Anti-malaria drugs and mosquito nets paid for by the British government fail to reach villages across Africa, and textbooks in local languages never arrive at schools.
A comprehensive and understated survey of seventeen countries receiving budget support from DFID published by Birmingham University in 2006 finds,
“…over-optimistic assumptions about the ability of international partners (meaning DFID) to influence matters that are deeply rooted in partner countries’ political systems.” Budget support, they conclude, “…does not transform underlying political realities.”
Attempts to improve efficiency according to “agreed performance targets and conditions,” are always “more significant in the eyes of the donors than in those of the partner governments.”
The American who administers his nation’s aid programme in one central African country laughs at loud at the naivety implicit in DFID’s policy.
Yet, curiously, there is cross-party consensus in Britain in favour of the 1960’s belief that the state can solve any development problem, given a big enough purse. The same parties noisily rejected this mantra in domestic politics twenty years ago.
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