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Development in Africa
Development in Africa
21 February 2011
The Third World has shrunk. For most of the past century, the development challenge has been how to get the rest of the world up to the living standard of the top one billion. Now that challenge has been reversed. With rapid growth across much of Asia, the future looks increasingly bright for billions of Indians and Chinese. As economist Paul Collier puts it, the challenge now is to raise living standards for ‘the bottom billion’. These are the one billion or so world citizens who live in countries with stagnant growth rates, with living standards at about the level of 14th century Europe. Most of the bottom one billion live in Africa. In the 1970s, both China and India had African per capita development levels. Since then, per capita incomes in India have doubled and those in China have quadrupled, but in sub-Saharan Africa incomes barely rose from 1970 to 2000.
Yet over the decade since 2000, there are hints that things might be changing, with sub-Saharan per capita incomes rising at around three per cent per year. Although this is modest by Asian standards, economist Edward Miguel suggests that things are starting to go right for Africa. Despite the occasional step backwards, Africa has undergone a wave of democratisation. Miguel also points to rising commodity prices, increasing mobile phone usage, and fewer conflicts, notwithstanding the gut-wrenchingly awful violence in Sudan and the Congo.
For Africa, some novel development strategies have been suggested. Miguel proposes rapid conflict prevention support as a means of targeting aid to fragile states at times of drought or falling commodity prices—as a means of insurance against collapsing into war. If left unchecked, dangerous climate change could make some of the driest places on earth—like Chad and Niger—even drier. So, while we should deal with climate change here in Australia by putting a price on carbon, a 2008 Lowy Institute report by Joel Negin and Glenn Denning also suggested that Australian aid agencies can play a vital role in using our agricultural expertise to improve productivity in African farms and assist with adaptation to climate change.
Recognising that resources have more often been a curse than a blessing to Africa, some experts have proposed a natural resource charter available at www.naturalresourcecharter.org. It has 12 economic principles for governments and societies on how to best manage the opportunities created by natural resources for development.
For Australia, aid to Africa this year amounts to around $201 million. We give because this region is one of the most impoverished in the world. For the most part, our donations are driven by generosity, but it so happens that even a selfish Australia would want to donate. By raising African living standards, we create new markets for our exports and probably also reduce the threat of extremism.
Overseas aid is an area where people have sometimes focused too much on inputs such as aid as a percentage of national income rather than outputs—poverty reduction. As in other areas of the aid portfolio, AusAID are working hard to ensure that the effectiveness of our aid to Africa is maximised. Under Bob McMullan, my predecessor as the member for Fraser, AusAID created the Office of Development Effectiveness to provide what it describes as a ‘health check of the Australian aid program’. ODE has not pulled its punches, with past reports suggesting that Australia might have been overinvesting in technical assistance. Discussing evaluation, ODE has in the past emphasised the importance of carrying out more impact evaluations, asking not only whether the program was properly administered but also whether it helped improve the lives of the poor.
My personal view is that the Australian aid program should carry out more randomised trials—a rigorous evaluation tool that is becoming increasingly common in the developing world. Much as I admire the audacity of big push strategies such as the Millennium Villages project, I think we can learn more when programs can be rigorously evaluated. More recently, the Minister for Foreign Affairs has established an independent panel to undertake a review on the future direction of Australia’s aid program. The expert panel—Sandy Hollway, Stephen Howes, Margaret Reid, Bill Farmer and John Denton—are carefully scrutinising how we can improve the effectiveness of our aid program. This kind of analysis is critical if we are to maintain public support for the Australian aid program. I look forward to their report.
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Community
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Canberra Centenary 20 Mar 2012
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Jervis Bay Territory 14 Mar 2012
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Ride for the Little Black Dress 13 Mar 2012
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National Sorry Day 13 Feb 2012
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Living on the Northside 09 Feb 2012
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National Memorials 24 Nov 2011
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Promoting Cancer Research and Treatment 24 Nov 2011
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Melba Men's Shed 13 Oct 2011
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Lost Superannuation 19 Sep 2011
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Community Organisations 12 Sep 2011
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Disability Volunteers 29 Aug 2011
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Same sex marriage report 24 Aug 2011
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Belco Bowl 18 Aug 2011
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ACT Community Living Project 16 Jun 2011
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Safety at Work 01 Jun 2011
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Common Ground 31 May 2011
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Centenary of Canberra 23 May 2011
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Loneliness 12 May 2011
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Welcoming the Babies 11 May 2011
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Better Together: Ten Ways to Revitalise Community 20 Apr 2011
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Religion in the USA and Australia 05 Apr 2011
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Community Roundtable 21 Mar 2011
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Royal Canberra Show 02 Mar 2011
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Arts and Sports 24 Feb 2011
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ACT Labor in the Community 22 Feb 2011
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Australian Youth Forum 10 Feb 2011
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Canberra is the Best City in Australia 03 Oct 2010
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Development
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Global Fund Independent Panel 21 Sep 2011
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Herb Feith Biography 06 Jul 2011
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Global Fund 05 Jul 2011
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Fragile States and Agile Aid 18 May 2011
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Development in Africa 21 Feb 2011
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Economics
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Market-Based Reforms and Transparent Budgeting 13 Mar 2012
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Trade Liberalisation and Anti-Dumping 28 Feb 2012
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Tax Forum 12 Oct 2011
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Parliamentary Budget Office 12 Sep 2011
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Consumer Credit Protection 21 Jun 2011
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Henry Review 20 Jun 2011
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Public Sector Superannuation 15 Jun 2011
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Reserve Bank of Australia 24 May 2011
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Commonwealth Pensions 23 May 2011
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Tax Reform 23 May 2011
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The Pro-Growth Progressive: 18 May 2011
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CEO Pay 24 Mar 2011
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A Super System 21 Mar 2011
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Flood Reconstruction 22 Feb 2011
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Reforming the World Bank 17 Nov 2010
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Economic Reform 16 Nov 2010
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The Outlook for Australian Trade in the 21st Century 17 Sep 2010
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Education
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Australia's First Early Childhood Randomised Trial 15 Sep 2011
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Schools Reform 22 Aug 2011
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Overseas Students 18 Aug 2011
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Demand Driven Universities 21 Jun 2011
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Indigenous Education 12 May 2011
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Revenge of the Nerds: Improving Australia’s Education System 16 Mar 2011
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Expanding Opportunity 03 Mar 2011
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Schooling in Indonesia 09 Feb 2011
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Early Childhood Intervention 18 Nov 2010
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Learning Behind Bars 17 Nov 2010
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Prison Education Programs 17 Nov 2010
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University Reform 15 Nov 2010
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Environment
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Clean Energy Bill 2011 28 Oct 2011
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Carbon Pricing - Getting on with the job 22 Aug 2011
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Climate Change & Carbon Farming 25 May 2011
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Economic Challenge of Climate Change 21 Apr 2011
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Clean Environment, Dirty Politics 31 Mar 2011
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Carbon Pricing 22 Mar 2011
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Environment Volunteers 22 Feb 2011
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Electric Cars 24 Nov 2010
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Climate Change Science 22 Nov 2010
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Ride to Work Day 19 Oct 2010
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Foreign Affairs
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The Asian Century 07 Feb 2012
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United Nations General Assembly Reform 19 Sep 2011
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A Decade On 14 Sep 2011
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World Refugee Day 20 Jun 2011
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Live Animal Exports, 14 Jun 2011
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Human Rights in Syria 01 Jun 2011
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Refugees and Asylum Seekers – Expanding Protection 11 May 2011
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Refugees and Asylum Seekers – The Big Picture 10 May 2011
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Open Australia 21 Feb 2011
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Democratic Reform in China 22 Nov 2010
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Afghanistan 26 Oct 2010
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Health
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E-Health 16 Feb 2012
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Suicide Prevention and Mental Health 25 Oct 2011
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Plain packaging of cigarettes 25 Aug 2011
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Polio Eradication 22 Aug 2011
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Launch of Drug Action Week 2011 14 Jun 2011
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Tobacco Products 30 May 2011
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AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria 21 Mar 2011
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Better Health Care 02 Mar 2011
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Mental Health 17 Nov 2010
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Other
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R18+ Computer Games Classification 14 Mar 2012
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Same-Sex Marriage 13 Mar 2012
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Australian National Botanic Gardens 14 Feb 2012
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Same-Sex Marriage: Supporting Reform 13 Feb 2012
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A Strong Public Service 08 Feb 2012
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Politics and Parenthood 20 Jan 2012
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Complex Mobile Phone Plans 23 Nov 2011
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Reducing Crime and Incarceration 21 Nov 2011
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Australian Orangutan Project 11 Nov 2011
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Migration Legislation Amendment 22 Sep 2011
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Randomised Trials 28 Feb 2011
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Prime Minister Julia Gillard Launches Disconnected 26 Oct 2010
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First Speech 18 Oct 2010
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Election Night Speech 21 Aug 2010
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People
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Helen Fraser 26 Mar 2012
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Chris McElhinny 19 Mar 2012
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Brad Runs North 01 Mar 2012
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Marie Colvin 27 Feb 2012
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Peter Veness 08 Feb 2012
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Cadel Evans 18 Aug 2011
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Tribute: Jamie Mackie 20 Jun 2011
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Tribute: Bob Gould 30 May 2011
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Great Canberrans: Henry and Chubb 21 Mar 2011
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Professor Frank Fenner 25 Nov 2010
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