POVERTY, ECONOMIC activity, ECONOMIC expansion, AGRICULTURAL economics, DEVELOPING countries, DEVELOPED countries
Abstract
For the sake of less developed countries, it is time to adjust the discussion of international development assistance on poverty reduction. This article attempts to do so by reviewing new and old literature explaining why some countries are rich and others are poor. History has repeatedly shown that building up capabilities in manufacturing and improving the productivity of agriculture are the keys to wealth creation and long-term sustained poverty reduction. Furthermore, industrialisation and increased agricultural productivity are interdependent processes. Discussion about ending world poverty needs to be shifted back to consideration of economic transformation and the role foreign aid can reasonably play in achieving these objectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
FOREIGN aid (American), GOVERNMENT policy, POVERTY, DEVELOPING countries, DEVELOPED countries, NATIONAL income, ECONOMIC development, DEVELOPMENT economics, INCOME inequality, GOVERNMENT accountability, GOVERNMENT liability, ECONOMIC policy
Abstract
The accountability movement in public policy hails a new programme for US foreign assistance - the Millennium Challenge Account established in 2004 with the aim of 'picking winners' for grants among developing countries based on their demonstrated quality of governance. This article uses the MCA's own rating system to dispute its claim to know in advance which countries are best positioned to meet major development goals. High governance scores alone bear little or no relationship to growth in national income or decline in poverty. Attempting to measure public-policy performance limits the range of choice available to policy-makers, and may inadvertently limit true performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]