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<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2>(Feedback welcome.)<BR><BR><FONT
face="Times New Roman"
size=3>/\/\//\/\/\//\/\/\//\/\/\//\/\/\//\/\/\//\/\/\//\/\/\//\/\/\//\<BR><BR>EQUINET
NEWSLETTER 62 profiles new information on STOPPING THE DRAIN OF<BR>AFRICA'S
WEALTH: A BOTTOM LINE FOR AFRICA'S HEALTH <BR><BR>The April 2007 EQUINET
newsletter on World Health Day highlights a new<BR>EQUINET report with Centre
for Economic Justice in Southern Africa authored<BR>by Patrick Bond on the
wealth flows out of Africa that can be found at<BR></FONT><A href=""><FONT
face="Times New Roman"
size=3>http://www.equinetafrica.org/bibl/equinetpub.php</FONT></A><FONT
face="Times New Roman" size=3> <BR><BR>The newsletter editorial on the
report is shown below.
<BR><BR>/\/\//\/\/\//\/\/\//\/\/\//\/\/\//\/\/\//\/\/\//\/\/\//\/\/\//\<BR><BR>STOPPING
THE DRAIN OF AFRICA'S WEALTH: A BOTTOM LINE FOR AFRICA'S HEALTH
<BR></FONT></FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2><FONT face="Times New Roman"
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<DIV><FONT face=Arial size=2><FONT face="Times New Roman" size=3>EQUINET
Steering Committee, April 2007<BR><BR>At this year's World Health Day the WHO
will be launching its annual report<BR>which focuses on human resources for
health. In Africa, as we have raised in<BR>previous editorials in this
newsletter, we are experiencing a 'global<BR>conveyor belt' of health workers
flowing from rural, primary health care<BR>level in the public sector to urban,
private care; from poor to rich areas<BR>and countries in the region and from
the continent, with its high health<BR>needs and under-resourced health services
to developed, high income<BR>countries such as USA, Canada, UK and Australia.
The loss of public<BR>investment and social resources in this outflow is
significant and outweighs<BR>any returns in remittances or aid for
education.<BR><BR>However health workers will certainly continue to go to where
they can work<BR>in adequately resourced health services, in decent jobs and
where they can<BR>secure their own family needs. This draws attention to the
much wider<BR>question of how in Africa we secure the resources to retain and
value our<BR>health workers, and more widely to meet our population health
needs. The<BR>latest EQUINET discussion paper, written by Patrick Bond and
produced<BR>jointly by EQUINET with the Centre for Economic Justice in southern
Africa<BR>points to a South-North drain of African wealth that undermines
the<BR>resources for health and development, and that increases our dependency
on<BR>the global North, and our loss of health workers.<BR><BR>The 2005
Commission for Africa report leaves the impression of a continent<BR>receiving a
vast inflow of aid, with rising foreign investment, sustainable<BR>debt payments
and adequate remittances from the African diaspora to fund<BR>development. Our
discussion paper tells a different story: of significant<BR>and dramatically
rising flows of resources out of Africa northwards,<BR>draining the continent of
the important resources needed to address its own<BR>development, including in
health. The paper synthesizes data about the<BR>outflow of Africa's wealth, to
reveal factors behind the continent's ongoing<BR>underdevelopment, as the basis
for proposing policy measures to reverse<BR>these flows.<BR><BR>The statistics
speak loudly of a continent being progressively dispossessed<BR>of its wealth,
and thus the resources it needs to improve health and human<BR>development:
<BR><BR>* A debt crisis with repayments in the 1980s and 1990s that were 4.2
times<BR>the original 1980 debt levels, and annual debt repayments equivalent
to<BR>three times the inflow in loans and, in most African countries,
far<BR>exceeding export earnings, leaving a net flow deficit of by 2000 of
$6.2<BR>billion. <BR>* Unequal exchange in trade and trade liberalisation
policies that have<BR>lowered rather than increased Africa's industrial
potential and exacted an<BR>estimated toll in sub-Saharan Africa of $272 billion
over the past 20 years.<BR>* Flows of private African finance that have shifted
from a net inflow<BR>during the 1970s, to gradual outflows during the 1980s, to
substantial<BR>outflows during the 1990s. <BR>* Falling foreign direct
investment (FDI) from roughly one third of FDI to<BR>third world countries in
the 1970s to less than 5% by the 1990s, and a shift<BR>to highly risky
speculative investment in stock and currency markets - with<BR>erratic and
overall negative effects on African currencies and economies.<BR><BR>Africa is
commonly and mistakenly represented as the (unworthy) recipient of<BR>a vast aid
inflow. Aid flows in fact dropped 40% during the 1990s, and the<BR>phantom aid
that flows back to the source countries in technical and<BR>administrative costs
was estimated in one study to be $42 billion of the<BR>2003 total official aid
of $69 billion, leaving just $27 billion in 'real'<BR>aid to poor people.
<BR><BR>There is also a perverse subsidy in the extent to which
industrialised<BR>countries exploit the global stock of non renewable natural
resources . This<BR>takes place through the extraction of minerals and natural
resources from<BR>Africa by Northern investors with little investment in return
and few<BR>royalties provided. It also takes place through use of global goods
like the<BR>earth's clean air. Forests in the South absorbing carbon from the
atmosphere<BR>are estimated for example to provide Northern polluters an annual
subsidy of<BR>$75 billion. A method for measuring resource depletion used by the
World<BR>Bank suggests that a country's potential GDP falls by 9% for
every<BR>percentage point increase in a country's dependency on resource
extraction.<BR>This implies, for example, that Gabon's people lost $2,241 each
in 2000,<BR>based on oil company extraction of oil resources, <BR><BR>These
outflows deplete the resources available for productive and
human<BR>development. They are felt most heavily by women and poor communities,
and<BR>undermine progress towards the achievement of human security for
the<BR>majority of African people. <BR><BR>They imply that the first step to
effect genuine growth and to deliver<BR>welfare and basic infrastructure is for
African societies and policymakers<BR>to identify and prevent the vast and
ongoing outflows of the continent's<BR>existing and potential wealth.
<BR><BR>Current global reform agendas do not address these outflows. While
they<BR>point to debt and unfair trade, they do not seek to reverse the outflow
of<BR>African wealth. <BR><BR>Campaigns to reverse resource flows and challenge
perverse subsidies are<BR>emerging from grassroots struggles and progressive
social movements, such as<BR>those in Africa that are resisting privatisation
and commodification of<BR>basic services, pressuring for rights to generic
anti-retroviral medicines<BR>and resisting encroachments on human development
through trade and<BR>macroeconomic policies that intensify inequities.
<BR><BR>These grassroots struggles can be consolidated by national governments
and<BR>regional co-operation to improve disclosure of financial flows and
apply<BR>policies within Africa to prevent the outflows and encourage the 'stay'
of<BR>domestic investment resources. The paper points to some options -
systemic<BR>default on debt repayments, strategies to enforce domestic
reinvestment of<BR>pension, insurance and other institutional funds;
national-scale regulation<BR>of financial transfers from offshore tax havens;
clearer identification and<BR>renegotiation of tied or phantom aid; and improved
calculation and<BR>negotiation around of the costs of FDI (not simply the
benefits), including<BR>natural resource depletion, transfer pricing and
profit/dividend outflows. <BR><BR>EQUINET welcomes the focus on this year's
World Health Day on one area<BR>through which Africa is bleeding- its loss of
human resources. We would<BR>however urge that to deal with this effectively in
the continent, and<BR>address the inequity globally in the resources needed for
health and human<BR>development goals, we need to deepen the debate. In 1998
EQUINET highlighted<BR>that a critical dimension of equity is the power and
ability people have to<BR>make choices over health inputs and their capacity to
use these choices<BR>towards health. For Africa this must surely include
bringing control over<BR>the resources for health and development back within
the continent. <BR><BR>Please send feedback or queries on the issues raised in
this briefing to the<BR>EQUINET secretariat at TARSC, email </FONT><A
href=""><FONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3>admin@equinetafrica.org</FONT></A><FONT face="Times New Roman" size=3> .
EQUINET work<BR>on economic policy and health is available at the EQUINET
website at<BR></FONT><A href=""><FONT face="Times New Roman"
size=3>www.equinetafrica.org</FONT></A><BR><BR><FONT face="Times New Roman"
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