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Posts Tagged ‘development’

House Appropriator Warns Against Cuts in Foreign Assistance

Wednesday, February 16th, 2011
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In today’s The Hill, Representative Steve Rothman (D-NJ), a longtime member of the House Appropriations Subcommittees on Defense and State and Foreign Operations, argues that reducing U.S. foreign assistance will make America less safe.  Rothman writes that “a dramatic reduction in the one percent of the U.S. budget devoted to foreign aid and diplomacy is not wise” and that “our foreign aid and diplomatic budget has a return on investment that is at least a thousand fold.”

He goes on to conclude, “Cutting foreign aid will not right our struggling economy, but will ultimately cost us more in U.S. lives and taxpayer dollars.”

Continue reading for Rep. Rothman’s entire piece.

Foreign aid cuts jeopardize U.S. national steve-rothmansecurity

The Hill

By Rep. Steve Rothman (D-N.J.)

02/16/11

America’s national deficit will burden future generations and hurt the long term well-being of our nation. That is why, as the stewards of our constituents’ hard-earned taxpayer dollars, Congress must always ensure that every cent we spend is absolutely essential. But we can never forget that in meeting Congress’ first priority – keeping America safe – there is no better value than the one percent of the U.S. budget that is spent on foreign aid and diplomacy.

Some of my Republican colleagues have suggested that America would be better off if we drastically cut our foreign aid and State Department funding. This type of thinking is based on the faulty assumption that this level of funding is disproportionately high compared to other spending priorities. With only one percent of the U.S. federal budget allocated for these programs, nothing could be further from the truth.

U.S. spending on foreign aid and diplomacy under President Ronald Reagan was never less than 1.1 percent of the federal budget. Today, in our more interconnected, just as complex, and equally hostile world, our country would be less secure if we removed our diplomatic presence from the globe. It would be a detriment to our national security if the United States didn’t have Americans who know foreign languages, live in countries throughout the world, and understand the cultures, ways of thinking, and history of those nations.

Without knowledgeable American personnel on the ground, how would we be able to make fully-informed decisions on which diplomatic and military alliances to strengthen and which to weaken or break? Without the information we gather from our international efforts, how would we know which countries could be brought over to democracy, become better trading partners with America, or be more cooperative with the West?

Military professionals, from the Secretary of Defense to the American forces on the ground, agree about the importance of foreign aid and State Department programs. As Secretary of Defense Robert Gates said last September, “Development is a lot cheaper than sending soldiers.” Regarding the perspective of the professional officers who direct our soldiers on the battlefield, a poll commissioned in 2010 by the U.S. Global Leadership Coalition concluded, “nearly 90 percent of active duty and retired military officers agree the tools of diplomacy and development are critical to achieving U.S. national security objectives and a strong military alone is not enough to protect America.” And put succinctly by the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, in a letter to Congress last year about these programs, “The more significant the cuts, the longer military operations will take, and the more and more lives are at risk.”

With U.S. troops deployed in Afghanistan and Iraq; Iran racing toward nuclear weapons; the volatile situations in Egypt, Lebanon, Sudan, and Tunisia; and terror threats emerging from Somalia, Yemen, and virtually every corner of the world; now is not the time to have less knowledge of foreign languages, fewer embassies, or fewer diplomats working to avert war and nuclear proliferation. The interests of the United States would certainly not be well served if we were to deny military aid to indispensible allies that help us fight terrorism, protect essential sea lanes, provide safe ports for our troops, and deliver world-class intelligence in real time.

Indeed, for these reasons, and many more, our foreign aid and diplomatic budget has a return on investment that is at least a thousand fold. Cutting foreign aid will not right our struggling economy, but will ultimately cost us more in U.S. lives and taxpayer dollars. It will surely cause direct and substantial harm to America’s national security.

That is why, while we need to cut spending, while we need to get rid of waste, while we need to find additional sources of revenue, a dramatic reduction in the one percent of the U.S. budget devoted to foreign aid and diplomacy is not wise. There are other cuts in spending that would reduce our deficit without harming our national security.

For example, we could begin with cutting the approximately $4 billion a year given to the oil and gas industries to encourage them to look for energy. Oil companies do not need taxpayer encouragement for that purpose, especially as they continue to post record-breaking profits. Congress also can cut bloated agriculture subsidies, particularly for food-based biofuels, and roll back non-stimulative tax breaks for individuals with incomes of more than one million dollars per year. These policies amount to billions of wasted taxpayer dollars each year.

I look forward to working with my Republican and Democratic colleagues to address our unacceptable federal deficit, but we must make cuts where they make sense, not where they jeopardize the national security of the United States.

Congressman Steve Rothman (D-NJ) is in his eighth term in the U.S. House of Representatives. He serves on the House Appropriations Subcommittees on Defense; and State and Foreign Operations, which appropriate all spending for the United States military and foreign aid respectively.

Shah’s Speech at NIH: Delivering Dramatic, Sustainable Global Health Gains

Tuesday, February 15th, 2011
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A Guest Post by Kaitlin Christenson
Coalition Director for the Global Health Technologies Coalition

FIND, ASTHM, GHTC, family late 2010 110Before US Agency for International Development (USAID) Administrator Rajiv Shah uttered the first word of his National Institutes of Health (NIH) Barmes Lecture today, NIH Director Francis Collins called attention to the symbolism of the moment: He said it marked the first time that a sitting USAID leader had spoken at NIH.

But Shah had more than symbolism in mind.

Instead, he outlined an ambitious agenda for advancing the US government’s global health priorities, and he pinpointed one critical fact: To meet these goals, we need more than existing tools.

He called for a broad new whole-of-government approach when it comes to global health research and development. Before an audience who understood well his meaning, Shah articulated a vision of USAID, NIH, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and other partners working together more efficiently and more wisely in using research to reduce the death toll of diseases that affect the poorest people in the world. His call for greater cooperation, backed by inspired leadership at NIH and CDC, could put us on a path that accelerates a recent string of successes in global health research and development.

The key word is “could.” Now, many people will be watching to see what happens next.

USAID plays a critical role in this. It has a presence in more than 100 countries. It knows what works on the ground. It has people who understand local health systems . It has lots of experience in delivering better health care and then taking small projects national. So when it comes to new inventions—Shah’s word—USAID is the agency best positioned to determine if they work in the developing world.

But Shah said rightly that the current path isn’t going to be enough to reach an incredibly ambitious set of goals for the Global Health Initiative in five years: Saving the lives of more than 3 million children, preventing more than 12 million HIV infections, averting 700,000 malaria deaths, ensuring nearly 200,000 pregnant women can safely give birth, preventing 54 million unintended pregnancies, and curinGHTC logog 2.4 million people infected with tuberculosis.

As important as it is to set these goals in order to inspire others around the world to act urgently, it’s also critical to foster new scientific innovation in order to get the job done.  His case on malaria was particularly poignant.

Shah said that if current efforts to develop new tools against malaria are not sustained, history tells us that the epidemic will simply come back again with full force and that all those gains will be lost. He spoke movingly of the power of vaccines for this and other diseases, from the promising RTS,S malaria vaccine, now in a Phase 3 trial with preliminary results expected later this year, to a growing body of other mostly childhood vaccines including a pneumococcal vaccine and a rotavirus vaccine.

To keep our momentum in improving health around the world, we also have to remember our recent past. Over the last decade, presidential leadership coupled with a bipartisan group of champions in Congress have built a historical record in saving lives in the developing world—first through the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief and now increasing through the President’s Malaria Initiative. We need this bipartisanship to not only survive but to thrive.

Shah importantly called for new mechanisms to measure whether these new global health initiatives are actually working through the development of goals and strategies, a center of excellence, and an annual accountability review of global health technology. We need to know more about how these would be implemented, and what they would measure. With new and effective measurement, we can learn much more about what works and what doesn’t, and show US taxpayers that their money is having huge impact overseas. We also need to hear more about this from the leimagesaders of other agencies that are partnering with USAID, including Francis Collins, CDC Director Thomas Frieden, and FDA Commissioner Peggy Hamburg.

One final point, and it underscores an earlier one: US agencies that oversee scientific research need to work well together. Shah and other leaders should now hold a series of public meetings on this new ambitious, coordinated research agenda—an agenda that not only attacks the world’s most deadly diseases but also unleashes innovation from a national treasure: Our scientists at work.

An archived version of this speech can be found at: http://videocast.nih.gov/.

Another foreign assistance casualty of the 112th Congress?

Monday, February 14th, 2011
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A Guest Post by Bama Athreya: Trade, Aid and Security Coalition

Editorial writers for the New York Times, Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal agree:  this is no time to impose tariff barriers on the world’s least developed countries.

Congress allowed a longstanding trade access program to lapse in December, 2010.  That program, the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP), allowed over 100 poor developing countries around the world to export their goods to the United States. The program has been in place since 1974, and has succeeded in enabling low-income countries to expand their economies and create jobs for their citizens, thereby becoming less aid-dependent.  The program is consistent with a long-term vision of sustainable economic development.

Congress knew what it was doing, when it first passed this legislation in 1974.  The GSP program was premised on the concept that ‘trade, not aid,’ would ensure that the billions of dollars spent by the U.S. on direct foreign assistance would be complemented by   benefits that helped economies to grow.  Thus  countries could become self-sustaining and direct foreign aid could be phased out.  Should this not be exactly the approach that the US would want to foster in this time of constrained resources?

The expiration of the program could not have come at a worse time for the world’s working poor.  The global economic crisis is estimated to have cost poor countries hundreds of billions of dollars in lost exports and remittances.  The ILO has estimated that tens of millions of jobs have been lost in the developing world as a result of the crisis.  Now, new tariff barriers that will be imposed on imports from these countries may result in further shrinkage of these economies, and further job loss, pushing many more into poverty and dependency on humanitarian assistance for survival.

While the market access provided by GSP is far from comprehensive, and the rules governing the program have long needed reform, nevertheless the right approach, particularly from those in Congress who purport to be pro-trade, is to expand and reform the program, not to kill it.

MFAN Partner ONE Speaks Out on Aid Reform and the Budget

Friday, February 11th, 2011
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ONEMFAN Principal Larry Nowels, ONE’s U.S. policy director, urged policymakers to think through cuts to the International Affairs budget and the impact such cuts would have on ongoing national security efforts in a recent op-ed in The Hill. Nowels points to the reform effort in the Obama Administration as evidence that U.S. development programs recognize the need to become more efficient and effective and better respond to the challenges, both here and abroad. Read the full piece here and see excerpts below:

“Smartly, some among the Obama foreign assistance team have been scrutinizing their agency budgets for some time and identifying where cuts can be made. In a speech three weeks ago hosted by the Center for Global Development, Raj Shah, the Administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development, acknowledged that USAID would need to do “more with less” or at least with a stagnant budget. Administrator Shah previewed some reductions, announcing the graduation from foreign aid of at least seven countries by 2015, the closure of expensive offices in Europe and Tokyo, and administrative savings of $50 million over five years.”

“Now, the RSC is again calling for USAID’s termination, but offers no suggestions on where or who would manage the roughly $18 billion in programs overseen by the agency. And if the assumption is that the State Department or some other government agency would assume this responsibility, rolling their budgets back to 2008 would not exactly prepare for an orderly transition. Who would conduct oversight to ensure the funds are spent as intended and not lost to corruption or mismanagement? And most of all, who would provide the development expertise of experienced USAID staff that are responsible for planning, implementing, and measuring impact of our foreign aid dollars?”

“This month marks the beginning of what is sure to be a difficult and contentious year-long, and perhaps years-long, debate over U.S. spending. Foreign aid should and will be part of that discussion and cuts are certain, whether they come from the Administration or Congress. But my hope is that they will be “smart” cuts that will not minimize the goal of advancing American interests, scale back aid programs that have proven to be effective, or stifle promising new initiatives that will bring greater efficiency, accountability, and impact to that less-than-1% of the budget that is foreign aid.”

Sara Messer, policy manager for aid effectiveness at MFAN Partner ONE, posted a blog today about a significant leap forward for aid transparency and accountability that occurred earlier this week. On Tuesday the International Aid Transparency Initiative (IATI) Steering Committee met and agreed upon a new set of standards for publishing aid information—establishing a common language and format. Several MFAN Partners were key to behind-the-scenes work around IATI, including Publish What You Fund whose director Karin Christensen commented, “For the first time, a standard exists which means more aid information will actually be better aid information. And that is what we need to make aid transparent; not only to other governments, and aid agencies, but to the public in all of our countries too.” When everyone can see how much aid is being spent where, and on what, governments – whether giving or receiving aid – can be held accountable by their citizens for spending it well.” Read more of Messer’s recap and the important next steps toward greater accountability here.

Building a Better, Safer World Starting on Capitol Hill

Thursday, February 10th, 2011
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A Guest Post by Mary Deering

Advocacy Program Manager, Truman National Security Project

Two weeks ago representatives from NGO’s, the private sector, and retired military service members convened on Capitol Hill to meet face-to-face with close to two thirds of freshman legislators and their staffs. The day, orchestrated by the U.S. Global Leadership Coalition, was focused on educating these new lawmakers on the importance of the International Affairs budget to our national security and economic prosperity. At a time when budgets are tight, it is more important than ever that our members of Congress  see how a strong and effective International Affairs budget is a wise investment for the American people.

Broad, bipartisan groups of constituents criss-crossed the Hill, traveling from meeting to meeting throughout the morning to make the case for  a strong and effective International Affairs Budget. We also shared with the new Members that groundbreaking reforms to make foreign assistance programs work more efficiently and effectively are already underway. Thanks to a lot of hard work by, Secretary of State Clinton, USAID Administrator Raj Shah, and Millennium Challenge Corporation CEO Daniel Yohannes  and others, new plans for making programs more transparent and accountable are already in place.

Our message to the members tnspof Congress was simple. Even in tough economic times, a strong and effective International Affairs Budget is worth every dime. Investing in democracy, development, and diplomacy serves our economic interests here at home as well and our national security. As I accompanied Truman National Security Project veteran Lt. General Norm Seip (US Air Force, Retired) and his group to meetings with several new US Senators, the national security and economic arguments for continuing our development work abroad had the most resounding impact. One thing is clear: development is not charity — it is part and parcel of our national security and it has very real impacts on the global economy.

Foreign assistance programs and military strategies both have the ability to build a better, safer world. Our military cannot be everywhere all at once and military efforts are much more costly than foreign assistance efforts in terms of blood and treasure. As Secretary of Defense Robert Gates said, “development is a lot cheaper than sending soldiers.” Conflicts abroad are becoming harder to contain by military action alone as they become transnational and carried out by non-state actors. Thwarting these conflicts with stable, economically viable states, rather than reacting with military intervention once conflict ensues, is critical.

We must seize this opportunity to educate Americans about foreign assistance spending and the crucial role it plays. As budget discussions ramp up, it will become a target. This is especially important at a time when we will rely heavily on development efforts in strategically important states such as Afghanistan and Pakistan. As we transfer from a military to civilian operation in Iraq, maintaining stability in the region will hinge on the success – and the existence – of development programs.