CGD in the News

Self-reliance or Smart Engagement? (Express Tribune)

July 13, 2011

CGD's Commitment to Development Index was mentioned in an Express Tribune article.

From the Article

Having failed to ignite a revolution with their fiery speeches, the fierce, self-appointed defenders of Pakistan’s interests are now focusing their energies on preaching the virtues of national self-reliance. Their definition of self-reliance remains vague. However, their ire has focused mostly on portraying foreign aid, especially US and IMF aid, as the source of all our ills. The begging bowl must be broken, we are told, if Pakistan is to prosper. Trade, not aid, is the panacea, the sages suggest.

What are the pros and cons of aid and other forms of external flows such as trade and investment? A strict policy of self-reliance would mean shunning them all. North Korea is currently the most adept practitioner of such isolationism. It is also among the poorest countries globally. Hermitism constitutes a splendid individual strategy for gaining nirvana but represents poor national policy. The proponents of self-reliance may protest that they object only to aid. However, foreign aid is not all bad nor are other types of external flows without problems.

While living in splendid isolation clearly ensures national ruin, the one-size-fits-all and the one-step-open-all form of economic openness preached by the IMF is also inappropriate for developing countries. Rather than the development ladder that their proponents present them as, such policies constitute a ladder and snakes game where spectacular, sudden and spurious short-term growth is often followed by steep climbdowns, as financial bubbles burst. The recent economic openness and consequent development of China and India is presented as the perfect validation of neoliberal prescriptions. While both countries have certainly opened up, they do not subscribe to neoliberal policies and are still classified as ‘mostly unfree’ by the US-based Heritage Foundation’s Index of Economic Freedom. Thus, national success lies neither in isolation nor unfettered openness but in smart, selective external engagement.

Foreign aid often suffers from high overheads, corruption and politicisation. However, well-disbursed aid clearly benefits developing countries, especially in the social sectors since the fruits of trade and investment often do not flow to the poorest. Ironically, the Pakistani firebrand critics of US aid are not entirely wrong. The US is the most miserly donor, with the lowest aid-to-national income ratio among rich countries. It does not even rank among the top 10 on the US-based Centre for Global Development’s Commitment to Development Index, which measures the quality of bilateral aid. Its aid is linked very closely with its foreign policies. Thus, the three biggest recipients of US aid are not the three poorest countries globally, but strategic middle and high-income countries —Israel, Egypt and Pakistan.

Read it here.