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Remarks
on Global Development |
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President
George W. Bush
Inter-American Development Bank
March
14, 2002
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Thank
you all. Asientese.
Gracias, Enrique. It's
about time you invited a President here. It's
about time one accepted.
Thank
you for the energy and leadership you bring to the challenge of global
development. I'm honored to be at the Inter-American Development Bank, which has
done a lot of good in our hemisphere over the last 40 years. I appreciate your
work and I'm proud of your accomplishments.
Along
with many of you, I'll be in Monterrey, Mexico, next week as leaders from around
the world focus on the important work of reducing global poverty.
I'm
here today to announce a major new commitment by the United States to bring hope
and opportunity to the world's poorest people. Along with significant new
resources to fight world poverty, we will insist on the reforms necessary to
make this a fight we can win.
As
you can see, I'm traveling in some pretty good company today: Bono. We just had
a great visit in the Oval Office. Here's what I know about him: first, he's a
good musician; secondly, he is willing to use his position in a responsible way.
He is willing to lead to achieve what his heart tells him, and that is nobody --
nobody -- should be living in poverty and hopelessness in the world.
Bono,
I appreciate your heart and to tell you what an influence you've had, Dick
Cheney walked in the Oval Office, he said, "Jesse Helms wants us to listen
to Bono's ideas."
I
appreciate Paul O'Neill, Secretary of Treasury. I appreciate his work, I
appreciate his advice. He's a fine member of my Cabinet. Cardinal McCarrick,
thank you for coming, sir; I'm honored to have you here. Jim Wolfensohn, thank
you for your leadership of the World Bank. I appreciate Jose Fourquet. Thank
you, Jose, for taking on the responsibility you've done. It's good to see Andrew
Natsios here of AID. Thank you, Andrew, for coming. You've done a fine job, by
the way, in helping prevent starvation in Afghanistan. I appreciate your work
and I appreciate your focus.
I
want to thank John Negroponte, Embajador, of the United Nations. I want to thank
all the other ambassadors who are here. I look around, I can see many familiar
faces. Thank you all for coming today.
I
appreciate the members of the United States Congress who are here. I see Frist
and DeWine from the United States Senate. I appreciate both senators for coming.
I appreciate the Congressman from Puerto Rico; thank you for coming, se?or. I
see the Congress lady from Miami, Florida. I see Spencer Bachus, from Alabama. I
think that's it; I better -- well, anyway, if anybody else is here -- Chris
Cannon, I think, from Utah is here. Hey, Chris, thank you for coming. And thank
you all for taking an interest in this subject; it's an important subject.
As
you all know and we all know, America is engaged in a global struggle, a mighty
struggle against the forces of terror. Yet, even as we fight to defeat terror,
we must also fight for the values that make life worth living: for education,
and health, and economic opportunity. This is both the history of our country
and it is the calling of our times.
In
World War II we fought to make the world safer, then worked to rebuild it. As we
wage war today to keep the world safe from terror, we must also work to make the
world a better place for all its citizens.
The
advances of free markets and trade and democracy and rule of law have brought
prosperity to an ever-widening circle of people in this world. During our
lifetime, per capita income in the poorest countries has nearly doubled.
Illiteracy has been cut by one-third, giving more children a chance to learn.
Infant mortality has been almost halved, giving more children a chance to live.
Nations from India to Chile have changed old ways and, therefore, found new
wealth. Nations from Turkey to Mali have combined Islam with progress.
Yet
in many nations, in many regions, poverty is broad and seemingly inescapable,
leaving a dark shadow -- a dark shadow -- across a world that is increasingly
illuminated by opportunity. Half the world's people still live on less than $2 a
day. For billions, especially in Africa and the Islamic world, poverty is
spreading, and per capita income is falling.
In
Malawi, thousands of teachers die each year from AIDS, and life expectancy has
fallen to only 38 years. In Sierra Leone, nearly one-third of all babies born
today will not reach the age of five. And in Sudan, only half the children
attend school.
This
growing divide between wealth and poverty, between opportunity and misery, is
both a challenge to our compassion and a source of instability. We must confront
it. We must include every African, every Asian, every Latin American, every
Muslim, in an expanding circle of development.
The
advance of development is a central commitment of American foreign policy. As a
nation founded on the dignity and value of every life, America's heart breaks
because of the suffering and senseless death we see in our world. We work for
prosperity and opportunity because they're right. It's the right thing to do. We
also work for prosperity and opportunity because they help defeat terror.
Poverty
doesn't cause terrorism. Being poor doesn't make you a murderer. Most of the
plotters of September 11th were raised in comfort. Yet persistent poverty and
oppression can lead to hopelessness and despair. And when governments fail to
meet the most basic needs of their people, these failed states can become havens
for terror.
In
Afghanistan, persistent poverty and war and chaos created conditions that
allowed a terrorist regime to seize power. And in many other states around the
world, poverty prevents governments from controlling their borders, policing
their territory, and enforcing their laws. Development provides the resources to
build hope and prosperity, and security.
Development
is not always easy, but the conditions required for sound development are clear.
The foundation of development is security, because there can be no development
in an atmosphere of chaos and violence. Today, the United States is leading a
broad and vast coalition defending global security by defeating global terror.
Meeting this commitment is expensive, but securing peace and freedom is never
too expensive.
Development
also depends upon financing. Contrary to the popular belief, most funds for
development do not come from international aid -- they come from domestic
capital, from foreign investment, and especially from trade. America buys and
imports over $450 billion in products from the developing world every year --
$450 billion of purchases every single year. That is more than eight times the
amount developing countries receive in aid from all sources. Trade is the engine
of development. And by promoting it, we will help meet the needs of the world's
poor.
Successful
development also requires citizens who are literate, who are healthy, and
prepared and able to work. Development assistance can help poor nations meet
these education and health care needs. That's why the United States provides
more than $10 billion a year for development assistance for food and for
humanitarian aid. That is also why my administration has committed $500 million
to the global fund to fight aids and other infectious diseases.
And
we will work with Congress to increase this commitment, to show our love and
compassion by increasing our commitment as the fund gets organized, develops a
strategy, and shows success. We're spending billions more on AIDS research and
other programs, to fight the disease around the world.
Yet
many of the old models of economic development assistance are outdated. Money
that is not accompanied by legal and economic reform are oftentimes wasted. In
many poor nations, corruption runs deep. Private property is unprotected.
Markets are closed. Monetary and fiscal policies are unsustainable. Private
contracts are unenforceable.
When
nations refuse to enact sound policies, progress against poverty is nearly
impossible. In these situations, more aid money can actually be
counterproductive, because it subsidizes bad policies, delays reform, and crowds
out private investment.
The
needs of the developing world demand a new approach. In Monterrey, we have a
tremendous opportunity to begin acting on a new vision of development. This new
vision unleashes the potential of those who are poor, instead of locking them
into a cycle of dependence. This new vision looks beyond arbitrary inputs from
the rich, and demands tangible outcomes for the poor.
America
supports the international development goals in the U.N. Millennium Declaration,
and believes that these goals are a shared responsibility of developed and
developing countries. To make progress, we must encourage nations and leaders to
walk the hard road of political, legal and economic reform, so all their people
can benefit.
Today,
I call for a new compact for global development, defined by new accountability
for both rich and poor nations alike. Greater contributions from developed
nations must be linked to greater responsibility from developing nations. The
United States will lead by example. We will increase our development assistance
by $5 billion over the three -- over the next three budget cycles. This new
money above and beyond existing aid requests -- is above and beyond existing aid
requests in the current budget I submitted to the Congress.
These
funds will go into a new Millennium Challenge Account. Under this account, among
other efforts, we will expand our fight against AIDS; we will bring computer
instruction to young professionals in developing nations; we will assist African
businesses and their people to sell goods abroad; we will provide textbooks and
training to students in Islamic and African countries; we will apply the power
of science and technology to increase harvests where hunger is greatest.
These
are some of the examples of what we intend to do. The goal is to provide people
in developing nations the tools they need to seize the opportunities of the
global economy. In return -- in return for this additional commitment, we expect
nations to adopt the reforms and policies that make development effective and
lasting.
The
world's help must encourage developing countries to make the right choices for
their own people, and these choices are plain. Good government is an essential
condition of development. So the Millennium Challenge Account will reward
nations that root out corruption, respect human rights, and adhere to the rule
of law. Healthy and educated citizens are the agents of development, so we will
reward nations that invest in better health care, better schools and broader
immunization.
Sound
economic policies unleash the enterprise and creativity necessary for
development. So we will reward nations that have more open markets and
sustainable budget policies, nations where people can start and operate a small
business without running the gauntlets of bureaucracy and bribery.
I've
directed Secretary Powell and Secretary O'Neill to reach out to the world
community, to develop a set of clear and concrete and objective criteria for
measuring progress. And under the Millennium Challenge Account, we will apply
these criteria rigorously and fairly.
Countries
that live by these three broad standards -- ruling justly, investing in their
people, and encouraging economic freedom -- will receive more aid from America.
And, more importantly, over time, they will really no longer need it, because
nations with sound laws and policies will attract more foreign investment. They
will earn more trade revenues. And they will find that all these sources of
capital will be invested more effectively and productively to create more jobs
for their people.
The
evidence shows that where nations adopt sound policies, a dollar of foreign aid
attracts $2 of private investment. And when development aid rewards reform and
responsibility, it lifts almost four times as many people out of poverty,
compared to the old approach of writing checks without regard to results.
Marrying
good policies to greater aid led Mozambique to a 10 percent growth rate in 2001.
This approach help Uganda open its schools to more children, and increased
teacher pay by 2,700 percent. Bangladesh, a nation that was once a symbol of
famine, has transformed its agricultural economy; rice production is almost up
by 70 percent since the mid-'70s.
The
new compact I propose would multiply this progress. I challenge other nations,
and the development banks, to adopt this approach as well. America's support for
the World Bank will increase by almost 20 percent over the next three years. We
expect the World Bank to insist on reform and results, measured in improvements
in people's lives. All the development banks should adopt a growth agenda,
increasing their support for private sector enterprises and focusing more on
education, as the Inter-American Development Bank has done.
And
I challenge the development banks to provide up to half of the funds devoted to
poor nations in the form of grants, rather than loans.
Grants instead of loans that may never be repaid. Many have rallied to
the idea of dropping the debt. I say let's rally to the idea of stopping the
debt.
This
new compact for development can produce dramatic gains against poverty and
suffering in the world. I have an ambitious goal for the developed world, that
we ought to double the size of the world's poorest economies within a decade. I
know some may say that's too high a hurdle to cross -- I don't believe so, not
with the right reforms and the right policy. This will require tripling of
current growth rates, but that's not unprecedented. After all, look at the
dramatic growth that occurred in Asia in the 1990s.
With
the world's help and the right policies, I know -- I know -- that the developing
world can reform their own countries. I know it can happen. And, therefore,
better their own lives. They can live in a world where their children's dreams
are ignited by liberty and learning, not undermined by poverty and disease. They
can live under governments that deliver basic service and protect basic rights.
The demands of human dignity know no borders and know no boundaries. They are
universal. And so are the gifts of creativity and enterprise that lead to
prosperity.
When
governments repress and punish those gifts, no amount -- no amount of aid is
sufficient to lift people from poverty. When governments honor these gifts,
every nation can know the blessings of prosperity.
People
across the world are working to relieve poverty and suffering, and I'm proud of
their efforts. I appreciate Bono. I appreciate groups like the Sisters of
Charity. Some were motivated by simple decency, some serve a God who is
impatient with injustice. And all have made this commitment. We cannot leave
behind half of humanity as we seek a better future for ourselves. We cannot
accept permanent poverty in a world of progress. There are no second-class
citizens in the human race.
I
carry this commitment in my soul. And I'll carry it with me to Monterrey next
week. As the civilized world mobilizes against the forces of terror, we must
also embrace the forces of good. By offering hope where there is none, by
relieving suffering and hunger where there is too much, we will make the world
not only safer, but better.
Thank
you very much.
March
18, 2002
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