Friday, January 15, 2010

More on the Difficulty of Development

David Brooks today reiterates something I was just writing about:
We don’t know how to use aid to reduce poverty. Over the past few decades, the world has spent trillions of dollars to generate growth in the developing world. The countries that have not received much aid, like China, have seen tremendous growth and tremendous poverty reductions. The countries that have received aid, like Haiti, have not.

In the recent anthology “What Works in Development?,” a group of economists try to sort out what we’ve learned. The picture is grim. There are no policy levers that consistently correlate to increased growth. There is nearly zero correlation between how a developing economy does one decade and how it does the next. There is no consistently proven way to reduce corruption. Even improving governing institutions doesn’t seem to produce the expected results.

The chastened tone of these essays is captured by the economist Abhijit Banerjee: “It is not clear to us that the best way to get growth is to do growth policy of any form. Perhaps making growth happen is ultimately beyond our control.”

Brooks goes on to say that the problem is cultural, and that many places, including Haiti, have cultures "resistant to development." I would put this a little differently. I think that by "development" we mean "becoming more western," so to say that a culture is resistant to development is to say that the people don't want to give up their old ways.

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