Sunday, October 26, 2014

How foreign aid screwed up Liberia's ability to fight Ebola

How foreign aid screwed up Liberia's ability to fight Ebola - The Week
Foreign aid has created a hopelessly dependent political class that stays in business by ignoring good governance and begging its Western benefactors instead 
 Liberia's reliance on outside assistance may have stunted its response to the Ebola outbreak.

President Obama is sending military personnel and $750 million to Liberia and other Ebola-afflicted countries in West Africa.
At this point, such aid might offer the only hope of containing this deadly epidemic — but foreign aid also had a big hand in creating Africa's Ebola problem in the first place.
How? 
By breeding a dependence mentality that has prevented these counties from generating their internal institutional defenses to deal with public health emergencies.

Nothing illustrates this better than the contrasting courses of the disease in Liberia, one of the most heavily indebted countries on the continent, and Nigeria, one of the least.
Global aid agencies have berated America and other Western countries for their plodding response and letting Ebola's hemorrhagic virus infect about 10,000 people in Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone, killing roughly half of them.
But the reality is that distant powers, no matter how well intentioned, have never been any good at proactively identifying and responding to such emergencies, precisely because they are distant.
Hence, they have to rely on intermediary groups such as the World Health Organization, which happens to have an unbroken record of botching every response to every recent epidemic, from bird flu to cholera. 

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