Does Aid Kill Development?

Published / by Jehangir

One blogger whose posts I follow regularly is Kevin Kelly. Recently I came across a thought-provoking idea in his Technium blog.

Quote:
Poverty is the natural beginning state of all societies, east or west. Rather, decentralization is the engine which removes poverty and brings wealth. To the degree that infrastructure, education, and trade can be decentralized, wealth will rise in proportion. To the degree that infrastructure, education and trade are centralized, poverty will remain.

….Wiliam Easterly argues in his book, The Elusive Quest for Growth, that the billions and billions of dollars spent on aid for developing countries has not only *not* helped, it has set them back decades. Aid, as we know it, kills development. This harm occurs because almost all previous aid has funneled through a central government or semi-governmental organizations and that official route tightens centrality. Even if the governments were saintly, and they are definitely not, the scale of money flowing through these centralizing nodes prohibits the distribution of resources, infrastructure, trade, and education. The more aid that arrives, the less development can actually happen.
Unquote.

In Kashmir I feel that the problem is that all very often the motives behind providing aid are not entirely altruistic. Aid is more like largesse distributed according to a specific agenda of either the provider [aid agency] or the implementer [government agency/NGO] with the result that that aid-based development is skewed, even though it can be argued that it may be better than no development at all.

KK also has some interesting photos of Kashmir in his photogallery.
Well worth a visit.

Serendipity and the Internet

Published / by Jehangir

One of the greatest joys of the internet is online serendipity, when you make a fortunate discovery while looking for something entirely different. During a search for a totally unrelated item, I stumbled upon this little gem in the comments section of a website that had a strange mix of politics, DIY guides, lonely hearts clubs, game cheats, vernacular abuses and other eclectic stuff. It is a poem called ‘Burdbaari’.

Even though I take pride in my googling ability, I must confess that I have been unable to locate the webpage again to confirm the name of the poet. Probably Google cannot do a keyword search because I changed the spellings of the urdu words into more conventional ones.

lotus

Burdbaari

mitti mein ugay huve khaamosh magar khushnuma phoolon se ek kamal ne kaha,

satah-e-aab pe mera yeh dilfareb zahoor,

mere paikar ki yeh dilfareb raanaee,

is thehrey hue paani ki khilqat hai

aur yeh thehra hua paani hi,

mere husn kaa sana-khuwan bhi hai

mujhay mitti ki tamanna hai, na barsat ki justuju

mitti mein ugay huve khaamosh, magar khushnuma phool

us haseen kamal ke is izhaar-e-ehsaas-e-bezameeni par

chupke se muskura diye

aur badastoor khaamosh rahey

150 not out (WildKashmir)

Published / by Jehangir

Kashmir

This weekend I recorded the 150th bird species I have personally observed in Kashmir. This checklist is based on birds I have observed in the valley and positively identified. The list includes some rarities like the Kashmir Nuthatch, Isabelline Wheatear, Black Stork and Chaffinch (the first ever sighting in Kashmir).

If there is any element of doubt regarding the identification the sightings have not been included in this list. AFAIK this is the most comprehensive list of confirmed bird sightings in Kashmir. For the record the 150th bird species was the Ferruginous Pochard.

Ferruginous

Here is a list of the 20 commonest birds of Kashmir. This is a really fast photogallery of the Birds of Kashmir.

P.S The checklist now stands at 172 confirmed sightings (2018). Watch this space.


Image copyright Dr. Bakshi Jehangir. All rights reserved.