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Capitalism, Economic Freedom, Investment, Foreign Aid, Connections, and Growth Focusing on Rwanda Africa Africa’s Core problems History Poverty Our own miserable record with aid • We did them more harm than good • The debt burden is partly our fault Population and dependency issues • Health care AIDs, tropical diseases, famine Questions Why are the three most indebted nations in Africa also the 3 largest oil exporters? • The resource curse Why does Nigeria, the largest oil exporter also have the largest disparity of wealth? Why is Zimbabwe rapidly moving toward the cellar? 2005 Index of Economic Freedom 1. Hong Kong 2. Singapore 3. Luxembourg 4. Estonia 5. Ireland 6. New Zealand 7. UK 8. Denmark 9. Iceland 10.Australia 11. Chile 12. Switzerland 13. U S 23 Lithuania 28 Latvia 37 Botswana is best African country 40 Japan 56 South Africa Economic Freedom 8% of people in World enjoy economic freedom 16% mostly free 72% mostly un-free 4% repressed What is poor? There is a huge difference between $1 a day and $2 a day • 4 bn people live on less than $2 a day In Rwanda, most people live on $250/year At $3 day, people can afford computers, phones, tv, get loans to buy vehicles Solution? No country or region ever developed thanks to aid alone. The best way to eradicate poverty is to deal with the poorest people in the world in terms of a market Innovation to deliver products and services to poorest people • Primarily in cost structures These entrepreneurs have an incentive to operate profitably • NGO’s do not want to or need to innovate on the cost structure as that is where they get their money Africa: Land Of Opportunity or Lost Continent? There are serious problems • Famine • Aids • Income disparity However, you can see a functioning economy in just about any part of Africa • Illness, poverty, famine exist, but not dominant in most African countries • Much of what people see in the news encourages them to simply ask the government to give more aid On the Turning Away On the turning away from the pale and downtrodden And the words they say which we won't understand Don't accept that what's happening Is just a case of others' suffering Or you'll find that you're joining in the turning away It's a sin that somehow Light is changing to shadow And casting it's shroud Over all we have known Unaware how the ranks have grown Driven on by a heart of stone We could find that we're all alone In the dream of the proud On the wings of the night As the daytime is stirring Where the speechless unite In a silent accord Using words you will find are strange And mesmerized as they light the flame Feel the new wind of change On the wings of the night No more turning away From the weak and the weary No more turning away From the coldness inside Just a world that we all must share It's not enough just to stand and stare Is it only a dream that there'll be No more turning away? Development and Growth Strategies Harrod Domar growth model Structural Transformation • Lewis Dual Sector Model Rostow Economic Growth Model • Traditional, transitional, growth, maturity, mass consumption Aid • Loans • Humanitarian and military Government: bi lateral or multi lateral intergovernmental agency NGO Trade Export Promotion Import Substitution Market economics (as opposed to government intervention) • Foreign Direct Investment MNC • Private capital investment Entrepreneurship venture capital • Micro credit Grameen Bank and others Development Strategy: Aid What is Aid? Mostly loans • by one government to another government for development • Subsidized loans are key part of loan package Still has to be paid back Grants for development Money/supplies for disease prevention and alleviation Food transfers for poverty and hunger alleviation Transfer of military goods Does aid help? Or are we wasting our money? Foreign aid OFTEN does not help recipient country World Bank assessment of own policies and results • Aid did not always help • Critical linkage Quality of governance of recipient Why doesn’t it seem to work? Aid is given for non-development purposes Aid is tied to the giving country Aid generates rent-seeking behavior Aid functions in a top down manner Aid tends to go to large projects Aid undermines the functioning of the existing economy Governance Characteristics Affects Efficacy of Aid Poor Governance • • • • • No respect for property rights Inflationary policies Haphazard but significant land redistribution policies Corrupt Basically stupid policies and activities Mediocre Governance • Too much inflationary pressures • Middle of road governance • Sort of like property rights, but do not provide protection of property rights Good Governance • Property rights respected • Legal system, banking system • reasonably strong fiscal and monetary policy Who gives Aid? Government Transfers through Red Cross • • • • • • • • • • United States UK Switzerland Netherlands Sweden Canada Norway Germany Japan Finland 232 million Swiss Francs 114 91 48 37 32 30 24 19 14 US is biggest giver because of war in Iraq • This money spent is considered aid • in the past we have been way down the list Aid: Loans Very little foreign aid is anything other than a loan • less than 10% of foreign aid is cash or transfers in kind. Most foreign aid is expected to be paid back Generates a debt burden Debt Forgiveness: Live 8 Live 8 was a concert series to raise awareness, not raise money for aid Key Focus: Debt Forgiveness by G8 Issues • Who incurred the debt? Did the individual in power create the waste and debt? • If so, debt should not be forgiven • If not, if the current ruling party did not create the debt and waste, debt should be forgiven • Who benefited? Did we give the aid to benefit the country or to benefit our own corporations (Bechtel)? • We should forgive the debt if it was really corporate welfare • Does it generate moral hazard? This is the question Bono has to answer. • Will it help? Review: Development Strategies Harrod Domar growth model Structural Transformation • Dual sector Aid • Loans • Humanitarian Government, intergovernmental agency, NGO Trade Export Promotion vs Import Substitution Market system/Capitalism • Direct Foreign Investment MNC • Private capital investment Entrepreneurship venture capital • Micro credit Grameen Bank and others Aid as Loans: Servicing the external debt Requires Export activities • Nigeria’s debt is funded in $US • The only way to get the dollars necessary to pay back the debt plus interest is to export something This creates export dollars flowing into their economy Made difficult by overvalued exchange rate Use of foreign earnings to cover payments on non-productive aid projects precludes use for current development/productive projects Aid: Loans from World Bank International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) • Focus: Loans to middle income countries for development projects • Loans primarily aimed at government sponsored and funded projects • Debt resold on private market Aid: Loans from World Bank International Development Association (IDA) • Focus: loans to low income countries • Loans primarily aimed at government sponsored projects • Government funds; private banks not involved • Debt typically held by World Bank as loans are heavily discounted This debt cannot be sold to private market Reasonable risk that loan will not be repaid Aid: Loans from World Bank International Finance Corp • Focus: Private sector loans Negotiated between private entities/banks and the World Bank • Profitable loans that can be paid back • Government not involved • Debt commonly resold on private market Aid: Assistance from World Bank Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency • Coordinates loans from private sector to low- and middle-income countries Mortgage broker type of activity Terms of loans, oversight, information for approval • Provides repayment guarantee Aid: World Bank International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) • Aids in debt consolidation and restructuring and reduction negotiations Governance / Aid linkage Poor governance • For each dollar given/transferred, reduce GDP by .30 They are worse off after transfer than they were prior to transfer • Our aid actually makes things worse for them Mediocre • For each dollar given, no change We give them a dollar and they get nothing back It does not reduce anything but has zero effect on quality of life • We do no harm, but we also do no good with the aid Good • For every dollar given, .50 gain in GDP Development Strategy: Trade Advantages of International Trade Pursue comparative advantage Allows for exploitation of economies of scale Historical evidence in east Asia indicates that it is growth promoting • Competitive pressures matter • Technology transfer Buy, develop, or steal Lack of international connections slow that technology transfer Africa’s Position on Trade Exchange rates • About 40% over-valued Tariffs • 20% Non tariff barriers (to tariff equivalent) • 46% Tends to remove an opportunity for improvement Concerns Immiserizing growth • This is where growth results in exactly the opposite what you had hoped for Primary goods trade • Resource extraction activities; minerals, raw resources Infant industry argument • WTO rules; if you are a developing country you have few sophisticated manufacturing plants in the country • If you want to give these new industries a foothold, they need protection in the international market Development Strategies: Market solutions Micro credit • Grameen Bank Capital Investment • Loans from local banks for business infrastructure • Enable/enhance entrepreneurship Foreign Direct Investment • Foreign ownership of local assets • MNC Inward investment Grameen Bank Founded by Muhammed Yunis • From Bangladesh Studied at London School of Economics • What is a better way to help his poor country move toward development? Figured out a way to get around the lack of collateral Innovation on the cost structure He enforced a group ethic/ethos to ensure repayment Repayment rates over 90% • Higher than any type of loan in US during the 1990's East Asian financial crisis, a large Indonesian bank suffered nearly 100 percent default rates in its corporate portfolio, but only 2 percent in its microfinance portfolio Banks Essentially non existent in rural Rwanda and most LDC in the world world's poor desperately need access to a broader range of financial services — microfinance is the more apt term — to improve their living standards. The staggering flows of money sent home by migrant workers are a case in point. • The Inter-American Development Bank estimates that remittances from Mexicans working in the United States this year will total $14.5 billion more than Mexico earns from tourism or foreign investment. what the recipients of payments from abroad or proceeds of micro loans need most is a place to put their money. established microlending organizations can help fill the void in ways that encourage private saving and, equally important, enlarge development capital in poor communities. Foreign Direct Investment "long-term investment by private multinational corporation in countries overseas." Facts about FDI: usually consists of new plants in foreign countries sometimes there are mergers with domestic firms there are 70,000 multinational corporations (MNCs) operating with 690,000 affiliates around the world. In the past, most FDI was from one rich country to another In 2004 36% of FDI went to developing countries, China received 9.4% of the total, while Africa only received 2.8% The US is the largest recipient of FDI with 14.8% of total Why do multi-national corporations (MNCs) invest in developing countries? natural resource extraction domestic market potential cheap labor - lower production costs loose government regulations and standards - lower production costs Foreign Investment Foreign Direct Investment • Outside group purchases ownership and control of productive asset • Foreign company sets up plant Long term capital flows • Purchasing ownership of foreign asset, but not control Buying stock in Microsoft Short term capital flows • Buying US treasury bonds which have maturity of less than a year Concerns about foreign investment Loss of domestic control Instability generated by short term capital flow fluctuations • This can be very destabilizing • Free to go into and out of an economy Over 3 months or less Advantages of foreign investment Replaces the need for domestic savings to fund growth • Home mortgage loans stay inexpensive this way • We can borrow from foreign fund managers to get capital to build new factory Partially replaces the need to develop domestic financial capital markets • Financial markets totally intangible; easy to commit fraud • We can do this easier for them than they can do for themselves Encourages technology (knowledge) transfer • Encourages substantial growth in the economy Private Investment Model Thousand Hills Venture Fund Private Capital Investment $50,000 to $500,000 for business endeavors in Rwanda Equity investors • Take shares of stock in company in return for investment • Take active role in management • Sell shares to someone else It is difficult to sell these African shares How do you exit the investment Focus on Rwanda Per capita GDP = $250 Most densely populated; 8m Smallest country; about the size of Maryland One language, one culture, plenty of intermarriage between ethnic groups When genocide ended in 1995, government outlawed any identification of ethnic groups Agriculture is about 40% of GDP; supports 90% of the people Mobile phone penetration: 2% Electricity penetration: 5% Literacy rate: 60%; higher in men by about 10% 60% of population under 20 5 to 10% in rural; 15 to 20% in city Life expectancy: 45 years old Infant mortality:11% Highest level of elected positions held by women in the world • 40% of elected officials are women Why so few entrepreneurs? Imagine you are poor Rwandan. How would you go about getting wealthier? You look around • One way to get significant increase in income is to get one of the jobs involved with an NGO Knowing the right people rather than having a better idea • Cozy up to NGO Similar to what happens in our own urban environments with the young drug entrepreneurs. • Get the salary Agricultural economy Mostly subsistence farming • Few cash crops Currently moving toward specialty coffee • Inherent problem trying to sell perishable products • Related to very limited transportation network How to sell the product outside of the limited walking distance of neighbors? Very fertile but hilly • most are terraced to grow crops Two predictable rainy seasons There was never really a time when there was a dominant colonial presence • No appreciable resources to extract Bananas • Largest crop But we don’t buy them • they are not ‘normal’ size and color Heavier, relatively cheap Little market Coffee • New emphasis Kasava • Root crop high in nutrients, but little market for flour basically a subsistence crop rather than cash crop Coffee and Hope Grow in Rwanda At the washing stations, or wet mills, farmers clean, sort, pulp and dry coffee cherries — the bright red berrylike fruit produced by coffee trees. Then the beans, or seeds, that they contain can be sold to the lucrative specialty market, where demand and prices remain relatively high even when conventional coffee prices dip. New York Times, Sunday Aug 6, 06 By improving the quality of their coffee, about 40,000 of Rwanda’s 500,000 coffee farmers have at least doubled their incomes,” said Kevin J. Mullally, who runs the office of the United States Agency for International Development, or A.I.D., in Kigali, the Rwandan capital. “Coffee has played a crucial role in the positive changes in Rwanda.” Since 2001, A.I.D. has invested $10 million in helping Rwandans improve the quality of their coffee, mainly by providing farmers’ cooperatives and small entrepreneurs with financing for washing stations and training in their use. The Rwanda government’s goal is to make all coffee produced in the country specialty coffee by 2008. (New York Times, Aug 6, 06) The big canned coffee companies currently pay about $1 a pound for C-grade coffee beans, while the higher-grade specialty coffees preferred by Starbucks, Green Mountain and other chains generally fetch about $1.50 a pound or more. In Rwanda, premium roasters will pay as much as $3.50 a pound for the best beans. (New York Times, Aug 6, 06) When these prices are paid to cooperatives, instead of to private dealers, the profits go directly to farmers, 20 percent of whom are widows and orphans because of the genocide. In the United States, gourmet coffee has generally accounted for 15 percent of the market, but 40 percent of the revenue (currently $11 billion, up from $7.6 billion in 2000), so roasters are eager to develop relationships with cooperatives that can deliver consistently high-quality coffee. (New York Times, Aug 6, 06) Until the 1990’s, coffee accounted for 60 percent of total exports, but that declined to about 20 percent in 2001 because of the economic devastation of the genocide and a worldwide crash in coffee prices. Since then, the government has focused on increasing the volume and quality of coffee exports as it tries to revive the economy; coffee now accounts for 30 percent of exports, totaling $35 million, which is expected to double this year, Mr. Mullally said. (New York Times, Aug 6, 06) Cooperatives Improve transaction costs • 30 people represent 1m farmers Owned by the farmers • Shareholders are also employees Ties together incentives nicely Market Linkages No way for farmer to test the market prices Transportation non existent • Even if they want to sell the crop and even if there might be market for their crop Up to 9 hour walk Don’t know what the price is until they get there No way to store the product Property rights Technically, all land is owned by government They possess their land • But they have no ability to tap into this possession of land • Banks won’t lend on this land • Very limited transfer of land • Cannot be allocated to its best use For more information on this problem, read “Mystery of Capital” by Hernando DeSoto Food Processing The easiest way to get wealth into these rural areas is to get them to sell crops The easiest way to get wealth into the country is to process the crops into a different foodstuff • Add value and/or changes the perishability Dried fruit/bananas rather than fresh bananas Fruit juice concentrate Tomato paste and sauce. Changes the transportation economics as well • Reduces weight, removes the perish ability so can use slower, cheaper transportation One of the Problems with processing idea Electricity is not dependable; no infrastructure Economically, manufacturers must have dependable supply of power in order to keep the capital assets engaged • The unreliability makes it very difficult to compete What do they do? • Some businesses and wealthy people buy diesel generators Essentially privatize on their own Very expensive Other Processing Problems Consistent, high quality supply • So many small farmers result in a wide range of quality • High transactions costs of buying from small holder farmers Food standards non existent • This requires a huge investment Especially if you have not and cannot identify a market for the product Packaging and labeling for shelf ready agricultural products • There is no capacity for this whatsoever Need to have economies of scale in their production sufficient for distribution • Historically coffee has been largest export The problem is that they cannot produce enough coffee for Starbucks • So it really does not matter; is it worth it for Starbucks to deal with Rwanda even if the quality of the coffee is higher and the price is lower? Reasons for Hope Small holder farmers are more productive on per acre basis than large plantation type farmers • They ‘own’ the property They are not working for someone else Any yield goes to them, not the boss • Cheaper labor, mainly in the form of family Kids and relatives work during the peak times Reason for Hope Potential for wealth creation: • There is significant potential for profit through this agricultural base if the market linkages and processing to value added non perishable products can be created. Small scale, low cost agricultural processing • Located closer to the farmer, rather than getting the product to a central processor Solar fruit dryer Other problems American protectionism • US farmers are subsidized African farmers have genuinely lower cost structures • OXFAM says that if Africa could increase its ag exports by 1%, it would increase the per capita GDP by $100 per year Other Problems In Rwanda, the problem is not corruption, it is more lack of regulatory enforcement They do not pay bribes and won’t accept bribes nor will they pay bribes to others • They will shut down the operation first Micro finance tiny business loans extended to poor people in developing countries is a proven development strategy Benefits 100 million of the world's poorest families Loans from $20 to $2000 Essentially transform lives • Buy chickens, start a chicken farm, lay eggs, cash crops • Chickens also keep away the snakes Other Possible Solutions? So what if we give store value debit cards to everyone? • Has nothing to do with a physical bank, or currency, or savings, or checking accounts • Creates an entirely new economic infrastructure