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VII.
Expand the Circle of Development by Opening Societies and Building
the Infrastructure of Democracy
"In World War II we fought to make the world
safer, then worked to rebuild it. As we wage war today to keep
the world safe from terror, we must also work to make the world
a better place for all its citizens."
President Bush
Washington, D.C. (Inter-American Development Bank)
March 14, 2002
A world where some live in comfort and plenty, while half of the
human race lives on less than $2 a day, is neither just nor stable.
Including all of the worlds poor in an expanding circle of
developmentand opportunityis a moral imperative and
one of the top priorities of U.S. international policy.
Decades of massive development assistance have failed to spur
economic growth in the poorest countries.Worse, development aid
has often served to prop up failed policies, relieving the pressure
for reform and perpetuating misery. Results of aid are typically
measured in dollars spent by donors, not in the rates of growth
and poverty reduction achieved by recipients. These are the indicators
of a failed strategy.
Working with other nations, the United States is confronting this
failure.We forged a new consensus at the U.N. Conference on Financing
for Development in Monterrey that the objectives of assistanceand
the strategies to achieve those objectivesmust change.
This Administrations goal is to help unleash the productive
potential of individuals in all nations. Sustained growth and poverty
reduction is impossible without the right national policies. Where
governments have implemented real policy changes, we will provide
significant new levels of assistance. The United States and other
developed countries should set an ambitious and specific target:
to double the size of the worlds poorest economies within
a decade.
The United States Government will pursue these major strategies
to achieve this goal:
- Provide resources to aid countries that have met the challenge
of national reform. We propose a 50 percent increase in
the core development assistance given by the United States.While
continuing our present programs, including humanitarian assistance
based on need alone, these billions of new dollars will form
a new Millennium Challenge Account for projects in countries
whose governments rule justly, invest in their people, and
encourage economic freedom. Governments must fight corruption,
respect basic human rights, embrace the rule of law, invest
in health care and education, follow responsible economic policies,
and enable entrepreneurship. The Millennium Challenge Account
will reward countries that have demonstrated real policy change
and challenge those that have not to implement reforms.
- Improve the effectiveness of the World Bank and other development
banks in raising living standards. The United States is
committed to a comprehensive reform agenda for making the World
Bank and the other multilateral development banks more effective
in improving the lives of the worlds poor.We have reversed
the downward trend in U.S. contributions and proposed an 18
percent increase in the U.S. contributions to the International
Development Association (IDA)the World Banks fund
for the poorest countriesand the African Development
Fund. The key to raising living standards and reducing poverty
around the world is increasing productivity growth, especially
in the poorest countries.We will continue to press the multilateral
development banks to focus on activities that increase economic
productivity, such as improvements in education, health, rule
of law, and private sector development. Every project, every
loan, every grant must be judged by how much it will increase
productivity growth in developing countries.
- Insist upon measurable results to ensure that development
assistance is actually making a difference in the lives of
the worlds poor. When it comes to economic development,
what really matters is that more children are getting a better
education, more people have access to health care and clean
water, or more workers can find jobs to make a better future
for their families.We have a moral obligation to measure the
success of our development assistance by whether it is delivering
results. For this reason, we will continue to demand that our
own development assistance as well as assistance from the multilateral
development banks has measurable goals and concrete benchmarks
for achieving those goals. Thanks to U.S. leadership, the recent
IDA replenishment agreement will establish a monitoring and
evaluation system that measures recipient countries progress.
For the first time, donors can link a portion of their contributions
to IDA to the achievement of actual development results, and
part of the U.S. contribution is linked in this way.We will
strive to make sure that the World Bank and other multilateral
development banks build on this progress so that a focus on
results is an integral part of everything that these institutions
do.
- Increase the amount of development assistance that is provided
in the form of grants instead of loans. Greater use of
results-based grants is the best way to help poor countries
make productive investments, particularly in the social sectors,
without saddling them with ever-larger debt burdens. As a result
of U.S. leadership, the recent IDA agreement provided for significant
increases in grant funding for the poorest countries for education,
HIV/AIDS, health, nutrition, water, sanitation, and other human
needs. Our goal is to build on that progress by increasing
the use of grants at the other multilateral development banks.We
will also challenge universities, nonprofits, and the private
sector to match government efforts by using grants to support
development projects that show results.
- Open societies to commerce and investment. Trade and investment
are the real engines of economic growth. Even if government
aid increases, most money for development must come from trade,
domestic capital, and foreign investment. An effective strategy
must try to expand these flows as well. Free markets and free
trade are key priorities of our national security strategy.
- Secure public health. The scale of the public health
crisis in poor countries is enormous. In countries afflicted
by epidemics and pandemics like HIV/AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis,
growth and development will be threatened until these scourges
can be contained. Resources from the developed world are necessary
but will be effective only with honest governance, which supports
prevention programs and provides effective local infrastructure.
The United States has strongly backed the new global fund for
HIV/AIDS organized by U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan and its
focus on combining prevention with a broad strategy for treatment
and care. The United States already contributes more than twice
as much money to such efforts as the next largest donor. If the
global fund demonstrates its promise, we will be ready to give
even more.
- Emphasize education. Literacy and learning are the foundation
of democracy and development. Only about 7 percent of World Bank
resources are devoted to education. This proportion should grow.
The United States will increase its own funding for education
assistance by at least 20 percent with an emphasis on improving
basic education and teacher training in Africa. The United States
can also bring information technology to these societies, many
of whose education systems have been devastated by HIV/AIDS.
- Continue to aid agricultural development. New technologies,
including biotechnology, have enormous potential to improve crop
yields in developing countries while using fewer pesticides and
less water. Using sound science, the United States should help
bring these benefits to the 800 million people, including 300
million children, who still suffer from hunger and malnutrition.
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