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Online this week: Dambisa Moyo interviewed

Susha Ireland
moyo

Zambian economist Dambisa Moyo

Also online this month is an exclusive interview by ASH Smyth with Dambisa Moyo, former employee of the World Bank and Goldman Sachs and author of Dead Aid: Why Aid Is Not Working and How There Is a Better Way for Africa (Allen Lane). Since its publication earlier this year, Moyo’s book has attracted worldwide attention for its forthright argument that foreign aid is not helping—and perhaps is damaging—most African countries. (Read Prospect’s review by Kevin Watkins here.) Last month, Time magazine named her as one of the world’s 100 most influential people.

As Moyo acknowledges in the interview, she is not the first to make this claim about aid, but is perhaps to first to offer a comprehensive list of economic policies for nations to follow instead. Will African leaders step up and follow her advice? Leave your thoughts below.

Prospect online this week: the trouble with Dead Aid

Tom Chatfield
Is western aid a gift or a curse for Africa?

Is western aid a gift or a curse for Africa?

In a web-exclusive article for Prospect this week, Kevin Watkins—an expert on international development and aid, and Senior Visiting Research Fellow at Oxford University’s Global Economic Governance Programme—looks at Dambisa Moyo’s book Dead Aid and its controversial thesis that western governments should replace their current aid policy for Africa with “a hefty dose of cold-turkey.” What should we make of this radical position?, he asks: “Is it time for Bono and Bob Geldof to stop haranguing rich world leaders for a better deal for Africa? Should Oxfam campaigners be matching under the banner ‘Turn off the Aid Taps Now’?”

The answer, Watkins suggests, is far more complex than Moyo’s analysis allows, most centrally because of Dead Aid’s “failure to explore why past aid has delivered so little.” As he puts it, the fact that aid policies themselves have failed to solve Africa’s problems is as inconclusive a proof of their uselessness as the argument that “fire engines cause fires because you find them near burning houses.” The question of what does and can work is, Watkins argues, a hugely important one for the 21st century to answer when faced by the appalling conditions in which hundreds of millions of Africans live. But simply turning off the taps is no solution. As ever, let us know what you think below.