Bottom line.
That way of thinking constantly puts us in a subordinate position, and than we are surprised at why we are not respected or taken seriously in negotiations within these  institutions and their systems  and processes ...duh.......

China made  choices in their long slow struggle. It looked inwards developed their political and managerial style, and when they got strong they started to look outwards. and look where they are today.   America and the rest  of the world are in quiet fear of Chinas' potential global economic strength
and numbers!   Not one of us do not have something in our homes that is not 'made in China'.

As a consequence of,  China doing it their way. China has a lot  of global respect and admiration. As a nation they have shown fortitude, patience and dignity.  China stood steadfast; they did the job, they worked,  they planned, they  sweated!   and it is known they did it their way. In line
with their traditions, culture and heritage.  Who disrespects the Chinese? NO ONE!

Our leaders truly, want it easy. To tap into something that exists. Some other nations', institutions, systems, processes, patterns of logic, language and rationale. and than wonder why the outcomes are not want they desire.  If you play in a 'game'  that you do not own,  what do you truly expect?   The deal/ status quo,  is too good to give up, may tinker with it to give an appearance of trying to be fair but why change it substantially? So when we ask for debt relief?  or get involved in the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiatives , what should we expect? we have to follow the rules laid down and produce begging documents  (poverty reduction strategy
papers)  with contents that we know will please and in compliance  with the game that is being played......

Countries with huge debts should say   "CAN'T PAY, WON'T PAY",  In fact what do we owe? We know how / why those debts came about and the injustice of the calculations of the  interest payments of these debts. What do we owe? Infact we are owed!  Where are the apologies and reparations
for centuries of organised theft from the continent?

Countries in debt  should declare themselves bankrupt  (that is not a bad thing, it gives you breathing space)  and start the long slow struggle to rehabilitate our economies, rehabilitate  our  thinking, rehabilitate  our way of doing things and set up our own structures in our  image. it  will be
a hard slog, but in the long term the results are more enduring and sustainable. When you  play someone else's game, misery eventually unfolds......  in reality it is the ''over developed countries' game, we cannot win in that areana. We should set up own own game, and ask them to play if theydare.

Surely we have had enough of  'disingenuous policies and initiatives' from the West's Institutions and Systems. Anyway why do we constantly expect to be helped?   that  permanently  reinforce poverty in our countries and our
subordinate position to the rest of the world.

How long do we stay labeled poor?  When we ARE NOT POOR ....  Why do we get hooked  in that jargon. We are rich. We are rich in natural resources, human resources and cultural heritage.  We have all the resources we need on the
continent . What we are poor in is;

* poor managers that cannot organise sustained growth,
* poor caretakers that allow others to loot, buy  and control our resources cheaply
* poor leaders that are political infants that criminally  allow
themselves and the countries they lead to accept unfavorable terms and conditions, they follow an agenda  and incapable of setting an agenda that works for the continent

We are too trusting and too reliant of Western institutions, constructs, systems and dogma. When European  nations  were developing and evolving their structures, political and economic logic, did they privatise their essential resources?  or was everything state owned and controlled  for essential protection of  health, education and  water?    in order to allow these services to  be  universally provided  fairly and justly to all.   Why do we buy into dangerous  IMF/WORLD's  '' rubbish neo liberal policy prescriptions'?

If you stay in the club, what would you expect....Even  50 CENTS in his   'in da club'  track,  'get rich or die trying'  album, provides more cogent economic lessons than you will find any world bank document, and guess who we respect?    

Yeno Thorli
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