A note from Mr. Development Man

Perhaps after experiencing a Bill Easterly moment, a friend of mine (grad student here at Stanford) had this on his facebook wall:

“Hello, my name is Mr. Development Man. I know Africa so much!! I went there one summer and stayed with an NGO. I talked to my servant cook who served me food, so I know African workers. I read a few books written by white Americans about Africa, and remembered their big words. So I know African ideology. African prostitutes talked to me at my hotel poolside, so I know about relationships in Africa. I took pictures of kids at the orphanage, so I know how Africans suffer.

My conclusions: Africans are corrupt. The place is poor because of poor policies. And my knowledge can help them. If they just listened to my smart American knowledge — obtained from the 2 months at the NGO, my white man books, my prostitutes, my few words with my servant cook — they would develop!! Why don’t they listen to me?? I can help them…Stubborn, corrupt African politicians…

Signed, Mr. Development Man. Remember, I am here to help you Africa!!”

I have a sense that Mr. Development Man’s note is directed at both development practitioners and academics alike. Let us all take heed.

Chad, who is into short stories and is also a late night radio DJ, wrote this Letter to Mr development man on the dynamics of the love-hate relationship between donors and aid recipients.

H/T Chad.

2 thoughts on “A note from Mr. Development Man

  1. So Ken, I don’t know Easterly…would you say he gets it right in his “The White Man’s Burden”? I know the Development Man’s comment was satire, but what about Easterly? I may read him sometime…but not right now.

    Like

  2. Hi Karen,

    Easterly has a number of critiques of the aid industry in general and the wisdom of Western intervention in promoting development in particular. If you find time you should check out the elusive quest for growth. I like it better than the White Man’s Burden.

    Like

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.