Lettre d’un senateur americain au directeur general du millenium challenge corporation les 270 milliards du Mca plus que jamais menacés

Date:

Au rythme des dénigrements, le Sénégal pourrait bientôt perdre le financement de 540 millions de dollars (270 milliards Cfa) que le gouvernement américain, à travers le Millenium Challenge Corporation, lui a accordé. Après le sénateur californien, Ed Royce, un autre sénateur (celui de Pennsylvanie), Arlen Specter a écrit une lettre à Daniel W. Yohannes, Directeur général du Millenium Challenge Corporation pour douter de l’éligibilité du Sénégal à ce financement.

Le millenium challenge account est plus que jamais menacé. Après la sortie du sénateur californien Ed Royce dans Business Insider pour décrier la façon dont les autorités sénégalaises « ont tenté de soutirer 200 millions de dollars à Millicom » c’est au tour du sénateur de Pennsylvanie, Arlen Specter, d’émettre des doutes sur l’éligibilité du Sénégal à ce financement. C’est ainsi que le mercredi 10 mars dernier le sénateur Arlen Specter a adressé une correspondance obtenue par L’As à Daniel Yohannes, Directeur général du Mcc, concernant « les allégations récentes selon lesquelles un haut fonctionnaire de rang au Sénégal a tenté d’extorquer 200 millions de dollars à Millicom, une société basée à Luxembourg télécommunications », lit-on dans la lettre du sénateur. En dépit de cette tendance inquiétante, poursuit le sénateur, « le journal sénégalais Le Soleil a rapporté que Tanya Southerland, directrice résidente du Millenium Challenge Corporation (Mcc) a affirmé que « nous continuons de faire des affaires comme nous le faisions auparavant ». De l’avis du sénateur, « les propos de la directrice donennt l’impression que l’équipe résidente ne parvient pas à répondre adéquatement au problème de la corruption ».

Et de poursuivre : « fervent défenseur du Mcc, je suis concerné par les risques potentiels posés par le programme d’une valeur de 540 millions de dollars (270 milliards Cfa) donné au Sénégal ». Avant de s’inquiéter sur la corruption au Sénégal. « La corruption au plus haut niveau du gouvernement du Sénégal, dit-il, rend un mauvais service aux contribuables américains qui ont confié au Mcc leur argent pour son utilisation dans les projets de développement légitimes. L’aide américaine transférée au Gouvernement du Sénégal via le Mcc doit avoir servi à promouvoir la bonne gouvernance et à lutter contre la corruption ». Ce qui du reste amène le sénateur à émettre des doutes sur la bonne utilisation de ce financement. A cela s’ajoute, le soutien de Wade au Président Iranien. Monsieur J.P. Pham du Comité national sur la politique étrangère américaine a dénoncé le soutien de Wade au Président Iranien sur le site washingtonexaminer.com, « nous leur avons remis un demi-milliard de dollars ; en guise de remerciement nous avons obtenu le soutien obséquieux à la position iranienne », écrit-il.

Samba THIAM

1 COMMENTAIRE

  1. What Works
    Behind the Curve
    By J. Peter Pham
    Stanford Social Innovation Review
    Fall 2009
    Copyright © 2009 by Leland Stanford Jr. University
    All Rights Reserved
    Action What Didn’t Work
    Fall 2009 • STANFORD SOCIAL INNOVATION REVIEW 65

    In 2004, the US. government-backed
    Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) certifi ed
    the West African nation of Senegal as eligible to receive
    hundreds of millions of dollars in foreign aid. Initially,
    Senegal seemed like an excellent choice for a
    grant from the MCC, which targets aid to poor countries
    that are committed to good governance, free markets,
    and investments in people. Senegal is one of the
    few African states that has never had a coup d’état.
    And since the nation became independent from
    France in 1960, Senegal’s leaders have peacefully transferred
    power two times—most recently in 2000, when
    citizens elected the current president, Abdoulaye Wade. In addition,
    the country has encouraged private sector-led development and has
    at least offi cially welcomed foreign companies.
    Since Wade’s election, however, Senegal’s enthusiasm for economic
    freedom, poverty reduction, and sustainable growth seems
    to have fl agged. For instance, after giving the French and Canadian
    consortium Hydro Québec International-Elyo a 34 percent stake in
    senelec, Senegal’s monopoly electricity supplier, the Senegalese
    government would not allow the company to recoup its investment
    by raising prices. Frustrated in their attempts to turn a profi t and to
    modernize the ramshackle power system, the investors were forced
    to accept a government buyout after less than 18 months.
    Likewise, Luxembourg-based Millicom International Cellular has
    encountered problems with the Wade administration. Since receiving
    a 20-year license in 1998, Millicom, whose local subsidiary operates
    under the Tigo brand, has invested heavily in the Senegalese
    market (more than $90 million in 2008 alone) to grow a nationwide
    network of 1.8 million loyal subscribers—one-sixth of Senegal’s
    population. Since Wade took offi ce, however, the government has
    tried to pressure Millicom into renegotiating its license and paying
    an additional $200 million. In September 2008, the government issued
    a decree that purported to terminate Millicom’s license and
    seize its holdings. The company is currently seeking arbitration
    through the World Bank’s International Centre for Settlement of
    Investment Disputes (ICSID). Subsequently, the Senegalese government
    has threatened to charge the fi rm’s general manager with
    illegal gambling because of a Tigo sales promotion that awarded
    prizes (such as a goat) to participating customers.
    Senegal’s commitment to good governance is also waning, with
    the Wade government following an all-too-familiar pattern of seeking
    to perpetuate itself indefi nitely. Wade initially promised to serve
    only one seven-year term, but in 2007 he was reelected to a second
    fi ve-year term. And since Wade came to power, some elections have
    been delayed up to one year. Meanwhile, in June, the Senegalese
    parliament created a presidentially appointed vice president post,
    which many speculate will go to the president’s son, Karim. In his
    previous government posts, including oversight of the 2008
    Organization of the Islamic Conference summit in Dakar, Karim
    Wade was criticized for cost overruns and accused of corruption.
    Despite its departures from the MCC’s selection criteria, Senegal
    is on track to receive major funding from the organization. In
    April 2009, the MCC even gave the Senegalese government a $13.39
    million grant to help the latter get ready to sign a “compact,” as the
    J. Peter Pham is a senior fellow and director of the Africa Project at the National
    Committee on American Foreign Policy. An advisor to governments and the private
    sector on policy issues in Africa, he was the recipient of the 2008 Nelson
    Mandela International Prize for African Security Development.
    PHOTOGRAPH BY SEYLLOU/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
    Behind
    the Curve
    Corrupt governments cash in
    on the Millennium Challenge
    Corporation’s outdated metrics
    By J. Peter Pham
    President Abdoulaye
    Wade of Senegal—an
    MCC grantee—and his
    son Karim have been
    accused of corruption.
    Action What Didn’t Work
    66 STANFORD SOCIAL INNOVATION REVIEW • Fall 2009
    agency calls its multiyear funding agreements. The compact, which
    the MCC lists as its leading priority, would pour hundreds of millions
    into infrastructure projects—which Karim Wade would direct.
    Although it is possible that the MCC’s local administrators in
    Senegal are corrupt, a better explanation for the MCC’s misguided
    investments is that bureaucrats in Washington are relying on out-ofdate,
    inaccurate, third-party information. In turn, aid recipients, as
    rational economic actors, sense the weaknesses in MCC’s selection
    and monitoring processes and then exploit them to their own advantage.
    This is happening not only in Senegal, but also in other
    countries eligible for MCC compacts. For example, after Mongolia
    received a fi ve-year, $285 million grant in 2007, it turned against private
    investors, slapping a staggering 68 percent “windfall profi ts” tax
    on holders of copper- and gold-mining licenses. Yet Mongolia’s decidedly
    antidevelopment actions did not aff ect its MCC funding.
    For the MCC to achieve its mission of reducing global poverty
    through sustainable economic growth, it needs to consider its data
    more critically. It also needs more timely assessments of grantees.
    faith-based science
    Established in 2004, the MCC is arguably one of the most signifi –
    cant foreign policy legacies of George W. Bush’s presidency. The
    MCC uses 17 third-party-generated policy indicators to select recipient
    nations for large, multiyear, fl exible grants, called Millennium
    Challenge Compacts. These compacts allow recipients to defi ne
    their greatest obstacles to sustainable development, and then to determine
    how to overcome these obstacles. Twenty of the 39 countries
    that are eligible for MCC funding are in Africa, and more than
    three-quarters of the funding committed so far has been destined
    for the continent.
    Although initiated by a Republican administration, the MCC
    continues to enjoy broad bipartisan support. President Barack
    Obama himself requested an almost two-thirds increase in funding
    for the MCC for 2010, raising its budget to $1.43 billion.
    Yet the very reason for the MCC’s popularity—the program’s
    use of “objective” selection criteria—actually undermines its broader
    goals. To shield its decision-making process from undue politicization,
    the MCC relies on third parties to generate the data it uses
    to select grantees. To assess countries’ regard for civil liberties and
    human rights, for instance, the MCC consults Washington, D.C.-
    based Freedom House scores. Using a 1 to 7 scale (on which 1 is the
    highest rating and 7 is the lowest), the 2008 edition of Freedom
    House’s Freedom in the World report gives Senegal a rating of 2 on
    political freedom and a 3 on civil liberties. These ratings designate
    Senegal a “free country”—one of fewer than a dozen African states.
    These third parties, however, take a long time to gather and analyze
    their data. The most recent Freedom House scores, for example,
    come from the group’s 2008 report, which is based on observations
    from the fi rst part of 2007. By the time the MCC uses the third-party
    indicators to make decisions, some of the inputs are several years old
    and may no longer represent the facts on the ground.
    Potential aid recipients seem to be aware of this loophole and
    time their backsliding accordingly. In the case of Senegal, the current
    MCC scorecard does not capture the country’s increasingly unfriendly
    investment climate or the Wades’ tightening grip on power, both of
    which will impact the country’s economic prospects. Yet the U.S.
    State Department’s most recent annual report on investment climate—
    a more subjective document—warns
    that “potential investors, and indeed all businesses,
    face obstacles, including non-transparent
    regulation and high factor costs” and
    that “court rulings can be inconsistent, arbitrary,
    and non-transparent.”
    In short, although the use of third-party
    indicators reassures observers that the MCC is practicing “smart
    aid,” appearances can be deceiving. The notion that numerical indicators
    are more scientifi c than qualitative analysis is based more on
    conceit than on evidence.
    better aid to africa
    Over the past 50 years, Africa has received more than $1 trillion in
    foreign assistance. After subtracting the $400 billion that these
    countries have paid back, the continent has received a net transfer
    of more than $600 billion. Yet donors and recipients have little to
    show for this unprecedented redistribution of wealth. Although a
    few African countries have recorded impressive economic growth
    in recent years, per capita income across the continent remains essentially
    where it was in 1960. In 2008, all 22 countries that the
    United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) characterized
    as having “low human development” were in sub-Saharan Africa.
    This failure of foreign aid suggests that simply increasing assistance
    levels will not necessarily buy more development. Indeed, my
    conclusion is quite the opposite: Unless aid carefully avoids reinforcing
    fl awed policies, supporting poor governance, weakening
    African institutions, and creating dependence, it will actually buy
    less development. I am not alone in this conclusion; New York
    University economics professor William Easterly and former World
    Bank consultant Dambisa Moyo have also indicted foreign aid. (For
    a review of Moyo’s Dead Aid, see the summer 2009 issue of the
    Stanford Social Innovation Review.) Likewise, as Rwandan President
    Paul Kagame declared in the Financial Times this year, “The cycle of
    aid and poverty is durable: As long as poor countries are focused on
    receiving aid they will not work to improve their economies.”
    Yet many other African leaders are still willing to play on donors’
    lingering colonial guilt. And despite widespread criticisms of current
    practices, donor countries are unlikely to scale back their assistance
    anytime soon. If no one turns off the spigots of foreign aid, then donors
    must at least make aid more eff ective by adopting more strategic
    approaches. The MCC is a valiant attempt at this. But if the
    granting of hundreds of millions of dollars to countries like Senegal
    is any indication, it has a long way to go before it will truly revolutionize
    foreign assistance. Decisions about aid need to be not only
    well intentioned, but also well researched and well timed.
    If the granting of hundreds of millions of dollars to countries
    like Senegal is any indication, the MCC has a long
    way to go before it will truly revolutionize foreign aid.

LAISSER UN COMMENTAIRE

S'il vous plaît entrez votre commentaire!
S'il vous plaît entrez votre nom ici

DEPECHES

DANS LA MEME CATEGORIE
EXCLUSIVITE

Afrique-Kenya : le nombre de décès liés aux inondations atteint 188 depuis mars

XALIMENEWS-Le nombre de décès liés aux inondations au Kenya...

15e sommet de l’OCI : le président Bassirou Diomaye Faye attendu à Banjul

XALIMANEWS-Lors du Conseil des ministres, tenu, hier jeudi, le...