Sources - a clown reading list
The July, '05 Reason Magazine has a nice review of the book "The Shackled Continent: Power, Corruption, and African Lives, by Robert Guest, Washington, D.C.,
Smithsonian Books, 288 pgs, $27.50
Guest is the African editor for the Economist.
Since I've been reading on the topic for decades, I didn't see anything startling in the overview, but the specifics he sites are nice. Particularily the Zambia example. An average percapita income in 1964 of $540 plunging to $300 by year 2000, (inflation adjusted) despite $6 billion in foreign aid from 1980 to 1996.
Bad government, no rule of law, no property rights = no investment, no savings, no progress. "Africans are poor because they are poorly governed".
See Zimbabawe for another nasty example.
Here are some articles from past issues
The June 20 issue of Forbes also has a nice article "Trickle Up Economics" relating to how "low - tech, low -cost designs are helping the poorest farmers on earth grow their way out of poverty." Sites the Denver, CO organisation International Developement Enterprises, and the success of their bottom up aproach to helping people help themselves in the third world.
Forbes (and others) have covered the micro-lending success phenom of the last few years.
Heifer International may be one of the best known boot strapping charities out there, but they are certainly not alone.
Having said all that, Chris, ANY opportunity to perform is an
opportunity to learn. Go for it and have fun!
It's ok if you don't want to perform as your
Renaissance character, just don't go as a UN aid worker ! ;>)
Smack! Bad Clown! Bad Clown!
The July, '05 Reason Magazine has a nice review of the book "The Shackled Continent: Power, Corruption, and African Lives, by Robert Guest, Washington, D.C.,
Smithsonian Books, 288 pgs, $27.50
Guest is the African editor for the Economist.
Since I've been reading on the topic for decades, I didn't see anything startling in the overview, but the specifics he sites are nice. Particularily the Zambia example. An average percapita income in 1964 of $540 plunging to $300 by year 2000, (inflation adjusted) despite $6 billion in foreign aid from 1980 to 1996.
Bad government, no rule of law, no property rights = no investment, no savings, no progress. "Africans are poor because they are poorly governed".
See Zimbabawe for another nasty example.
Here are some articles from past issues
The June 20 issue of Forbes also has a nice article "Trickle Up Economics" relating to how "low - tech, low -cost designs are helping the poorest farmers on earth grow their way out of poverty." Sites the Denver, CO organisation International Developement Enterprises, and the success of their bottom up aproach to helping people help themselves in the third world.
Forbes (and others) have covered the micro-lending success phenom of the last few years.
Heifer International may be one of the best known boot strapping charities out there, but they are certainly not alone.
Having said all that, Chris, ANY opportunity to perform is an
opportunity to learn. Go for it and have fun!
It's ok if you don't want to perform as your
Renaissance character, just don't go as a UN aid worker ! ;>)
Smack! Bad Clown! Bad Clown!

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