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Restoring Purpose to Foreign Aid


Article # : 15642 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 2 / 1989  4,976 Words
Author : Nicholas Eberstadt
Nicholas Eberstadt holds the Henry Wendt Chair in Political Economy at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C., and is the author of The End of North Korea, from which this essay is drawn.

       American foreign aid policies must be made more effective. Their effectiveness cannot be increased, however, without an appreciation of the larger purposes to which they are to be applied. In principle, these purposes are clear. The first is to augment American political power throughout the world. The second is to support the postwar liberal international economic order that the United States helped create and is committed to preserving.
       
        These purposes are closely related. With its particular political values, the United States can achieve greatest security under a world order that accepts as legitimate the free international flow of information, trade, technology, and capital; that does not question the right of people to act to improve their material well-being; and that embraces the rule of law and the propriety of enlightened governance. Conversely, the use of American power to protect a system that offers all nations and peoples opportunity--unmatched by alternative arrangements--to participate in broad-based material advance is not only a strategic goal but an objective dictated by U.S. moral and humanitarian concerns. The liberal international economic order America helped create remains the best broad hope for the world's poor and disadvantaged peoples. The United States should use its power--military, financial, moral--to protect it.
       
        Just as the wedding of moral purpose and international power is fundamental to Americans' view of their own nation, so too should it govern the country's approach to foreign aid. In a consideration of foreign assistance, however, it is best to distinguish three separate concerns.
       
        ... (1990 of 32466 Characters)
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