Tuesday, 22 September 2015

Participation NOT Self-Exclusion: "Let us not try to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup of bitterness in history" MLK

Participation NOT Self-Exclusion:

"Let us not try to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup of bitterness in history" MLK

Interview with 
 Costantinos Berhutesfa Costantinos, 
Professor of Public Policy, School of Graduate Studies, 
College of Business & Economics, AAU - 2007
HoF: Ethiopia is one of the poorest countries in the world. According to the UNDP Human Development Report of 2007 the majority of the population live with less than one USD/day. Half the population live under the national poverty line. Which poverty reduction strategies do you think are necessary?


Costantinos:
         The first part of the question is interesting in that very few in our world today articulate questions related to poverty reduction in terms of scholarly approaches to human development. Instead, many jump at finding a silver bullet answer (such as debt cancellation, more aid…) to the complex nature of poverty. Poverty is a complex phenomenon of a web of factors leading to destitution and marginalisation that requires an inter-generational and interdisciplinary strategic framework to remedy complex web of factors of impoverishment. I will dwell on the strategies for sustainable livelihoods (SL).

      First and foremost, it is useful to distinguish different strategies of reducing vulnerabilities and factors of impoverishment on the basis of the underlying forces of policy-relevant social change which inform them. One way of conceptualising forces of social change is in terms of different forms of ‘capital’ – applied here in the broadest sense as resources or assets which may be utilised to achieve social objectives. For the purposes of conceptualising poverty-relevant social change, seven forms of capital are particularly relevant: human; economic; social; political (the network of informal and formal political alliances that confer decision-making authority; sources of violence and means of enforcing social norms and maintaining social relationships) and environmental capital (natural resources). Changes in anyone of the above forms of capital interact in complex ways with other forms of capital to constitute poverty-relevant social change. Analyses based on different forms of capital may very well lead to similar policy prescriptions. Hence combinations of the following reasoned poverty reduction strategies that have direct implications on begetting SL are recommended:

           Firstly, we focus our anti-poverty strategies primarily on human capital development that links investment in education, health and nutrition with sustainable livelihoods policies, strategies and action plans to enable human development must per force play a leading role.

             Secondly, we have those mechanisms which increase the primary income of the poor – with emphasis placed on factors which increase the level or price of output and/or the returns received by poor producers; whereby output is a function of factors of production (land, labour and physical capital and financial capital (credit) and technology). Increasing output entails increasing the volume, distribution, productivity or changing the relative prices of factor inputs. The Government has also launched a safety nets programme to stem poverty and that aim to transfer cash or in-kind income to the poor by providing subsidised goods, services or employment guarantees don't rely on the above analyses; but are included because of its importance as buffers in an anti-poverty strategy.

            Finally, the human security, governance and rights-based poverty reduction promises to cap the entitlement and equity arenas. Sadly, it has been primarily and narrowly reckoned in technocrat terms to refer to public sector management issues (e.g. civil service reform), in public policy terms (market liberalisation), etc. Needless to say, human security ‘protecting the vital core of all human lives in ways that enhances human freedoms and human fulfilment – is protecting fundamental freedoms – - freedoms that are the essence of life... build on people's strengths and aspirations.... protecting people form critical and pervasive threats... using processes that build on people's strengths and aspirations…. creating political, social, environmental, economic, military, and cultural system that together give people the building blocks of survival, livelihood and dignity’. In its present use, it embodies three basic principles: inclusiveness, lawfulness and accountability. To sum up, a combination of safety nets, investment in education, commercial food production, health and nutrition and the primary incomes, increasing output entails increasing the volume, distribution, productivity or changing the relative prices of factor inputs and human security and development are the primary tools for human empowerment and hence poverty reduction. The Government, which is still the main actor in development, has recorded impressive gains over the past years in terms of economic growth (11.6% for 2003/2004), it has increased its food security spending by 200 fold over the past few years implementing some of the strategies discussed above. Gross education enrolment ratio has improved in favour of rural areas and females; while challenges remain in the health sector; but is being dealt with competently under the leadership of the current minister. 

HoF: 85 per cent of the Ethiopians earn their living with agriculture. However, food production cannot cover domestic demand for adequate nutrition. Is foreign food aid the right strategy? What could be the alternatives?

Costantinos:
         Hundreds of millions of dollars are spent on food aid every other year, (albeit and indubitably, an essential component of survival now). Food aid has well documented side effects on our national psyche, moral, economy, society and polity. We must face up to our donors (such as the G8 resolution) to help us develop our capacity to use our resources in an environmentally sound manner. I propose a two pronged solution to persistent poverty that augur deep in reforming the very strategy and structure of our rules and institutions of development that would enable self-reliance…

       First is to develop an integrated package of policy, technology and investment strategies together with appropriate decision-making tools, which are used together to fight poverty and promote sustainable livelihoods by building on local adaptive strategies (widely promoted by the IISD, CHE, CIDA and UNDP). Its benefit arises from several features: empowerment, the provision of an integrated framework, assessment of community assets, adaptive strategies, and livelihood activities, governance and policy questions and their inter-linkages are addressed in a cross-sectoral manner. It seeks to improve productivity of people's own livelihood systems and create new opportunities in a sustainable manner.

         Secondly, the foremost priority is food security. According to government reports, 74 million hectares or 66% of the total area of Ethiopia is suitable for agriculture. However, the actual size of land cultivated is estimated to be only 16.5 million ha or 14.8 % of the total according to The State of the Environment Report in Ethiopia, Environmental Protection Agency, August 2003. Ethiopia is the water tower of Africa. Ethiopia's water resources natural endowment is big and generous. Yet our country has only 40 m3/capita water in storage (compare to about 800m3/capita in South Africa where the variability is much lower). One consequence of this variability is endemic and unpredictable drought and flood, with enormous direct social and economic impact. To make matters worse, the country loses 1.5-1.9 billion tons of soil annually due to erosion, leaving behind eco-cadavers in the highlands. This must urgently change. Ethiopia must use its resources to feed its people. Hence, Government and donors must support the business community, (through various incentives that are available to other commercial farmers world-wide) to promote large-scale mercantile food production that can use these resources more judiciously without hampering the empowerment of nations and nationalities. In this connection, an external review of the Agriculture policy and strategy promulgated more than a decade ago is obligatory to be able to craft sound policies and strategies to emerge out food aid.

          Thirdly, I have been on record underlining the crux of the challenge - creating, retaining and putting to productive use peoples with such qualities throughout the economy. It is basically about having the ability and willingness to identify, sequence, and execute human-centred development priorities and programmes in the face of limited human, financial and institutional capacities. It boils down to formulating and executing national and sectoral policies that would enhance aggregate commitment, will power and capacities to mobilise, develop, motivate, encourage and utilise all segments of the population. To meet this challenge is synonymous to meeting the development challenge at large. The results, under all probability, would lead to the creation of a strong nation, active in both domestic and world transactions. The overall objective is to develop a critical mass of human qualities and ensure their effective participation in the development process in order to provide, consolidate, expand and sustain the required base for development within a rapidly shrinking and competitive global environment.

HoF: It is not uncommon to hear discussion among Addis Ababans these days on the rising cost of living and the inability of families to make ends meet. While there are visible signs of why this came to pass (increase in prices of fuel, energy, cement, beef, Teff, etc. which have cascading effects in the household economy), what are the options for dealing with it.

Costantinos:
           Discussions on the rate of inflation and its impact on the livelihoods of the people and hedging livelihood strategies are of more recent phenomena. Such inflation - a rise in the general level of prices, as measured against some baseline of purchasing power – is usually adjusted through monetary and fiscal policy instruments. The quality theory rests on the expectation of a buyer accepting currency to be able to exchange that currency at a later time for goods that are desirable as a buyer; and the quantity theory rests on the equation of the money supply, its velocity, and exchanges. Many theories of inflation combine the two. A cost-of-living index measures differences in the price of goods and services over time.

            Nonetheless, we should ask ourselves if inflation bad? Well not at all up to a point! Small rates of inflation are often viewed as having positive ripples as it is difficult for wages and some prices to be renegotiated downwards. Inflation is also viewed as a hidden risk pressure that provides an incentive for those with savings to invest them, rather than have the purchasing power of those savings erode through inflation. More significantly it gives the NBE room to maneuver, since, ideally, its primary tool for controlling the money supply and velocity of money is by setting the lowest interest rate in an economy - the discount rate at which banks can borrow from the central bank. However, in general, inflation rates above the nominal amounts required to give monetary freedom, and investing incentive, are regarded as negative, particularly because in current economic theory, inflation begets further inflationary expectations. On the one hand it will redistribute income from those on fixed incomes, such as pensioners, and shifts it to those who draw a variable income. Similarly it will redistribute wealth from those who lend a fixed amount of money to those who borrow. It has an impact on international trade, shoe leather costs (the cost of walking to the bank every too often) menu costs: firms must change their prices more frequently, which imposes costs; relative price distortions: firms do not generally synchronize adjustment in prices. The worst form of inflation is hyperinflation as is observed in Zimbabwe and the DR Congo.

         Within the Ethiopian context, some important questions rankle though, and for several reasons – is the government running a budget deficit, (a fiscal policy irony in itself) where funds will need to come from the issue of government bonds, international borrowing or - seignorage (the printing of new money)? Has the government influenced the level of aggregate demand in the economy, in an effort to achieve the economic objectives of price stability and ‘full’ employment? Will the removal of funds from the economy (Keynesian) reduce levels of aggregate demand in the economy and contract it, bringing about price stability? How and how often are interest rates adjusted and in response to which economic stimulants? So where do we go from here?

         Our legislature should establish a permanent but rotating independent commission of experts to review progress every three years or so and advise it on the appropriate interpretation of current statistics. It should enact the legislation necessary for improving accuracy and timeliness of economic statistics and to reduce the resources consumed in their development and production; and provide the additional resources necessary to undertake surveys more frequently, and to acquire additional commodity detail from alternative sources. Our legislature must also decide on the substantial over-indexing of various federal spending programs. If the purpose of indexing is accurately and fully to insulate the groups receiving transfer payments and paying taxes, no more and no less, they should pass legislation adjusting indexing provisions accordingly. In relation to this, it needs to look into the most visible and obvious power of the National Bank of Ethiopia - to curtail money supply and set interest rates unilaterally to influence markets. These rates directly affect the market for short term loans: marginal lending rate, main refinancing rate and deposit rates at commercial banks.

The labor ministry should establish a cost of living index as its objective in measuring consumer prices and develop and publish indexes: one published monthly and one published and updated annually and revised historically. A certain level of indexation to keeping pace with inflation is necessary so that wages and pensions are automatically hedged – allowing incomes to retain their value in real terms.

           There is simply no alternative to the establishment of sound institutional capacity for real-time strategy development, sensitivity analysis, policy coordination, and attention to the details of implementation of employment generations schemes. Strategic objectives must be clearly defined and specific measures made consistent with overall polices of a good national economic management. Provision of incentives to entrepreneurs must be subject to periodic review and continuation and expansion made conditional upon performance criteria established in advance. Most important of this is the fact that banking system must be functioning as efficiently as planned - taking care of the credit market needs of private sector. An efficient and a development-oriented private sector provide the nourishment which markets require to grow and function effectively. Markets themselves provide the credit ingredients which the private sector requires to grow expand and contribute to development. Thus, there is a reciprocal and mutually productive relationship between the private sector and credit and capital markets.

HoF: The Ethiopian government in the last years took rigorous steps against corruption. Government is making efforts for more transparency, accountability and a wider social dialogue – what do you make of this?

Costantinos:
          Since its emergence in the early 20th century, the modern Ethiopian State has been typified by autocratic leaders and primarily existed for the benefit of the powerful elite of the centre. Consequently there was little popular participation in the political process and has become distrustful, critical of the state, and wary of having any contact with it. Even under democratically favourable contemporary global conditions; these historical, ideological and strategic characteristics make democracy a costly and insurmountable exercise. Notwithstanding this, the commitment of the Government to promote openness and transparency by developing legal protection of constitutionally defined rights, legal and regulatory frameworks to control corruption and rent seeking, a civil service with appointments based on merit, systems that subject officials to the rule of law is encouraging. Indeed more must be done in terms of compensation for civil servants and civil service career development, creating a range of countervailing civil society organisations and media that function freely and openly, broadening legal provision for private ownership of property.

           Combating corruption and enhancing development lies basically in the enthronement of democracy, but most essentially through transparency in the leadership with equal and adequate access of the citizens to popular and informed participation. There is need to heighten public awareness of the destructive effects of corruption and restore the confidence of the people in government by exemplary leadership both of which would create and reinforce the capacity to combat corruption. The independence of institutions such as the media, the judiciary, that play the role of regulating the operation of public policies should be established and safeguarded. Ethiopia’s development of a grand-corruption-free market economy, without any doubt, heavily depends on the legitimacy of governance processes that will in turn depend in important ways on it being perceived as reasonably honest, predictable, transparent and accountable in the execution of the states’ broader responsibility of providing enabling conditions for national development. Public sector inefficiencies undermine political, economic and social stability by undermining citizen’s faith and result in a general loss of respect for authority and despondency in the general population. It is apparent that as the country enters this new era of political pluralism there is a need to overhaul the executive and develop institutional alternatives that have proved to function elsewhere in Africa, Asia and Latin America.

         Indeed there has been progress in installing transparency and accountability and a wider social dialogue. Democratisation is a very - very long mission -- to install the rules and institutions of governance that would guarantee human security in its totality. True, the Western liberal democratic model, often taken as the acme of democratic governance, is what Ethiopia has set for itself - the attainment of institutions and practices that have been the basic ingredients of established democratic traditions. Nevertheless, to label the progress as a success at this stage is problematique. These are constrained by the low level of awareness and understanding of democratic norms, practices and processes by the populace at large. Indeed, a major problem inherent in this is the extreme weakness of the social movements and their failure to develop coherent strategies for promoting broad based and well organised citizenry - whose functions are to preserve basic rights of its constituents and the society at large, educate the citizens and advocate popular claims, build a consensus and promote political and moral ethical values, and disseminate them among the populace; it has become difficult to nurture a sense of civil society. Free and open discourse on public issues are all foreign concepts that needed to be installed carefully over the past fourteen years in the minds of the majority of the populace. The dearth of political culture is clearly manifest in the disarray and inability of political forces to achieve internal unity. 

HoF: How do you see the role of Ethiopia in cooperation with international donors? What is the role of concepts like ownership, strengthening of state and society and national efforts such as PRSPs in this context?

Costantinos:
        The Ethiopian version of the PRSP, the PASDEP, encompasses a wide range of development objectives that are being linked to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). At the heart of all this is the role of the Ethiopian state - the key distinction, which runs through much of in the history of political theory is between the stewardship on the one hand and guiding role of the state on the other. Over the centuries, these two images i.e. the shepherd and the helmsman - have been at the heart of many political governance controversies. Although neither guardianship nor guiding can be discharged effectively in isolation, some writers advocate one and others the other as the primary responsibility of the state. Developmentalists emphasise stewardship while neo-classical economists augur its guiding functions.

          Indeed donors have in recent years taken a large number of initiatives aimed at directly or indirectly helping Ethiopia develop its way out of economic chaos and socio-political instability. In this effort donors provide the bulk of the support, in accordance with the Rome, Marrakech and Paris declarations on Aid Harmonisation and effectiveness. The budget support has been now transformed into protection of basic services following the post-election violence of June and November 2005, when a number of donor constituencies decided that they could no longer provide assistance to the Government through the Direct Budget Support mechanism; that hitherto financed the execution of commonly agreed poverty reduction and human development strategies. The PBS Project is an initiative designed by the donor community in cooperation with the Government and various stakeholders in and outside the country; is designed to expand and sustain the basic human development programmes that have been almost exclusively provide by the Government today.

          In doing so, they rely on a wide variety of institutional mechanisms and policies. Indeed, growing external involvement in projects of economic recovery has resulted in increasingly challenging problems of conceptualising and understanding the role and function of foreign interventions. This is in marked contrast to the limited thought and effort exerted by developers of our polity to put the interventions in coherent theoretical or strategic perspective. The important issues that these queries suggest are not sufficiently addressed, or even raised, in much of the current discussion of development. Insofar as the activities of external agencies are not understood and engaged in partly as indigenous societal potentialities developing gradually into actual structures, functions and characteristics of societies and polities, their developmental impact may diminish with their proliferation. This can mean little more than a weakly co-ordinated multiplication of projects which have immediately recognisable or measurable effects in limited areas, but which seem to suspend rather than serve the ultimate goals of development. The strategic co-ordination of diverse international activities supportive of development can become a challenge both for the international agencies involved and for the Government partly because of limitations in the individual characteristics of the activities and their narrowly technocratic orientation and limited generalisability and variability. We are undoubtedly dependent on international assistance in their projects of reform. Such assistance is vital for the projects in many areas and at many levels. Yet it must be recognised that external support creates problems as well as opportunities for development and democratisation on Africa.

HoF: What is your take on Somalia?

Costantinos:  
         Rising from the ashes of brutal dictatorship and the warlords’ sordid motives of the ultimate scale, the ICU was a spontaneously formed populist uprising. From the looks of it, the ICU had developed an overwhelming camaraderie and fellowship among the ordinary Mogadisho-Somalis. Indeed support for the ICU from local businesses, tired of the extortion by warlords, was widely considered a critical factor in their victory. On the flip side of the coin, however, the ICU’s anachronistic fundamentalist rule and Jihad on Ethiopia generated fears that this was the earliest sign of a Taliban-like hard-line Islamic regime to come. It was clear form the beginning that terrorist infiltrations such as al Ithad into the ICU could not be ruled out completely in this stateless nation. Especially with the appointment of hard lines to top the ICU will only entrench those who submit that the ICU was after all an al Qaeda invention that seems to have levitated to see the light of day. Coupled with the alleged support provided by neighbouring states to destabilize the Horn; this was a potentially dangerous situation that will have guaranteed heightened humanitarian crises in defenceless Somaliland and Djibouti and the IGAD region that already hosts close to over ten million internally displaced peoples, 11% of the world’s total.

            Ultimately, the true renaissance of Somalia will only happen only and only if it can join the league of peaceful and law-abiding nations of the world; in friendly terms with its neighbours. The quest to accomplish this task would not only require the willpower and buoyancy to propel Somalia against the wild waves of mistrust and revulsion that prevails in the failed state and among its citizens today, but also a synergized political and economic aid of material benefit to a populace traumatized by poverty. This will indubitably have an inimitable prospect to prove right those who believe that Somalis deserve a life free of rampant killings, famine and hunger, gender-based violence, torture, extortion, trafficking (children, women and drugs), outright robbery, lack of access to education, health and livelihoods… This may even reverse the brain drain and bring back the Somali Diaspora back home to build a nation from scratch. Between euphoria and frustration, clarity and confusion, moderates must develop a sustainable alternative to the lawlessness that paralyzed Somalia for over fifteen years, and find a platform to showcase that”. IGAD with the support of the International Contact Group, the AU and the UN must focus on building the rules and institutions that will govern Somalia -- including a timetable for elections that would bring in a popularly elected state power. Chances are that a ‘Hamas-type’ outcome might rein in any democratic experiment in Somalia hardly to the liking of the international community. This may or may not necessarily assure a level playing political field for all Somalis; but these are the paragons of democratic pluralism that the post-Berlin Wall era has held high on the moral ground and that we may all have to come to terms with this in our thirst for a Government of the People in Somalia.

HoF: my final question, the Ethiopian Diaspora, many believe, has been counter-productive in its call for aid withdrawal compromising the livelihood of Ethiopians?

Costantinos: 
           I do not believe you are suggesting that the Ethiopian Diaspora must alienate itself form their mother land; as there is sufficient evidence that the Diaspora's involvement can have a very serious impact on our development and contribute sustainably to determine the rules of the game on how this nation is governed. Today, the majority of elected opposition politicians are in parliament exercising their prerogatives to represent the populace who have elected them.  Nonetheless, the final outcomes of the political mêlée between the incumbent and the opposition leaders is a sad story that every Ethiopian at home or in the Diaspora has taken to heart – indeed a regrettable outcome of a historic sea change that could have launched our nation in a different trajectory. Description: BD21294_

         But Ethiopians have survived the brutal military dictatorships of the recent past and there is no reason that to believe that this level of resilience has lost its steam. Hence the need for the Ethiopian Diaspora to take a long term view of our national development --- as rising from the ashes every time we change regimes violently has indeed made us vulnerable to the whims of nature, famine and pandemics that haunt us every single day.  In the end, it is the poor who pay for this. Beyond classic examples such as India, Pakistan, Yemen, Egypt, Ghana… the role of the Ethiopian Diaspora has been amply demonstrated in Ethiopia by the Technology Park project initiated by the Ethiopian Diaspora soon to see the light of day -- ENAHPA's medical capacity building, P2P Programmes, and AHEAD in Canada, many supporting human development focused on the individual citizen, and hundreds if not thousand that have come back home and invested successfully (such as the booming flower industry, textiles and real estate ) and meaningfully here at home, bringing many citizens in destitution out of poverty. 
         It was the reverend Dr. Martin Luther King that said, "let us not try to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup of bitterness in history".  "We must not let our creative militancy to degenerate into physical violence… we must fight physical force with soul force". Thus was how the emancipation of African Americans was achieved; only 40 years ago in the world's mightiest nation that many Ethiopian have adopted.

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