Iraq to Aceh, Afghanistan to Haiti

December 20th, 2005

Naomi Klein: “It certainly seems that ever-larger portions of the globe are under active reconstruction: being rebuilt by a parallel government made up of a familiar cast of for-profit consulting firms, engineering companies, mega-NGOs, government and UN aid agencies and international financial institutions. And from the people living in these reconstruction sites--Iraq to Aceh, Afghanistan to Haiti--a similar chorus of complaints can be heard. The work is far too slow, if it is happening at all. Foreign consultants live high on cost-plus expense accounts and thousand- dollar-a-day salaries, while locals are shut out of much-needed jobs, training and decision-making. Expert "democracy builders" lecture governments on the importance of transparency and "good governance," yet most contractors and NGOs refuse to open their books to those same governments, let alone give them control over how their aid money is spent.”

Klein decries what she calls "disaster capitalism", where after a natural disaster—her examples are Hurricane Mitch and the South East Asia Tsunami—and unnatural, such as the war in Iraq, leading to the World Bank or other non-govnernmental organizations pushing for privatization of state-owned assets. She wrote the article before Hurricane Katrina hit, but she no doubt would have found cause for concern, for example, the now-repealed "Gulf Coast Wage Cut".

Comments

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Submitted by Micah on December 20th, 2005 at 7:21 AM #

NGOs exist for a reason, and anybody who thinks that the reason is to help other people is sadly naive. (the same thing goes for academics and their "conferences".)