Changing the Face of Foreign Aid
US to Begin New Approach on Foreign Aid.
WASHINGTON - A revolution in U.S. foreign aid, rewarding countries for how they govern, is finally ready to get under way, almost two years after first promised by the Bush administration.The program will favor countries whose governments are judged to be just rulers, welcoming hosts for foreign investment and promoters of projects to meet their people’s basic health and education needs.
Corrupt police states need not apply.
Administration officials expect this year to inaugurate President Bush’s plan, known as the Millennium Challenge Account, which he outlined in March 2002.
It contemplated $5 billion annually for the program starting in 2006, a 50 percent increase over the base foreign aid budget of $10 billion.
The administration had hoped for $1.3 billion for the current budget year, which began Oct. 1, as a starter; Congress has provided nothing so far but is expected to approve $1 billion after it reconvenes this month.
Bush’s initiative came six months after the Sept. 11 attacks and clearly has a national security component.
“Poverty, weak institutions and corruption can make weak states vulnerable to terrorist networks and drug cartels within their borders,” according to Bush’s National Security Strategy report from September 2002.
It should be very interesting to see the criteria for judging which countries deserve US aid. Will the Palestinian Authority qualify? Will Egypt?