« Free Schooling in Africa. | Main | Workplace Regulation. »

June 30, 2005

Nonsense.

A quite wonderful piece of nonsense in the Guardian today. Well, it would be wonderful if it wasn’t so disgustingly damaging.

If road building is posited as the solution to African poverty, we have learned nothing from history. For the past two centuries, Africa's roads have led to its impoverishment. Its earliest export was the indigenous population consigned as slaves to the Americas. The trade ended in the 1860s and was succeeded by a new wave of exploitation. European traders realised they could use Africa's cheap labour to extract its abundant minerals and grow cash crops to export to Europe. To this end, Europe had to control Africa, and so the colonial invasion began.

By 1900 conquest was complete. African labour was now used to create wealth from Africa's resources for the benefit of Europe. In his economic history of Africa, Walter Rodney describes how its transport infrastructure was built to that end: "Means of communication were not constructed in the colonial period so that Africans could visit their friends. Nor were they laid down to facilitate internal trade in African commodities. There were no roads connecting different colonies or different parts of the same colony to meet Africa's needs and development. All roads and railways led down to the sea. They were built to extract gold or cotton and to make business possible for the trading companies and for white settlers."

The improved transport system enabled foreign companies to make profits, but the companies preferred to fund the costs of construction through foreign loans, thereby putting in place the foundations of African debt.

After the demise of colonialism in the second half of the 20th century, the haemorrhage of African wealth continued. Africa was locked into a global economic system rigged by the rich countries. Trade barriers ensured that Africa was denied its share of the value added in the manufacturing process - not least because the commodity market was controlled by foreign companies, resulting in low prices for African exports but high prices for imports. Africa was locked into exporting more and more for less and less; its transport infrastructure proved inadequate and so its dependence on loans remained. Currently, transport accounts for more than 25% of World Bank lending to sub-Saharan Africa, around $5,367m in 2005. Most of this is for building roads.

We are now expected to believe that if Africa had a more efficient transport infrastructure it would be able to export more effectively to western countries and expand its economy. Lowering the cost of transport, we are told, would reverse the historical flow of wealth. The African economy would develop along the same lines as the carbon-hungry affluent world, but in a sufficiently sustainable way to save the planet. It is a tall order.

They’re right that the colonial era infrastructure was based on the idea of getting things down to the sea, not on trade within the regions. So what should we do about that? Obviously, help to build a transport infrastructure that does actually facilitate trade between the regions (we might also point out to them that lowering tariffs mutually would be a good idea...low or no tariff access to the rich world is all well and good but many of the gains from trade will come from regional and local specialization).

And what do these giant brains suggest?

Tony Blair and the Commission for Africa mistakenly believe that more road building will enable Africa's economy to prosper. However, reducing transport costs will, as the commission acknowledges, greatly increase traffic volumes, thereby worsening climate change. And Africa will experience some of its most severe impacts.

Contraction and Convergence changes the direction of policy from aid for road building to payments to the poor of Africa for their unused carbon rations. This process will enable the African economy to develop, but in a uniquely African way. The affluent west can and should repay some of the wealth it has stolen from Africa. Funding for healthcare, HIV prevention, education and security is urgently needed. But Africa does not need the crumbs from the white man's carbon banquet to build more roads.

Yes! Carbon Trading! The cure for all our ills!.

What they are actually suggesting is that Africa not develop a better transport infrastructure and we pay them not to do so. That is, that they should stay poor and stuck in misery because...well, because why?

This process will enable the African economy to develop, but in a uniquely African way.

God forbid that the happy darkies and dancing picanninies should actualy become capitalist, or wealthy, or be able to feed their children or anything. No, no, far better that they remain different, unable to follow the only method we have as yet found to create a modicum of material wealth, for they are different than we.

This is disgusting racist tosh and The Guardian should be thoroughly ashamed of publishing it. Whether Africa develops along individualistic lines, communal, social, tribal, whatever, they still need a transport infrastructure as it is the most basic necessity for such development. The one they have won’t do it. Whether such infrastructure should be funded privately, publicly, via aid or whatever is a different matter but to state that they shouldn’t have one because they’re different  is worthy of the most appalling racists...these Africans, hopeless, just can’t do a thing with them.

June 30, 2005 in Make Poverty History | Permalink

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341c2d3e53ef00d8344b8d7d53ef

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Nonsense.:

Comments

Fortunately, apart from the briefest of spells under Italy, Ethiopia avoided being colonised, which explains its vast prosperity today.

Posted by: dearieme | Jun 30, 2005 2:00:25 PM

My only visit to Africa was to Angola in 2003. When I asked our interpreter, a native Angolan,what the country needed most, he said roads.

You're right. The Guardian piece is "disgusting racist tosh".

Posted by: pdberger | Jun 30, 2005 4:37:42 PM

"..enable the African economy to develop, but in a uniquely African way.."

I see what they mean - "Africans should ensure they just stick to making those cute ethnic carvings that we Guardian readers like to bring back to amuse our friends at parties".

I suspect you'd never find such garbage in the so-called 'right wing' press! Still, it's an intersting chance to see what happens when two competing 'grand ideas' collide. In this case, environmentalism seems to be trumping Third World development. Wonder why that is..?

Posted by: JuliaM | Jul 1, 2005 8:48:40 AM

The Grauniad! will you never learn?
written by liberal nutters for liberal nutters and not an effective thought between them.

Posted by: tim moody | Oct 9, 2007 11:42:43 PM

Post a comment