The growth and decline of American economic aid to less developed countries
Date
1978
Authors
Wickes, Ronald James
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Abstract
The principal purpose of this study is to account for
changes in the amount of economic aid which the United States has
provided to less developed countries. Economic aid is defined
broadly to cover direct transfers of resources (money, credits,
commodities or services) from the government of the donor nation
to the economic sector of the recipient nation. Concessional
economic aid refers to grants and credits on terms markedly more
liberal than those applying in private commercial markets.
The first chapter of the dissertation notes that the United
States provided very little economic aid to less developed countries
prior to the New Deal. The American Government sought many of those
objectives which later gave rise to the transfer of aid, but it used
other instruments (including gunboat diplomacy, the institution of
customs receiverships, and measures to deny or facilitate private
loans) to achieve its objectives. U.S. relations with Central
American countries in the first part of the century illustrate the
use of these techniques.
The second chapter covers the emergence of significant
programmes of economic aid for less developed countries over 1933-
47. It includes detailed case studies on the growth of Eximbank
lending and technical assistance in Latin America, and the provision
of aid to North Africa, Saudi Arabia and China. The chapter argues
that a number of factors explain increased resort to economic aid
over this period, including the presence of strong foreign policy
and defence motives for providing assistance, increased interest in developing new outlets and markets for American products,
changed attitudes concerning the effectiveness of aid as a
foreign policy instrument, diminished use of alternative methods
(of the type discussed in Chapter One) for influencing events in
less developed countries, improved relations between the United
States and some recipient nations, the increased capacity of the
United States to provide aid, a humanitarian response to widespread
destruction brought about by the Second World War, and a relatively
favourable domestic political climate for the transfer of aid.
Chapters Three and Four deal with the expansion of concessional
economic aid to less developed countries between 1948 and
1966. The third chapter suggests that the expansion of general
programmes of capital and technical assistance over this interval
resulted from increased concern with ’communist' influence in less
developed countries, the growth of doctrines which were optimistic
in their assessment of the way in which large scale capital aid
could promote development, increased requirements in a number of
less developed countries, improved relations between the United
States and some important recipients, a more pessimistic judgment
of alternatives to economic aid, and an increase in the capacity
of the American Government to provide aid as less funds were
required in Europe and revenue from other sources expanded.
Chapter Four considers the special case of PL480 and
associated programmes. It takes issue with the view that the introduction
of PL480 can be understood simply in terms of the emergence
of large agricultural surpluses in the United States. While this
was the immediate cause, resort to economic aid to deal with the problem of surpluses was facilitated by the increased reliance of
less developed countries on imports of wheat and other relevant
commodities, and by the existence of a climate in which the provision
of large quantities of concessional aid was considered more acceptable
than it would have been fifteen years previously. Subsequent
expansion of commodity aid to LDCs is attributed to diminished
willingness to transfer surpluses to Europe and Japan, a positive
interest in providing additional economic aid to less developed
countries, expanded requirements for food imports in these nations,
and improved relations between the United States and other producer
countries.
The fifth chapter shows that there was a decline in the
amount of U.S. concessional economic aid to less countries over
1966-73. This is explained in terms of reduced emphasis on some
of the 'Cold War' objectives previously important in justifying the
transfer of aid, a marked reduction in the level of U.S. agricultural
surpluses, greater scepticism concerning the effectiveness
of aid as an instrument of policy, the increasing severity of the
American balance of payments problem, deteriorating relations between
the United States and some important recipients (including India
and Egypt), the manner in which concessional economic aid became
linked with unpopular issues (such as American involvement in Indochina)
, the ability of a number of less developed countries to
expand their foreign exchange earnings rapidly by other means, and
increased concern with domestic problems in the United States.
The concluding chapter states the principal findings of
the dissertation concerning the emergence, growth and decline of American economic aid to less developed countries,
attempts some general statements about the factors
influenced the amount of economic aid transferred.
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