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The New Partnership for Africa's Development (NEPAD) - An Initial Commentary - Ravi Kanbur


6. Conclusion
 
As the implementation of NEPAD gathers steam, there will be more demands on it than can be satisfied-by a vast margin. The needs of the continent are so great, the diagnosis of the causes of African poverty are so complex and so interlinked, and the financial and technical resources of NEPAD will be so attractive, that this is bound to be the case. But, apart from simple operational overload, there is a danger that in satisfying too many demands NEPAD will squander its most precious resource-its position as a regional institution that draws its regional and global legitimacy from its democratic roots and aspirations. It is suggested in this initial commentary that in the next phase of the discussion and development of NEPAD each proposed action or program be put to a three pronged test-whether the action makes efficient use of NEPAD's regional status without duplicating what other regional agencies are already doing, whether the action particularly and peculiarly needs the special authority of NEPAD that stems from its claim to speak for the people of Africa through democratically elected heads of state, and whether the action will have not only a medium term but an immediate and direct benefit to the poor of Africa. It is hoped that these criteria would help in prioritizing among the vast array of actions that are already suggested and will further be suggested for NEPAD. But a stronger hope is that as the debate develops NEPAD will proactively generate actions and programs that are peculiarly suited to it. If that happens, then the framework suggested here will have been useful not simply in performing a gatekeeper role, but may also prove useful more positively for making the most of NEPAD's very special strengths.
 
 
Footnotes:      [back]
 
T.H. Lee Professor of World Affairs and Professor of Economics, Cornell University. This commentary was prepared at the invitation of the Southern African Regional Poverty Network.
I am grateful to Richard Humphries of SARPN for the invitation.
The analytical foundations for this commentary are to be found in a number of papers I have written over the last few years. See, in particular, Ravi Kanbur, "Cross Border Externalities, International Public Goods and Their Implications for Aid Agencies," 2001, http://www.people.cornell.edu/pages/sk145/papers/IPGWB.pdf ; Ravi Kanbur and Lyn Squire, "The Evolution of Thinking About Poverty: Exploring the Interactions," in G. Meier and J. Stiglitz (eds.), Frontiers of Development Economics: The Future in Perspective, Oxford University Press 2001, http://www.people.cornell.edu/pages/sk145/papers/evolution_of_thinking_about_poverty.pdf; Ravi Kanbur, "Economic Policy, Distribution and Poverty: The Nature of Disagreements," World Development, June 2001, http://www.people.cornell.edu/pages/sk145/papers/Disagreements.pdf; Ravi Kanbur, "Aid, Conditionality and Debt in Africa," in Finn Tarp (ed), Foreign Aid and Development: Lessons Learnt and Directions for the Future, Routledge, 2000, http://www.people.cornell.edu/pages/sk145/papers/africaid.pdf; and Ravi Kanbur, "Income Distribution and Development," in A.B. Atkinson and F. Bourguignon (eds.) Handbook of Income Distribution, Vol 1, North Holland, 2000, http://www.people.cornell.edu/pages/sk145/papers/Income1.pdf. I have also benefited from reading Stephen Gelb’s recent paper, "South Africa’s Role and Importance in Africa and for the Development of the African Agenda," The Edge Institute, October, 2001. The NEPAD document is being updated continuously. The version on which this commentary is based is dated October 2001, and is available at http://www.hsrc.ac.za/corporate/conferences/sarpn/primaryMaterial/NEPAD.php.

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