Investing in people
(Dossier coordinated by Augustine Oyowe)
Previous editions of The Courier have dealt, separately and at
length, with various aspects of human resource development, especially in the
context of recent dossiers on population and social development, education and
training, public health, women, and poverty. Our current dossier looks at the
issue from the investment perspective.
To say that investing in people makes economic sense is to state
the obvious. But to what extent are the implications of this statement fully
understood in the developing countries, especially in sub-Saharan Africa in
these days of constantly shifting development theories?
Labour or 'human capital' has long been recognised as a key
factor of economic growth. As opposed to sustainable human development, which
places human beings at the centre of economic activities (the recipient of the
fruits of economic progess), 'human capital' places them at the beginning of the
process. The difference of approach is thus evident even though the objective is
the same.
Investing in people is a concept which simultaneously combines
'human welfare' with the 'human capital' approach at the beginning of the
economic development process. It encompasses nutrition, health and education,
and should, under the right investment climate or conditions, enable any
investor, whether State or individual, to reap an adequate return .
After three decades of considerable efforts at investment in
health and education by sub-Saharan African countries, the returns in terms of
standards of living, economic grovvth and rate of development have been
extremely disappointing. The conclusion which can be drawn is that the
conditions necessary for adequate returns on these investments have been absent.
Colonial legacy
Sub-Saharan Africa inherited from the colonial regimes,
infrastructures in health delivery and education that were not only alien to its
culture and traditions, but also totally inadequate for nation building. It is a
well known fact that in 1960, there were no more than 1200 university graduates
in Capital redefined
It is important when thinking of investnent in human resources
to understand the real concept of capital. Below is an extract of a definition
given by Stefan de Vylder (taken from his UNDP discussion paper: 'Sustainable
Human Development and Macroeconomics strategic links and implications' .
A child in the North is born wealthy. His or her share of the
capital accumulated by earlier generations is worth a fortune. The higher wages
and salaries in the North, compared with those in the South, largely reflect
differences in endowment of the country, rather than of the individual. The fact
that, for example, a nurse in Germany earns 30 times more than one in Bangladesh
or Zambia has little to do with individual differences in training or skills;
the higher salaries in the North simply reflect the higher dividend on the
capital bestowed from the past. Part of this wealth or heritage is easily
visible: factories, roads, schools hospitals, universities, telecommunications,
and other infrastructure.
However, there are other, less tangible, forms of capital that
constitute a crucial complement to physical and infrastructural capital;
parliamentary democracy, a free press, respect for human rights' norms for
social interaction, systems of rapid dissemination of new ideas, trade unions
and a myriad of other large or small social organisations, a judiciary system
which, by and large, defends law and justice, and other institutions. This
latter form of capital may be called institutional or social capital. It is also
highly unevenly distributed in the world, with large differences both between
the North and the South and within individual countries of the North as well as
in the South the region as a whole. Indeed, some countries had no graduates at
all and in others, they could be counted on the fingers of one hand. In what was
effectively a race against time, African leaders understandably responded by
investing massively in human resource development. This was made possible partly
by small, but steady rates of economic growth and partly by sustained foreign
assistance. Between 1960 and 1980, sub-Saharan African governments consistently
allocated high proportions of their annual budgets to health and education.
Households and individuals made similar efforts (accounting for nearly 75% of
all spending on health). They made sacrifices and gave a high premium to the
education of their children.
The results were tangible and very significant. By the late
1980s, sub-Saharan Africa was producing over 70 000 graduates a year. Major
cities had hospitals and health centres and the rural areas, clinics and
dispensaries. Amid a general improvement in nutrition and health-care delivery,
the incidence of infectious disease, and maternal and infant mortality were
considerably reduced.
Despite these achievements, the approach to manpower building by
the post-independent African leaders was, to say the least, haphazard. As a
result, a number of problems, such as the appropriateness of school curricula,
under staffing and the long-term budget implications of recurrent expenditures,
were overlooked (although reform efforts have since been attempted in some
countries with varying degrees of success).
The consequences were felt in the 1980s when Africa's economic
crisis was only just beginning. Health and school infrastructures deteriorated
for lack of maintenance. There were shortages of qualified teachers and teaching
materials leading to falls in educational standards as well as in primary school
enrolments. And health systems failed for lack of personnel and drugs.
The situation has worsened as the continent's economic crisis
has deepened-a crisis characterised by huge budget deficits, high inflation
rates, sluggish growth rates and a heavy debt burden. Structural adjustment
programmes (SAPs), introduced in response to this, have only served to undermine
further the gains made in human resource development. SAPs have been aimed
mainly at macroeconomic stabilisation, deregulation and privatisation of state
enterprises, and the social sectors have lost out in the process. Subsidies on
basic commodities, especially food, have been removed, civil servants and
employees of state enterprises have been made redundant and cost-recovery has
become the standard practice in medical services. These measures have all
combined to produce a level of poverty never before seen in the region, a
situation which has adversely affected nutritional standards, provoked
malnutrition in many countries and reduced resistance generally to infectious
diseases. Because of the rise in unemployment, large sections of the educated
population have been rendered unproductive, a waste of several years investment
by both the state and the individuals in question.
Appropriateness of skills
Although sub-Saharan Africa produced a large number of graduates
before the economic crisis began, few had the kinds of skills needed for
industry and agriculture. The evidence of this lies in the unsuccessful attempts
by some governments in the late 1970s to indigenise executive positions, most of
which required high levels of technological knowledge or experience. The 1980s
saw a dramatic increase in the number of foreign technical assistants working on
the continent and, paradoxically, in the number of qualified African
professionals leaving, mainly for Western Europe, the United States and Canada.
International technical assistance to, or cooperation with,
subSaharan Africa has intensified. Organisations such as the World Bank, IMF,
UNDP, UNCTAD, UNESCO, European Union and Commonwealth are all involved in one
form or another. The effectiveness of this assistance varies, however. This
dossier features articles on the work of three of these bodies (the
Commonwealth, UNDP and VNESCO). The Commonwealth Fund for Technical Cooperation
was set up more than 25 years ago to mobilise Commonwealth skills to meet the
needs of member states as required. The UNDP's TOKTEN programme is designed to
reduce the negative impact of the brain drain by getting highly qualified
developing country expatriates to contribute their skills to the development of
their home countries without necessarily having to return permanently. Finally,
UNESCO's university twinning programme is designed as a mechanism for the rapid
transfer of technology and sharing of knowledge.
While international assistance or cooperation is indispensable,
it is surely no substitute for Africa's own efforts at human resource
development. Three years ago, Edward Jaycox, then World Bank Vice-President for
the Africa Region, announced what appeared to be a change of policy at the
annual conference of the African-American Institute in Washington DC. He said
that the Bank would no longer pay for foreign technical assistants to help
resolve African economic problems but would instead help African governments
build their own capacity. Although the Bank has traditionally had enormous
influence on development thinking and policy worldwide, the apparent policy
change does not appear to have influenced other donors. Nor, indeed, is there
any evidence that the Bank itself is implementing it vigorously. The number of
foreign experts being sent to Africa continues to grow. There were over 100 000
in 1988.
Rationality of investing in people
In addition to the negative social impact, ten years of
structural adjustment have not produced the sought-after stabilisation or the
economic growth that was initally anticipated. Even the World Bank and IMF, who
spearheaded the structural adjustment idea, have admitted that it has flaws and
the need for a new approach to sub-Saharan Africa's economic problems could
hardly be more urgent. In the Dossier, Giovanni Andreas Cornia argues for a new
focus for structural adjustment, based on restoring adequate levels of public
spending on health, education, social welfare and water supplies, so as to
enable sub-Saharan Africa to restore and develop its human resources.
Evidence of the impact of a healthy and educated population on
economic growth and development abound. Studies on the economies of the East
Asian 'tigers' have all concluded that big investments in education in the late
1950s and 1960s were largely responsible for the rapid growth they have
experienced in recent years. Malaysia, although a latecomer, appears to be
following in the footsteps of its neighbours. After nearly two decades of
investment in human resource development, and the introduction of a foreign
investment policy which requires some technology transfer, the Government now
predicts Malaysia will achieve 'fully developed' status by 2016-twenty years
from now.
A relatively well-educated workforce and a certain amount of
physical capital or natural resources are all a country needs to succeed
economically. Sub-Saharan Africa has sufficient natural resources as is often
pointed out. The other side of the equation-a relatively well-educated
workforce-is missing.
Sub-Saharan Africa lags behind other regions in human resource
development for a complex variety of reasons. The natural and political
environment are not conducive to the delivery of social services: low population
density and weak transport infrastructures make such delivery expensive and the
achievement of economies of scale impossible. The region's climate favours a
variety of diseases (such as malaria and sleeping sickness) and many areas have
little or no access to natural water sources. Political instability and weak
institutions also continue to cast a long shadow. Although these constraints are
long-term, appropriate policy measures could reduce their negative impact
significantly.
Giovanni Cornia analyses the distributive effects of appropriate
health care, nutrition and education on economic growth. He suggests ways of
making rational use of available resources for maximum returns and of mobilising
funds through taxation, foreign aid and other sources.
In an age of increasing globalisation, where technology is more
easily transferable across borders, a healthy and educated population is
essential, not only for the absorption and use of new technology but also for
meaningful participation in international trade.
It is insufficient, however, to have an educated workforce. Sub
Saharan Africa must acquire the institutional and managerial capacity to make
the right decisions, both in the public and private sectors. This is essential
in the quest to eliminate poverty, achieve sustained and sustainable economic
growth and ensure a realistic integration of the region into the global
economy.