ALTERNATIVE DEVELOPMENT
In drug producing regions, the creation of alternative income
opportunities through agrarian and other kinds of reform has been proposed to
wean existing and potential growers away from production and trade in illicit
drugs. Such strategies are termed alternative development. They are
intended to address the reason that so many farmers in developing countries grow
drug crops in spite of the risk involved: the fact that they have no other
comparable economic opportunities. This approach recognizes that, in order to
achieve long-run success, it is necessary to integrate peasants, producers and
traffickers into the social and economic mainstream, and it emphasizes tailoring
interventions to specific local level needs.
Alternative development in its many guises (e.g. crop
substitution, socio-economic development, integrated rural development) has been
attempted most vigorously in Bolivia and Thailand. Alternative development is
more politically acceptable than more direct ways of reducing illicit drug
supplies, since it promises new income opportunities within a context of
socio-economic development. However, continued interdiction programmes are
required for alternative development to work: disruption of the network of
processors and traffickers reduces demand for raw drug crops, and thus leads to
a fall in prices that is necessary for alternative economic activities to become
attractive.
Alternative development in Bolivia has been enshrined in
elaborate legislation based on the assumption that the failure of rural
development has caused peasants to move into coca production. The Bolivian
government, the United Nations and the US government vigorously support the
policy of promoting rural development so that coca production will decline.
Unfortunately, the programme has had relatively little impact to date, for
numerous reasons. First, coca remains economically attractive compared to the
alternatives: the income differential between coca and even the most
remunerative non-drug crop remains large, coca plants yield an income within 12
months of planting, they have a long life, and they produce four crops a year.
Second, coca is well suited to the social and economic conditions in Bolivia: it
requires little technology and only manual labour for picking, and it has a
well-established and nearby market not impeded by the poor transportation
infrastructure of the region.
In addition, alternative development schemes in some areas have
suffered from an emphasis on infrastructure rather than people, as well as from
institutional in fighting and inadequate funding. In practice, the farmer
participation envisioned by the programmes has not materialized, resources have
been inefficiently allocated, and the market potential for proposed alternative
crops has not been adequately researched. Another problem is that the
balloon effect has contributed to the failure of even relatively
successful regional alternative development programmes to make a significant
impact on the global illicit drug trade (just as regional crop eradication and
interdiction programmes have not been able to make a global impact). Thus,
although alternative development initiatives are clearly a good idea, in
practical terms a significant reduction of illicit drug production will not
necessarily be their main
outcome.