Fighting Poverty
is Big Business. But Who Profits the Most?
Aids & NGOs
……. Or Business & Entrepreneurship
Introduction
I want to start by
thanking Mr. Malcolm Speller for the presentation of this video. I am very sure
that there is a significant difference between now and before in my thinking
about poverty reduction with respect to the role of NGOs and Businesses.
I have always admired
great philanthropist like Bill Gate, Oprah, Angelina Julie, David Beckam and
others. My thinking was that these are great people with beautiful mindsets and
with the intention of making the world a better place. The truth is I was wrong.
This God sent video is an eye opening and a stimulant to rethink development
from a different perspective.
Who
Profits the Most?
After watching the
video, I realized that there are four persons who stands to profit or loose the
most and this depends on which side they are coming from. International
organisations from donor countries, their business, government and citizens OR
Businesses, government, local organisations and citizens from receptor
countries?
|
No.
|
Donors Camp
|
Receptors Camp
|
|
1
|
Governments
|
Governments
|
|
2
|
Organisations
|
Organisations
|
|
3
|
Businesses
|
Businesses
|
|
4
|
Citizens
|
Citizens
|
The truth is, all of
these people benefits the most, and it depends on which camp they belong. It also depend on what kind of aid is
provided and how the aids are provided.
Donors
Camp
The Donors camp
includes the citizens, businesses, organisations and government of countries
who provide aids for developing countries or to the poor who are their subject
of assistance.
The Citizens pay taxes
to the government who use some of these tax money for aids. Business in these
camps are usually the ones to produces donated materials and items to these
developing nations. The companies produces at high quantities so they pay huge
taxes to their government for their activities. The government uses this money
to develop their nation create jobs for the citizens. Organisations in this
camp benefits for the cash to paint a terrible picture for developing
countries. Their organisations and workers benefit tremendously from this opportunity.
So in actual sense, it means big business for them. To the best of my
knowledge, everybody profits the most in this camp.
Receptors
Camp
The Receptor camp
includes the citizens, businesses, organisations and government of countries
who receive aids from donor agencies and are usually placed at the end of the
continuum.
The citizens of these
camp are usually considered to be the poorest, and needing ultimate assistance.
They tend to lose the most. With very high unemployment rate and little
opportunity to start up a business. Again little or no opportunity, a damage
caused by international organisations in collaboration with some local
organisations. The business environment is also infected by the aid syndrome.
Local business cannot compete because products and services are heavily
subsidized through aids. The Governments who fall in the temptation of getting
free or cheap services don’t know how less they may benefit from their own
economy. At the end almost everyone in this camp profits the less if at all
there is a possibility of a long term profit.
Case
Studies
|
No.
|
Examples
|
Who profits?
|
Who does not
profit?
|
|
1
|
Free
Mosquito Nets in Cameroon (Imported from abroad)
|
-
Companies producing the mosquito nets from donor or other countries,
-
organisations from donor countries and
-
Sometimes local organisations who fits on the crumbs and do most of the work.
|
Mosquito
net business in Cameroon is simply a dream. This companies cannot survive.
They cannot sell products distributed for free. Because they cannot survive,
some citizens who were to be employed remains unemployed thus doing no help
to the poverty level. The government cannot get taxes from closed businesses
either. The production of mosquito nets in Cameroon would have fetch the government
a huge sum of money as well as employment for its citizens.
In
Cameroon over 12,000,000 mosquito nets have been distributed. If a mosquito
net cost at least 5,000frs. It thus implies that the mosquito net business
would have earned 60 Billion francs. Let us imagine how much the government
will tax this company. We can also imagine how many workers will earn
salaries from this business.
|
|
2
|
Free
Medical Equipment
|
Companies
of medical equipment from donor country. Organisations who carry them to the
presumed land of the needy. And the local organisations who benefits from the
crumps as well.
|
All
in the receptor camp, except local NGOs who benefit a bit from the Aids.
|
|
3
|
Education
|
Donor’s
Camp benefits.
Local
NGOs benefit to a lesser extent.
|
The
education market apart from regular schooling market seems almost impossible
to emerge. Some of the specialist in education here in Cameroon includes;
Educational Psychologist, Special Educators, Curriculum Designers, and Educational
Administrators. Setting up of Clinics and consultancy that works in these
domains seems almost impossible. The free services provided by the aid
community makes it almost impossible for this specialist to put a price on
their services.
Businesses
don’t also profit in this domain, the government also does not profit from
tax levy.
|
|
4
|
Agriculture
|
|
Subsidized
food stuff like rice and other products also kills local businesses in the
Agricultural sector. A good example is Ndop rice which is our own local rice
produced in the North west Region Cameroon. Other imported rice have over
shadowed the market. Local farmers work day and night but they cannot still
compete because of cheap imported products. Agriculture business also
suffers.
|
***Some Celebrities and
big business donors use the aid medium to make their name, advertise themselves
while painting a pathetic image about these receptors countries (low income
country).
What happens to our
mindset when we think that free or cheap services is the best way for us to
develop and come out of poverty? Will shall wait to receive at all times and
nothing will be created. From such a mentality we become beggars for life.
To Conclude, NGOs and
Businesses gain in the donor camp and NGOs gain to a lesser extent in the
Receptor Camps and Businesses are the biggest losers in the receptor Camp.
Suggestions
Aid should be provided
only in emergency situations and
this should be temporal.
Aids should be geared
towards supporting businesses to grow in these developing countries.
STOP Aids that compete
and damages our local markets.
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