Posted on 05/31/2002 6:00:39 AM PDT by PJ-Comix
Poor Bono. He got stuck in a moment, and he couldn't get out of it.
In one of the oddest enterprises in the history of development economics, Bono the lead singer for the rock band U2 has been touring Africa with Paul O'Neill, secretary of the treasury. For a while, the latent tensions between the two men were masked by Bono's courtesy; but on Monday he lost his cool.
The pair were visiting a village in Uganda, where a new well yielding clean water has radically improved the villagers' health. Mr. O'Neill's conclusion from this, as from the other development projects he saw, was that big improvements in people's lives don't require much money and therefore that no big increase in foreign aid is required. By the way, the United States currently spends 0.11 percent of G.D.P. on foreign aid; Canada and major European countries are about three times as generous. The Bush administration's proposed "Millennium Fund" will increase our aid share, but only to 0.13 percent.
Bono was furious, declaring that the projects demonstrated just the opposite, that the well was "an example of why we need big money for development. And it is absolutely not an example of why we don't. And if the secretary can't see that, we're going to have to get him a pair of glasses and a new set of ears."
Maybe the easiest way to refute Mr. O'Neill is to recall last year's proposal by the World Health Organization, which wants to provide poor countries with such basic items as antibiotics and insecticide-treated mosquito nets. If the U.S. had backed the proposed program, which the W.H.O. estimated would save eight million lives each year, America's contribution would have been about $10 billion annually a dime a day per American, but nonetheless a doubling of our current spending on foreign aid. Saving lives even African lives costs money.
But is Mr. O'Neill really blind and deaf to Africa's needs? Probably not. He is caught between a rock star and a hard place: he wants to show concern about global poverty, but Washington has other priorities.
A striking demonstration of those priorities is the contrast between the Bush administration's curt dismissal of the W.H.O. proposal and the bipartisan drive to make permanent the recent repeal of the estate tax. What's notable about that drive is that opponents of the estate tax didn't even try to make a trickle-down argument, to assert that reducing taxes on wealthy heirs is good for all of us. Instead, they made an emotional appeal they wanted us to feel the pain of those who pay the "death tax." And the sob stories worked; Congress brushed aside proposals to retain the tax, even proposals that would raise the exemption the share of any estate that is free from tax to $5 million.
Let's do the math here. An estate tax with an exemption of $5 million would affect only a handful of very wealthy families: in 1999 only 3,300 estates had a taxable value of more than $5 million. The average value of those estates was $16 million. If the excess over $5 million were taxed at pre-2001 rates, the average taxed family would be left with $10 million which doesn't sound like hardship to me and the government would collect $20 billion in revenue each year. But no; the whole tax must go.
So here are our priorities. Faced with a proposal that would save the lives of eight million people every year, many of them children, we balk at the cost. But when asked to give up revenue equal to twice that cost, in order to allow each of 3,300 lucky families to collect its full $16 million inheritance rather than a mere $10 million, we don't hesitate. Leave no heir behind!
Which brings us back to the Bono-O'Neill tour. The rock star must have hoped that top American officials are ignorant rather than callous that they just don't realize what conditions are like in poor countries, and how foreign aid can make a difference. By showing Mr. O'Neill the realities of poverty and the benefits aid can bring, Bono hoped to find and kindle the spark of compassion that surely must lurk in the hearts of those who claim to be compassionate conservatives.
But he still hasn't found what he's looking for.
a dime a day per AmericanOf course, Krugman would never support a tax of a dime a day on every American.
If a new well which might have cost $900 to put in is so good for the villagers, why can't the WHO and other people who get our money show thousands upon thousands of such wells in villages everywhere?
Reason: they don't want to spend the money on low and slow style projects, they want the big win, high dollar stuff.
Bono was confusing the Consitution with the Statue of Liberty inscription.
Please stick to the music making.
Also to install that $900 well, they have to line the pockets of corrupt government officials to the tune of several thousand dollars.
PJ-Comix, maybe we ought to sic Howard on this guy sometime. Really let Howard have at him. Krugman wouldn't last five seconds...
1. Africa is one of, if not the richest continent in the world.
2. Giving African nations foreign aid is like paying reparations for not enslaving them.
Yet these same liberals, like Bono, want us to spend untold trillions to modernize and westernize the undeveloped world.
The only conclusion I can draw is that liberals want us to stay in a perpetual state of guilt. Guilt that we're doing too much, guilt that we're not doing enough--guilt...guilt...guilt.
That's the only way to make sense out of the mixed messages liberals send and I've just chosen to ignore them.
This is true but almost ALL the money stays in the pockets of African leaders and officials. Very little of it is ever seen by the people.
How about you take your $50,000 in Enron consulting fees you eagerly took and donate it to an African charity that will surely spend every penny on helping people (sarcasm off).
This is going to be the liberal RAT attack. We are too cheap and tax cuts=death and suffering for Africans.This is so pathetic considering all of the hoopla about the deficit.
Let the people of Africa figure it out for themselves and if they can't then maybe mother nature thinks they shouldn't be around anymore.
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