We are all aware of the extreme hunger and poverty
that afflict the world's poor. We hear the facts, see
the images on television, buy the T-shirt and are moved
as individuals and governments to dig deep into our
pockets. Yet what happens to all this aid? Why after 50
years and $2.3 trillion are there still children dying
for lack of twelve cents medicine? Why are there so many
people still living on less than $1 a day without clean
water, food, sanitation, shelter, education or medicine?
In The White Man's Burden William Easterly, acclaimed
author and former economist at the World Bank, addresses
these twin tragedies head on. While recognising the
energy and compassion behind the campaign to make
poverty history he argues urgently and powerfully that
grand plans and good intentions are a part of the
problem not the solution. Giving aid is not enough, we
must ensure that it reaches the people who need it most
and the only way to make this happens is through
accountability and by learning from past experiences.
Without claiming to have all the answers, William
Easterly chastises the complacent and patronising
attitude of the West that attempts to impose solutions
from above.In this book, which is by turns angry,
moving, irreverent but always rigorous, he calls on each
and everyone of us to take responsibility, whether
donors, aid workers or ordinary citizens, so that more
aid reaches the people it is supposed to help, the
mother who cannot feed her children, the little girl who
has to collect firewood rather than go to school, the
father who cannot work because he has been crippled by
war. |
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