Recently, Professor Jeffrey Sachs made a public
application to be the next president of the World Bank with an
op-ed in the Washington Post titled
“How I would lead the World Bank.” I was not
aware they were taking applications, but since they are, I thought
I’d throw my name in the ring.
I must admit that unlike Mr. Sachs I am not on “a
quest to end poverty.” It is not that I don’t care — I just lack
the self-confidence to believe I have the power to do such a thing.
But I am hoping the World Bank presidency might be a good
confidence booster. I also confess that until Professor Sachs
pointed it out, I didn’t know the World Bank was on
18th and Pennsylvania, but now
that I do, I too am eager for this challenge.
But enough about me. Let’s focus on the issue at hand —
Why I should run the World Bank:
I don’t seek the presidency because of the World Bank’s
track record in “ending poverty.” In fact I don’t place a lot of
faith in the World Bank’s ability to solve world poverty. When it
comes to alleviating poverty in the developing world, I have a lot
more faith in entrepreneurs than I do in internationalista
technocrats from the World Bank or any part of the aid
industry.
Like Professor Sachs, I am not a Wall Street big player or
a Washington insider. But unlike Professor Sachs, I have not spent
years at the center of the foreign aid poverty establishment
promoting top-down solutions, and advocating for increases in
foreign aid despite the evidence that it has not worked.
Notwithstanding his self-characterization as an outsider, Professor
Sachs was the architect of the UN Millennium Development Goals,
which has dominated development policy for the last decade. In this
sense, it’s somewhat disingenuous for Professor Sachs to portray
himself as an outsider. He is a genuine development
celebrity.
But enough of Professor Sachs. Let’s get back to
me.
I believe that wealth can be created and poverty can be
reduced, but I do not believe that international bureaucrats have
much of a role to play in realizing such goals.
I believe that focusing on the causes of poverty is the
wrong question — the correct question is what causes
wealth?
For this reason, I don’t believe that foreign aid is the
solution — or even a solution. It has subsidized corruption and
delayed the development of local business. In short, it is
generally part of the problem. And I’m not alone in thinking so.
There are growing numbers of Africans, Latin Americans, and Asians
who are saying no
to aid and instead want the chance to have free and fair
competition.
I also don’t believe the developing world is a lab for
Western scientists and technocrats to test out their various
utopian theories on others. When I am president of the World Bank,
none of these people would be given support to experiment with the
lives of others.
In this connection, I should mention that I don’t believe
in a “scientific” solution to poverty. Nor do I believe that I or
anyone else can end poverty “forever.” There will always be some
poverty because there will always be human weakness, human error.
There will always be a need for human love and
caring.
I don’t hang out with celebrities and haven’t traveled the
world with Bono — not yet at least. (Bono has done much to raise
awareness and since I was a fan when I was young and feel some
loyalty, I don’t want Bono to be behind the times. I’d be happy to
help him re-think his advocacy of big aid.) I do not believe that
the poor are a different species; that they are somehow different
than us. As Ghanaian entrepreneur, Herman
Chinery-Hesse said to me. “The people here are not
stupid, they’re just disconnected from global trade, that’s
all”
I don’t believe in managerial capitalism, corporate
capitalism, Davos Capitalism, state-led industrial policies, big
business-big government oligarchies, or big UN plans that have
dominated developing economies. I believe in a free economy where
everyone, especially the poorest, have a chance to compete without
having to rely on favors from the social and political elites. I
believe that the locus of power needs to be transferred from
governments and big aid to local entrepreneurs and
leaders
I do not believe people are problem to be solved. I
believe that people are the solution to poverty. I believe that
people are created in the image of God with dignity and creative
capacity and when given the opportunity will create wealth and
produce more than they consume.
But if I want to run the World Bank I should at least tell
you what I believe.
I believe that wealth can be created when the poor are
allowed freedom and opportunity — when there are private property
rights, justice and the rule of law, freedom to start a business
without oppressive regulation, and freedom to enter into networks
of productivity and “circles of exchange.” I believe — in fact, I
know — that the poor can create wealth and prosperity for
themselves, their families and their communities that no state or
international agency could ever create.
I actually believe “the children are the future”
and therefore think we should be spending resources to keep them
alive and to give them opportunity not to reduce population through
abortion, sterilization, and making development assistance
contingent upon population control. Unlike Professor Sachs, I
prefer economic reality to his claim that the world is
“bursting
at the seams.” As president of the World Bank I
would stop the funding of abortions that have led to the death of
millions of unborn children in Africa, Asia, and Latin America and
that has led to what Nicholas Eberstadt documents in his article
“The
Global War on Baby Girls,” and what even the
New York Times has described as “The Daughter Deficit” and
the Economist has labeled called
“Gendercide.” As president of the World Bank I would promote a
culture that respects all life — including that of unborn
women.
I also believe that the real development professionals are
not people like Professor Sachs and certainly not me. I believe the
real development professionals are the entrepreneurs and a new
generation of local leaders who recognize the creative potential of
people. They are the only ones who can create the institutions of
wealth creation and long term sustainable development.
On second thought — I don’t really want to be president
of the World Bank. In fact, I don’t really believe in the World
Bank. It was formed at Bretton Woods with the original intent of
rebuilding Europe. When this task was taken over by the Marshall
Plan, the World Bank, like any bureaucracy worth its salt, went
looking for a new mission because, after all, where else would all
those technocrats and development specialists work? The World
Bank’s mission “dreams of world without poverty; to fight poverty
with professionalism and lasting results.” The best way to fight
poverty with lasting results is to allow entrepreneurs and
businesses to flourish. I think it would better for everyone if the
World Bank were closed down. I am sure there are many fine,
dedicated, and well intended people who have worked at the World
Bank over the years. Instead of using their talent and knowledge as
part of a broken system they could focus on partnering with poor,
starting businesses, or maybe become venture capitalists providing
investments to help grow local business throughout the developing
world.
The developing world doesn’t need another neo-colonial
master. They’ve had enough. The poor don’t need another development
expert. They need partners and access to markets. As a friend says,
“We give aid to Africa, but we don’t do business with Africa.”
We’ve had enough development professionals, celebrity campaigns and
wristbands — its time for something new. It is time to do
business.
Let’s get started.