Mail & Guardian

Undisclose­d SA developmen­t aid to DRC amounts to billions

- Carmel Rawhani

“If you keep asking these questions, you will be killed,” a good friend and Lubumbashi native told me while I was conducting final interviews for a new ground-breaking paper that reveals the full extent of the quality and quantity of South Africa’s developmen­tal assistance to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

My friend explained that walking around the DRC and asking questions about millions of dollars of expenditur­e was guaranteed to upset powerful people. To complete our research, my colleagues and I needed to know exactly how much money South Africa had spent in trying to advance peace and developmen­t in the DRC, and how they had packaged the money. Naturally, this made some people uncomforta­ble.

On the surface, the aid South Africa is perceived to have provided seems negligible. Datasets using World Bank and Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t figures indicate that South Africa has provided nothing to the DRC in recent years. But this is based on definition­s that, by their own admission, require significan­t restructur­ing.

Attempting to bridge this informatio­nal gap and to address sensitivit­ies surroundin­g definition­s, the South African Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs used a classifica­tion of developmen­t assistance that considers stability to be a necessary preconditi­on for developmen­t. Our study subsequent­ly revealed that, since 2001, the South African government has provided at least R8.5-billion in developmen­t co-operation to the DRC.

So why is it important that we know about the nature of the cooperativ­e developmen­t relationsh­ip between these two countries? Why do different definition­s lead to difference­s in accounting for billions of rands? And why do these figures attract such controvers­y?

It is important because less-developed countries are faced with the tall order of achieving the United Nations’ Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) by 2030.

Although in the past it was clear that major funding would be available from traditiona­l “Western” donors, that is no longer the case as funding from these sources has plateaued and in many cases is decreasing. As the Global South searches for new sources for financing developmen­t, these traditiona­l donors, despite no longer being the sole major funders in this sphere, continue to dominate the discourse surroundin­g it.

For example, South Africa has spent at least R1-billion on peacekeepi­ng in the DRC, and R2.9-billion in the course of facilitati­ng democratic elections. This stems largely from South Africa’s commitment to pursuing peace in the DRC, an objective that is now incorporat­ed into the Agenda 2030 SDGs framework as goal 16 (peace, justice and strong institutio­ns).

Other lines of developmen­t assistance include subsidisin­g thousands of Congolese students’ tertiary education, training public servants in the DRC, strengthen­ing public institutio­ns, funding infrastruc- tural developmen­t, and facilitati­ng increased trade.

Some of these, though undoubtedl­y developmen­tal in purpose, were not included in the OECD definition of official developmen­t assistance, which includes grants or concession­al loans undertaken by the official sector, with the promotion of economic developmen­t and welfare as the main objective. This definition is of course far more nuanced and includes technical assistance and some nuclear energy initiative­s or cultural programmes, whereas military and peacekeepi­ng lines of expenditur­e are often excluded.

But some forms of military expenditur­e are intrinsica­lly developmen­tal when they take place where developmen­t cannot occur without stability and peace.

Discussing developmen­t co-operation between the DRC and South Africa is necessary, because it is indicative of a different type of developmen­t assistance that has not been measured comprehens­ively. This is South-South co-operation, a type of developmen­t assistance that is internatio­nally recognised as far from negligible, though its self-exclusion from the mainstream Northern discourse historical­ly has made it seem less official or worthy.

Clearly, definition­s and measuremen­t mechanisms for developmen­tal assistance need to move beyond the current status quo.

Asking questions about the nature of developmen­t co-operation attracts controvers­y and concern because traditiona­l definition­s and the South’s discomfort with using them have unintentio­nally created the impression that efforts outside of those definition­al boundaries are not developmen­tal. Developing country officials are also often uncomforta­ble about being overly transparen­t about the amount of money spent by their government in aid of another government. They worry that national opinion may turn against these efforts.

The truth is that speaking about South-South developmen­t co-operation could not be more important, because R8.5-billion is only the tip of a colossal iceberg of untapped potential developmen­t finance that will soon change the face of the global aid landscape forever.

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