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Latin America
Related: About this forumHaiti and the failed promise of US aid
Source: The Guardian
Haiti and the failed promise of US aid
After an earthquake struck in 2010, the US pledged to help rebuild the Caribbean country. A decade later, nothing better symbolises the failure of these efforts than the story of a new port that was promised, but never built.
By Jacob Kushner
Fri 11 Oct 2019 06.00 BST
Last modified on Fri 11 Oct 2019 12.59 BST
When Bill and Hillary Clinton travelled to the Caribbean nation of Haiti as newlyweds in 1975, they were enchanted. Bill had recently lost a race for Congress back home in Arkansas, but by the time they returned to the US, he had set his mind to running for Arkansas state attorney general, a decision which would put him on the path to the White House. We have had a deep connection to and with Haiti ever since, Hillary later said.
Over the next four decades, the Clintons became increasingly involved in Haiti, working to reshape the country in profound ways. As US president in the 1990s, Bill lobbied for sweeping changes to Haitis agricultural sector that significantly increased the countrys dependence on American food crops. In 1994, three years after a military coup in Haiti, Bill ordered a US invasion that overthrew the junta and restored the countrys democratically elected president to power. Fifteen years later, Bill was appointed United Nations special envoy to Haiti, tasked with helping the country to develop its private sector and invigorate its economy. By 2010, the Clintons were two of Haitis largest benefactors. Their personal philanthropic fund, The Clinton Foundation, had 34 projects in the country, focused on things such as creating jobs.
Over their many decades of involvement there, the Clintons became two of the leading proponents of a particular approach to improving Haitis fortunes, one that relies on making the country an attractive place for multinational companies to do business. They have done this by combining foreign aid with diplomacy, attracting foreign financing to build factories, roads and other infrastructure that, in many cases, Haitian taxpayers must repay. Hillary has called this economic statecraft; others have called it a neoliberal approach to aid.
-snip-
There was no greater embodiment of the neoliberal approach to aid in Haiti than the USs largest post-earthquake project a $300m, 600-acre industrial park called Caracol, on the countrys northern coast. To make the park more attractive, the US also agreed to finance a power plant, and a new port through which firms operating at Caracol could ship in materials such as cotton, and ship out finished products including T-shirts and jeans.
The Clintons and their allies believed the Caracol project would attract international manufacturers, which they saw as the primary fix to Haitis faltering economy. Haiti has failed, failed and failed again, wrote the British economist Paul Collier and his colleague Jean-Louis Warnholz, who have both advised the Clintons, in the Financial Times two weeks after the earthquake. By building critical assets such as ports, they argued, the US and its allies could help Haiti attract private, foreign investment and create the stable jobs it needed to prosper.
-snip-
After an earthquake struck in 2010, the US pledged to help rebuild the Caribbean country. A decade later, nothing better symbolises the failure of these efforts than the story of a new port that was promised, but never built.
By Jacob Kushner
Fri 11 Oct 2019 06.00 BST
Last modified on Fri 11 Oct 2019 12.59 BST
When Bill and Hillary Clinton travelled to the Caribbean nation of Haiti as newlyweds in 1975, they were enchanted. Bill had recently lost a race for Congress back home in Arkansas, but by the time they returned to the US, he had set his mind to running for Arkansas state attorney general, a decision which would put him on the path to the White House. We have had a deep connection to and with Haiti ever since, Hillary later said.
Over the next four decades, the Clintons became increasingly involved in Haiti, working to reshape the country in profound ways. As US president in the 1990s, Bill lobbied for sweeping changes to Haitis agricultural sector that significantly increased the countrys dependence on American food crops. In 1994, three years after a military coup in Haiti, Bill ordered a US invasion that overthrew the junta and restored the countrys democratically elected president to power. Fifteen years later, Bill was appointed United Nations special envoy to Haiti, tasked with helping the country to develop its private sector and invigorate its economy. By 2010, the Clintons were two of Haitis largest benefactors. Their personal philanthropic fund, The Clinton Foundation, had 34 projects in the country, focused on things such as creating jobs.
Over their many decades of involvement there, the Clintons became two of the leading proponents of a particular approach to improving Haitis fortunes, one that relies on making the country an attractive place for multinational companies to do business. They have done this by combining foreign aid with diplomacy, attracting foreign financing to build factories, roads and other infrastructure that, in many cases, Haitian taxpayers must repay. Hillary has called this economic statecraft; others have called it a neoliberal approach to aid.
-snip-
There was no greater embodiment of the neoliberal approach to aid in Haiti than the USs largest post-earthquake project a $300m, 600-acre industrial park called Caracol, on the countrys northern coast. To make the park more attractive, the US also agreed to finance a power plant, and a new port through which firms operating at Caracol could ship in materials such as cotton, and ship out finished products including T-shirts and jeans.
The Clintons and their allies believed the Caracol project would attract international manufacturers, which they saw as the primary fix to Haitis faltering economy. Haiti has failed, failed and failed again, wrote the British economist Paul Collier and his colleague Jean-Louis Warnholz, who have both advised the Clintons, in the Financial Times two weeks after the earthquake. By building critical assets such as ports, they argued, the US and its allies could help Haiti attract private, foreign investment and create the stable jobs it needed to prosper.
-snip-
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/oct/11/haiti-and-the-failed-promise-of-us-aid
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