Development Council
- Poverty alleviation gets top priority
- Need for better aid
coordination
- A new approach for LomR>- A new member welcomed to the ACP
Group
Aid donors should regard action to combat poverty as a basic
component of development, rather than lust as one other aspect of their
cooperation work, since chronic poverty is one of the central problems of the
developing countries and not a secondary effect of underdevelopment. This was
the message sent out by the European Union's Council of Development Ministers at
their latest half-yearly meeting in Brussels. And there was an equally firm
message to the governments and societies of states which receive development
aid: 'The objective of reducing poverty can be achieved in each country only on
the basis of a clear and lasting political will based on national consensus and
directed In particular towards reducing the uneven distribution of the benefits
of growth and unequal access to productive resources and social services. 'The
poor must be helped to develop the capacity to provide for their own needs and
be involved in the process of political, economic and social decision-taking,
since 'democratisation processes, the rule of law and proper public
administration (...) are important conditions for the fight against poverty.'
A resolution from the Council says that action to combat poverty
should be a central theme in dialogue with the developing countries, especially
the least advanced among them, and in cooperation agreements between them and
the Community. Aid and action must be targeted on the poorest or most vulnerable
sections of the population, and women must be fully involved in ail measures to
alleviate poverty, since the part they play is often decisive in ensuring that
such polices, and development measures in general, are effective.
Poverty has generally persisted in the developing countries over
the last ten years and even worsened in some, especially in sub-Sahn Africa.
Among the reasons for this, ministers singled out debt and trends in commodity
prices, and admitted that the policies pursued so far had been inadequate.
The Vice-President of the European Commission, Manuel Mann, who
is responsible for development cooperation, reported briefly on progress in the
top priority areas for policy coordination between the EU and its Member States:
health, food security, education, population policy and women in development.
Written reports on these will be produced over the next year.
There has long been pressure in some quarters for action to
rationalise aspects of the European Union's food aid policy. NGOs recently
reported, for example, that subsidies for exports of EU meat to various West
African countries were putting farmers in the Sahel out of business. Food aid
given in cash equivalent, not in kind, would stimulate local production and
markets. At December's Development Council the subject came up again, when the
representative of Belgium said food aid should be given only in real emergencies
and not as a form of indirect budget assistance; it should not be seen as a way
of offloading the Westrn world's surpluses. Reviving an old suggestion, Denmark
thought it would be a good idea if a joint Council on agriculture and
development could be held to consider the effects of the EU's own common
agricultural policy on farmers in the developing countries. But objections from
other Member States scotched this suggestion.
Ministers were in favour of EU participation in the World Health
Organisation's AIDS control programme and wanted a coordinated approach to the
forthcoming Cairo conference on world population. They believed that the role of
women in development must be taken into account, as a matter of course, in all
development programmes.
The last time development policy complementarity and the
practicalities of operational coordination between the European Community and
the Member States were debated was in 1984, but the subject is bound to become a
burning issue again now that the treaty on European Union has come into force.
Under the Treaty, Community policy in the sphere of development cooperation has
to complement the policies pursued by the Member States; this extends to
coordinating their polices and consulting each other on their aid programmes in
international organisations and conferences. Where the Member States are
concerned, this includes the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, on
whose boards the Community as such is not represented. The Treaty entitles the
Commission to take any useful initiative to promote this coordination (though
any proposal it makes must, of course, still be adopted by the Council before it
can be acted on). The Development Council decided, however, that Council
resolutions would be the prime means of laying down guidelines and lines of
action for the Community and the Member States in their respective policies. In
other words, national governments are not willing to allow the Commission or the
European Parliament a greater consultative or advisory role in policy
coordination. Even so, the Commission's representatives are to work with those
of the Member States in recipient countries as the main channel for operational
coordination on the spot. This will promote greater coherence in discussions by
either party with the local authorities. Pilot projects in coordination are to
be run in three or four developing countries, although the Council did not
decide which. Exchanges of information about projects, informal meetings of
Directors-General for Development and contacts between experts in particular
fields, notably officials of the European Community's Humanitarian Office (ECHO)
and national humanitarian aid departments, will serve to make coordination more
efficient.
In the end, the feeling left by the Council's resolution was
that there is still an underlying problem of inadequate coordination between the
Member States themselves, whether for lack of political will or lack of a
structure. In any case, with some Member States set to cut their development aid
budgets, there is going to be less to coordinate at all in future. And the
question of whether or how to take a coordinated stance in international bodies
was left unresolved. As to the EU's development cooperation policies
complementing those of the Member States, which is seen as the next stage on
from coordination, the Council merely noted that this needed to be worked out in
greater detail before a workable policy could be arrived at.
The previous Development Council, in May 1993, decided to use
European Development Fund money to finance a rehabilitation programme for
certain African countries recovering from natural or man-made disasters.
December's Development Council heard that of the ECU 100 million earmarked, ECU
84 m had been paid out by 2 December and the rest was committed but could not,
under the Financial Regulation governing Commission payments, be paid until the
work concerned had been carried out. The Council concluded that rehabilitation
programmes should be decided case by case and in consultation with the United
Nations and other donors, but the Community's procedures should be simplified so
that it could act faster. Funding should come from the EDF and the Community
budget; the 1994 budget in fact includes ECU 45 million for rehabilitation,
which will go some way to meeting the cost of the projects still needed,
intimated by NGOs (who usually carry them out) at between ECU 250 and 350 m.
The Council considered a report on progress towards the midterm
review of the LomV convention, which is to begin by May of this year. The
report was drawn up by a working party set up by the Committee of Permanent
Representatives, the Member States' Ambassadors to the KU, to prepare a
negotiating brief for submission to the EU's General Affairs Council later in
December. National delegations supported the Commission's proposals in several
areas. They agreed that the Convention should include a 'democratic clause'
making respect for democracy (and not just human rights) a condition of EU aid
for ACP countries. The Belgian Presidency, the Commission and some Member States
thought a clause explicitly suspending aid for non-observance was essential,
while others preferred positive measures and consultation to unilateral
sanctions and said they would not tolerate the ACP countries being treated more
severely in this regard than other developing countries, especially those in
ASEAN and Eastern Europe, with which the Community had cooperation agreements.
There was general agreement that financial aid planning needed
to be more flexible, at a time when all the Member States were having to rein in
their budgets. The Commission proposes, and the Member States have accepted,
that national indicative programmes should be divided into yearly instalments,
payment of each instalment being dependent on how well previous tranches have
been used. This would prevent build-ups of unused money which cannot be put to
use elsewhere and persuade taxpayers that their contributions towards aid were
being used more effectively. The financial guarantees which recipient countries
enjoyed would remain, but they would be expected to show proof of their capacity
to absorb EU funds in the interests of their own peoples. As the President of
the Development Council, Eric Derycke, put it, the intention of the Member
States was chiefly to make ACP states share more of the responsibility for their
development. Care must be taken, however, to avoid marginalising the least
developed countries.
Thirdly, the Council agreed that management procedures in the
existing Convention need to be streamlined to make aid more efficient, and were
interested in the idea of extra financing being available as an incentive for
projects in special priority areas such as the environment.
On the subject of EU red tape, Mr Marin said he thought that the
procedural requirements in the Lomonvention which tied the Commission's hands
were unreasonable in the modern day. The procedures under the Protocols with
Mediterranean countries, for example, were much faster - and the ACP states were
now in competition for aid with those countries, not to mention Eastern Europe,
Latin America, Asia and the Middle East. On financing, the Commissioner reminded
Ministers that the package agreed by the Edinburgh European Council in December
1992 implied spending of ECU 25 to 30 per head in Eastern Europe and only ECU 5
per head in the South. This was a political decision which meant that the EU's
development cooperation instruments with the South, especially Africa,
absolutely had to work properly. The spirit of Lomould only be safeguarded if
the Convention were modernised.
In an exchange of views on relations with South Africa,
Ministers discussed practical EU support for the elections announced for April
1994 and trusted they would take place as scheduled, with all political groups
taking part. For relations thereafter, it would be for the Council to decide in
due course whether, from Europe's point of view, Loma bilateral agreement
between the EU and South Africa or cooperation via the Southern African
Development Community would be the best framework.
The Council asked the Commission to look into the possibility of
'labelling' environmental and sustainable development projects being carried out
in pursuance of the Rio Conference of June 1992, so as to make both governments
and public opinion more aware of them.
The Italian delegation made a statement welcoming Eritrea to the
ACP group, praising the work it was doing to promote good relations among its
neighbours and calling on all governments to help the young nation and thereby
promote peace and security in the region. _
Robert
ROWE