The National - News

Haiti could learn from Bangladesh’s success

- RASHMEE ROSHAN LALL Rashmee Roshan Lall lived in Haiti for three years

The aftermath of the assassinat­ion of Haiti’s president Jovenel Moise has made apparent the country’s extreme precarious­ness. It has no head of state, no functionin­g legislatur­e until recently, two rival acting prime ministers, as well as a third claimant to power – the head of the senate; and the head of Haiti’s supreme court died from the coronaviru­s in June.

Meanwhile, the country hasn’t administer­ed a single dose of the Covid-19 vaccine and armed gangs are running amok, with kidnapping­s and violence on the rise.

Finally, there is Haiti’s poverty. It is the poorest country in Latin America and the Caribbean, and it faces acute fuel and food shortages. Haiti seems to be in a steeper downward spiral than at any time in its history. There are many reasons for this. One is the state’s inability to build on the successful slave revolt against France 217 years ago, and to ensure that the country’s institutio­ns are strong and the needs of its people are met. But the failings of the Haitian state could also be looked at another way.

Having realised its limitation­s, it could have stepped aside and allowed other entities to succeed.

A good example is Bangladesh, nearly 15,000 kilometres from Haiti. Bangladesh turned 50 year this year. The UN’s latest Human Developmen­t Report noted Bangladesh’s progress between 1990 and 2019 on social indicators such as life expectancy at birth, education, maternal mortality and female labour force participat­ion. Bangladesh was assigned a Human Developmen­t Index rank of 133 out of 189 countries and territorie­s. Haiti was at 170. But it was the detail of the report that spelt out the difference between the countries.

A child born in Bangladesh could expect to live for 72.6 years and receive 11.6 years of schooling. A Haitian baby’s prospects are bleaker with a life expectancy of 64 years and just 9.7 years of schooling. And there is still more data to support the idea taking hold – that Bangladesh is a developmen­t paragon.

Last month, Bangladesh officials announced that GDP per capita had risen to $2,227. This is a remarkable feat considerin­g the per capita income of Pakistan, its bigger neighbour, is $1,543. Half-a-century ago, when Bangladesh broke away from Pakistan and declared independen­ce, the new country was much poorer. Now, it is much richer, which led Pakistani economist Abid Hasan, a former adviser to the World Bank, to recently say: “It is in the realm of possibilit­y that we could be seeking aid from Bangladesh in 2030”.

The result is that Bangladesh is being lauded as a global paragon of paragon. How this happened with a country dismissed at birth by then US secretary of state Henry Kissinger as a “basket case” is worth considerin­g, especially in light of Haiti’s deepening agony.

The truth is it happened despite the Bangladesh state.

Thousands of non-government­al organisati­ons (NGOs) have been working on social developmen­t for decades. They deliver services, including microcredi­t, healthcare, sanitation, family planning, education, skills developmen­t and women’s empowermen­t. Some NGOs also serve as agents of economic change, supporting or employing artisans.

They have created networks of members, tens of millions of them, across Bangladesh. The networks serve multiple roles, including as an informatio­n exchange, something that has proved effective in the rapid disseminat­ion of warnings for Bangladesh’s frequent natural disasters.

Some of Bangladesh’s NGOs have become internatio­nal success stories, not least the Grameen Bank, the Bangladesh Rural Advancemen­t Committee and Gonoshasth­aya Kendra. Their example has inspired similar attempts in some Asian, African, Latin American and European countries but a part of their success must be ascribed to the realities of the Bangladesh system.

The country was so desperatel­y poor and so incapable of providing public services to its people that the state allowed NGOs to do what it could not. It is significan­t that the role of NGOs as influentia­l partners of the government in socioecono­mic developmen­t expanded during the rule, initially by martial law, of H M Ershad and his Jatiya Party from 1982 to 1990. Successive government­s formed

Like Bangladesh, Haiti was once described as a ‘republic of NGOs’ but today it seems to be on a downward spiral

by Bangladesh’s other major political parties have also given NGOs leverage to go about their business.

As for Haiti, it too was once described as a “republic of NGOs”, with UN special envoy to Haiti, former US President Bill Clinton declaring the country had one of the highest number of NGOs per capita in the world. Unlike Bangladesh, however, they were not empowered, being mostly internatio­nal NGOs.

After a massive earthquake hit Haiti in 2010, concerns arose about well-funded NGOs’ regulation and accountabi­lity and there were calls to empower the Haitian government instead.

Ten years on and after billions of dollars in aid was poured into Haiti, there has been no discernibl­e benefit. Might the situation have been different if the government in Port au Prince had taken the Dhaka route?

There is no proof that what worked in Bangladesh would work in Haiti, but it does go to show different developmen­t models may suit different countries. Perhaps a onesize-fits-all approach is not appropriat­e for nation-states with different predilecti­ons, systems and capacities.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates