Jeffrey Sachs warns of red tape tying up the G-8 food security pledge

In his lat­est com­men­tary, Jef­frey Sachs applauds the G-8 deci­sion to put 20 bil­lion dol­lars into agriculture.

A few years ago, research con­ducted by the UN’s Mil­len­nium Project found that food pro­duc­tion could dra­mat­i­cally increase if small, peas­ant farm­ers are given good seeds and fer­til­izer to grow with. So the G-8 pledge of money hopes to give more of these inputs to small farmers.

How­ever, Sachs says that a lot could stand in the way of get­ting the inputs to the farm­ers. Sachs warns against the aid money being tied up in bureau­cra­cies and red tape. We found his lat­est com­men­tary at the Busi­ness World Online.

A con­sen­sus has now been reached on the need to assist small­hold­ers, but obsta­cles remain. Per­haps the main risk is that the “aid bureau­cra­cies” now trip over each other to try to get their hands on the $20 bil­lion, so that much of it gets taken up by meet­ings, expert con­sul­ta­tions, over­head, reports, and fur­ther meet­ings. “Part­ner­ships” of donors can become an expen­sive end in them­selves, merely delay­ing real action.

If donor gov­ern­ments really want results, they should take the money out of the hands of 30 or more sep­a­rate aid bureau­cra­cies and pool it in one or two places, the most log­i­cal being the World Bank in Wash­ing­ton and the Inter­na­tional Fund for Agri­cul­tural Devel­op­ment (IFAD) in Rome. One or both of these agen­cies would then have an account with sev­eral bil­lion dollars.

Gov­ern­ments in hunger-stricken regions, espe­cially Africa, would then sub­mit national action plans that would pro­vide details on how they would use the donor funds to get high-yield seeds, fer­til­izer, irri­ga­tion, farm tools, stor­age silos, and local advice to impov­er­ished farm­ers. An inde­pen­dent expert panel would review the national plans to ver­ify their sci­en­tific and man­age­r­ial coher­ence. Assum­ing that a plan passes muster, the money to sup­port it would quickly be dis­bursed. After­ward, each national pro­gram would be mon­i­tored, audited, and evaluated.

This approach is straight­for­ward, effi­cient, account­able, and sci­en­tif­i­cally sound. Two major recent suc­cess sto­ries in aid have used this approach: the Global Alliance on Vac­cines and Immu­niza­tions, which suc­cess­fully gets immu­niza­tions to young chil­dren, and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB, and Malaria, which sup­ports national action plans to bat­tle these killer dis­eases. Both have saved mil­lions of lives dur­ing the past decade, and have paved the way to a new more effi­cient and sci­en­tif­i­cally sound method of devel­op­ment assistance.

Not sur­pris­ingly, many UN agen­cies and aid agen­cies in rich coun­tries fight this approach. All too often, the fight is about turf, rather than about the most effec­tive way to speed help to the poor. Obama, Rudd, Zap­a­tero, and other forward-thinking lead­ers can there­fore make a huge dif­fer­ence by fol­low­ing up on their pledges at the G-8 and insist­ing that the aid really works. The bureau­cra­cies must be bypassed to get help to where it is needed: in the soil tilled by the world’s poor­est farm families.

This article is from Poverty News Blog: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/blogspot/EOch/~3/EyRx2UAVprw/jeffrey-sachs-warns-of-red-tape-tying.html




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