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Over five decades of economic and technical assistance to the
countries of Africa and the Middle East have failed to improve the
life prospects for over 1.4 billion people who remain vulnerable.
Billions of dollars have been spent on such assistance and yet
little progress has been made. Persistent hunger and hopelessness
threaten more than individuals and families. These conditions
foster political alienation that can easily metastasize into
hostility and aggression. Recent uprisings in the Middle East are
emblematic of this problem. Vulnerable people give rise to
vulnerable states. This book challenges the dominant catechism of
development assistance by arguing that the focus on economic growth
(and fighting poverty) has failed to bring about the promised
"convergence." Poor people and poor countries have clearly not
closed the gap on the rich industrialized world. Pursuing
convergence has been a failure. Here we argue that development
assistance must be reconstituted to focus on creating economic
coherence. People are vulnerable because the economies in which
they are embedded do not cohere. The absence of economic coherence
means that economic processes do not work as they must if
individual initiative is to result in improved livelihoods. Weak
and vulnerable states must be strengthened so that they can become
partners in the process of creating economic coherence. When
economies do not cohere, countries become breeding grounds for
localized civil conflicts that often spill across national borders.
Over five decades of economic and technical assistance to the
countries of Africa and the Middle East have failed to improve the
life prospects for over 1.4 billion people who remain vulnerable.
Billions of dollars have been spent on such assistance and yet
little progress has been made. Persistent hunger and hopelessness
threaten more than individuals and families. These conditions
foster political alienation that can easily metastasize into
hostility and aggression. Recent uprisings in the Middle East are
emblematic of this problem. Vulnerable people give rise to
vulnerable states. This book challenges the dominant catechism of
development assistance by arguing that the focus on economic growth
(and fighting poverty) has failed to bring about the promised
"convergence." Poor people and poor countries have clearly not
closed the gap on the rich industrialized world. Pursuing
convergence has been a failure. Here we argue that development
assistance must be reconstituted to focus on creating economic
coherence. People are vulnerable because the economies in which
they are embedded do not cohere. The absence of economic coherence
means that economic processes do not work as they must if
individual initiative is to result in improved livelihoods. Weak
and vulnerable states must be strengthened so that they can become
partners in the process of creating economic coherence. When
economies do not cohere, countries become breeding grounds for
localized civil conflicts that often spill across national borders.
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