Misguided compassion hurts the poor
A scramble for rotting fish: decades of foreign aid have not helped Tanzanians. |
By Theodore Dalrymple
To sympathize with those who are less fortunate
is honorable and decent. A man able to commiserate only with himself would
surely be neither admirable nor attractive. But every virtue can become
deformed by excess, insincerity, or loose thinking into an opposing vice.
Sympathy, when excessive, moves toward sentimental condescension and eventually
disdain; when insincere, it becomes unctuously hypocritical; and when
associated with loose thinking, it is a bad guide to policy and frequently has
disastrous results. It is possible, of course, to combine all three errors.
No subject provokes the deformations of
sympathy more than poverty. I recalled this recently when asked to speak on a
panel about child poverty in Britain in the wake of the economic and financial
crisis. I said that the crisis had not affected the problem of child poverty in
any fundamental way. Britain remained what it had long been--one of the worst
countries in the Western world in which to grow up. This was not the
consequence of poverty in any raw economic sense; it resulted from the various
kinds of squalor--moral, familial, psychological, social, educational, and
cultural--that were particularly prevalent in the country
My remarks were poorly received by the
audience, which consisted of professional alleviators of the effects of social
pathology, such as social workers and child psychologists. One fellow panelist
was the chief of a charity devoted to the abolition of child poverty (whose
largest source of funds, like that of most important charities in Britain's
increasingly corporatist society, was the government). She dismissed my
comments as nonsense. For her, poverty was simply the "maldistribution of
resources"; we could thus distribute it away. And in her own terms, she
was right, for her charity stipulated that one was poor if one had an income of
less than 60 percent of the median national income.
This definition, of course, has odd logical
consequences: for example, that in a society of billionaires, multimillionaires
would be poor. A society in which every single person grew richer could also be
one in which poverty became more widespread than before; and one in which
everybody grew poorer might be one in which there was less poverty than before.
More important, however, is that the redistributionist way of thinking denies
agency to the poor. By destroying people's self-reliance, it encourages dependency
and corruption--not only in Britain, but everywhere in the world where it is
held.
I first started thinking about poverty when I
worked as a doctor during the early eighties in the Gilbert Islands, a group of
low coral atolls in an immensity of the Central Pacific. Much of the population
still lived outside the money economy, and the per-capita GDP was therefore
extremely low. It did not seem to me, however, that the people were very poor.
Their traditional way of life afforded them what anthropologists call a
generous subsistence; their coconuts, fish, and taros gave them an
adequate--and, in some respects, elegant--living. They lived in an almost
invariant climate, with the temperature rarely departing more than a few
degrees from 85. Their problems were illness and boredom, which left them avid
for new possibilities when they came into contact with the outside world.
Life in the islands taught me a lively
disrespect for per-capita GDP as an accurate measure of poverty. I read
recently in a prominent liberal newspaper that "the majority of Nigerians
live on less than $1 a day." This statement is clearly designed less to
convey an economic truth than to provoke sympathy, evoke guilt, and drum up
support for foreign aid in the West, where an income of less than $1 a day
would not keep body and soul together for long; whereas it is frequently said
that one of Nigeria's problems is the rapid increase in its population.
As it happens, an island next door (in Pacific
terms) to the Gilbert Islands was home to an experiment in the sudden, unearned
attainment of wealth. Nauru, a speck in the ocean just ten miles around, for a
time became the richest place on earth. The source of its sudden riches was
phosphate rock. Australia had long administered the island, and the British
Phosphate Commission had mined the phosphate on behalf of Australia, Britain,
and New Zealand; but when Nauru became independent in 1968, the 4,000 or so Nauruans
gained control of the phosphate, which made them wealthy. The money came as a
gift. Most Nauruans made no contribution to the extraction of the rock, beyond
selling their land. The expertise, the management, the labor, and the
transportation arrived from outside. Within just a few years, the Nauruans went
from active subsistence to being rentiers.
The outcome was instructive. The Nauruans
became bored and listless. One of their chief joys became eating to excess. On
average, they consumed 7,000 calories per day, mainly rice and canned beef, and
they drank Fanta and Chateau d'Yquem by the caseload. They became the fattest
people on earth, and, genetically predisposed already to the illness, 50
percent of them became diabetic. It was my experience of Nauru that first
suggested to me the possibility that abruptly distributing wealth has
psychological effects as well as economic ones.
I next spent a few years (1983 to 1986) in
Tanzania, a country that presented another experiment in treating poverty as a
matter of maldistribution. Julius Nyerere, the first--and, until then, the
only--president, had been in charge for more than 20 years. His honorific,
Mwalimu--Teacher--symbolized his relation to his country and his people. He had
become a Fabian socialist at the University of Edinburgh, and a more
red-blooded one (according to his former ally and foreign minister, Oscar
Kambona, who fell out with him over the imposition of a one-party socialist
state) after receiving a delirious, orchestrated reception in Mao's China.
One can say a number of things in Nyerere's
favor, at least by the standards of post-independence African leaders. He was
not a tribalist who awarded all the plum jobs to his own kind. He was not a
particularly sanguinary dictator, though he did not hesitate to imprison his
opponents. Nor was he spectacularly corrupt in the manner of, say, Bongo of
Gabon or Moi of Kenya. He was outwardly charming and modest and must have been
one of the only people to have had good personal relations with both Queen
Elizabeth II and Kim Il-sung.
Nyerere wished the poor well; he was full of
sympathy and good intentions. He thought that, being so uneducated, ignorant,
and lacking in resources, the poor could not spare the time and energy--and
were, in any case, unqualified--to make decisions for themselves. They were
also lazy: Nyerere at one point complained about the millions of his fellow
countrymen who spent half their time drinking, gossiping, and dancing (which
suggested to me that their lives were not altogether intolerable).
But Nyerere knew what to do for them. In 1967,
he issued his famous Arusha Declaration, named for the town where he made it,
committing Tanzania to socialism and vowing to end the exploitation of man by
man that made some people rich and others poor. On this view of things, the
greater accumulation of wealth, either by some individuals or by some nations,
could be explained only by exploitation, a morally illicit process. The
explanation for poverty was simple: some people or nations appropriated the
natural wealth of mankind for themselves. It was therefore a necessary
condition of improvement, as well as a form of restitution, that they no longer
be allowed to do so and that their wealth be redistributed. So Tanzania
nationalized the banks, appropriated commercial farms, took over all major
industry, controlled prices, and put all export trade under the control of
paragovernmental organizations.
There followed the forced collectivization of
the rural population--which is to say, the majority of the population--into
Ujamaa villages. Ujamaa is Swahili for "extended family"; as Nyerere
insisted, all men were brothers. By herding the people into collectivized
villages, Nyerere thought, the government could provide services, such as
schools and clinics. After all, rich countries had educated and healthy
populations; was it not evident that if the Tanzanian people were educated and
healthy, wealth would result? Besides, collectively the villagers could buy
fertilizer, perhaps even tractors, which they never could have done as
individuals (assuming, as Nyerere did, that without government action there
would be no economic growth). Unfortunately, the people did not want to herd
fraternally into villages; they wanted to stay put on their scattered ancestral
lands. Several thousand were arrested and imprisoned.
The predictable result of these efforts at
preventing the exploitation of man by man was the collapse of production,
pauperizing an already poor country. Tanzania went from being a significant
exporter of agricultural produce to being utterly dependent on food imports,
even for subsistence, in just a few years. Peasants who had once grown coffee
and sold it to Indian merchants for soap, salt, and other goods uprooted their
bushes and started growing meager amounts of corn for their own consumption. No
reason existed for doing anything else because growers now had to sell their
produce to paragovernmental procurement agencies, which paid them later, if at
all, at derisory prices in a worthless currency that peasants called
"pictures of Nyerere."
Nyerere blamed shortages of such commonplaces
as soap and salt on speculators and exploiters, rather than on his own economic
policies. He made the shortages the pretext for so-called crackdowns, often
directed at Indian traders, which eventually drove them from the country.
Nyerere's policies were no more soundly based than those of Idi Amin, who drove
out the Indians more brutally. Anti-Semitism, it has often been said, is the
socialism of fools. I would put things another way: socialism is the
anti-Semitism of intellectuals.
With foreign exchange exhausted, only the funds
that the honey-tongued Nyerere continued to obtain from the World Bank and
foreign donors enabled the country to avoid mass starvation. By the time I
reached Tanzania, the country had become completely dependent on handouts. Aid
represented two-thirds of Tanzania's foreign-exchange earnings; one might say
that its largest export was requests for such aid. In the rural area where I lived,
the people dressed in hand-me-downs sent by European charities. A single egg
was a luxury. One of the goals that had induced Nyerere to move to socialism,
ironically, was national "self-reliance."
The foreign aid that allowed Nyerere's policies
to continue well after the economic disaster was evident had precisely the
baleful effects that Peter Bauer, the development economist who contradicted
the professional orthodoxies of his time, predicted. The aid immensely
increased the power of the sole political party by giving its officials control
over scarce goods. When I was in Tanzania, you needed political connections to
buy even a bottle of beer--the famous local monopoly brand, Safari, which, the
saying went, caused you to pass directly from sobriety to hangover without
passing through drunkenness. The regime provided ample opportunities for
corruption. Most Tanzanians were slender; you could recognize a party man by
his girth.
Thanks to foreign aid, a large bureaucracy grew
up in Tanzania whose power, influence, and relative prosperity depended on its
keeping the economy a genuine zero-sum game. A vicious circle had been created:
the more impoverished the country, the greater the need for foreign aid; the
greater the foreign aid, the more privileged the elite; the more privileged the
elite, the greater the adherence to policies that resulted in poverty. Nyerere
himself made the connection between privilege and ruinous policies perfectly
clear after the International Monetary Fund suggested that Tanzania float its
currency, the Tanzanian shilling, rather than maintain it at a ridiculously
overvalued rate. "There would be rioting in the streets, and I would lose
everything I have," Nyerere said.
Long years of living under this perverse regime
encouraged economically destructive attitudes among the general population.
While I was impressed by the sacrifices that Tanzanian parents were willing to
make to educate their children (for a child to attain a certain stage of
education, for example, a party official had to certify the parents' political
reliability), it alarmed me to discover that the only goal of education was a
government job, from which a child could then extort a living from people like
his parents--though not actually from his parents, for he would share his good
fortune with them. In Tanzania, producing anything, despite the prevailing
scarcity of almost everything, became foolish, for it brought no reward.
When I returned to practice among the poor in
England, I found my Tanzanian experiences illuminating. The situation was not
so extreme in England, of course, where the poor enjoyed luxuries that in
Tanzania were available only to the elite. But the arguments for the expansive
British welfare state had much in common with those that Nyerere had used to
bring about his economic disaster. The poor, helpless victims of economic and
social forces, were, like Ophelia in the river, "incapable of their own
distress." Therefore, they needed outside assistance in the form of
subsidies and state-directed organizations, paid for with the income of the
rich. One could not expect them to make serious decisions for themselves.
This attitude has worked destruction in Britain
as surely as it has in Tanzania. The British state is today as much a monopoly
provider of education to the population as it is of health care. The monopoly
is maintained because the government and the bureaucratic caste believe, first,
that parents would otherwise be too feckless or impoverished to educate their
children from their own means; and second, that public education equalizes the
chances of children in an otherwise unequal society and is thus a means of
engineering social justice.
The state started to take over education in
1870, largely because the government saw a national competitor, Prussia,
employing state power to educate its children. But practically all British
children went to school already: according to the calculations of economist and
historian E. G. West, 93 percent of the population was by then literate. It is
true that the British state had started providing support to schools long
before, but in 1870, 67 percent of school income still came from the fees that
parents paid.
Not all British children received a good
education before the state intervened: that was as vanishingly unlikely then as
it is today. But it is clear that poor people--incomparably poorer than anyone
in Britain today--were nonetheless capable of making sacrifices to carry out
their highly responsible decisions. They did not need the state to tell them
that their children should learn to read, write, and reckon. There is no reason
to suppose that, left alone, the astonishing progress in the education of the
population during the first three-quarters of the nineteenth century would not
have continued. The "problem" that the state was solving in its
destruction of the voluntary system was its own lack of power over the population.
As in Tanzania, the state-dominated system
became self-reinforcing. Because of the high taxation necessary to run it, it
reduced the capacity and inclination of people to pay for their own
choices--and eventually the habit of making such choices. The British state now
decides the important things for British citizens when it comes to education
and much else. It is no coincidence that British advocates of the
cradle-to-grave welfare state were great admirers of Julius Nyerere--who,
incidentally, has been proposed for Roman Catholic canonization, thus bringing
close to reality Bauer's ironic reference to him as Saint Julius.
The only time I ever saw Nyerere in person was
in Dodoma, the dusty town designated to become Tanzania's new capital. He was
expected to drive by, and by the side of the road sat a praise singer--a woman
employed to sing the praises of important people. She was singing songs in
praise of Nyerere, of which there were many, with words such as: "Father
Nyerere, build and spread socialism throughout the country and eliminate all
parasites."
The great man drove past in a yellow Mercedes.
The praise singer was covered in dust and started to cough.
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