9.2 Funding links
There is a widespread concern among South NGOs about how general
funder fads and paternalism discussed generally in the previous chapter appear
specifically in the North-South funding context. This concern is shared by some
people within North funders, as these observations illustrate, since they both
originate from North NGO funder staff:
"Some international NGO activities or initiatives
are breathtaking in their neo-colonial style and approach..." s
"...when it comes to Northern NGOs funding Southern NGOs, rarely
are funds released for southern partners to allocate as they see fit. Instead a
'project obsession' comes into play - money must be earmarked for a neatly
packaged project, so that the Northern NGO can market it for fundraising
purposes..."
In southern NGOs, experiences abound which reiterate and
elaborate on such observations. North funders are often accused of:
regarding the southern NGO as inexpert or
inexperienced;
undermining co-operative networking among southern NGOs by
encouraging rivalry and competition among them;
in the aftermath of the fall of the "iron curtain", faddishly
switching funding priorities to Eastern Europe as if needs in the South had
suddenly disappeared;
surrounding funding with onerous or complex conditions about
accounting (even to the extent of insisting the funders' own accounting systems
of hard- and soft-ware and practices were faithfully repeated in the NGO in one
case);
constantly demanding reports or making demands about their
format (one very large North funder brought staff from funded projects in one
country together for a 3-day training course so as to ensure that all funded
projects presented their reports in the format prescribed by the funder); and
sending in external consultants and evaluators (some
funders insist on appointing their own consultants and evaluators), often
lacking knowledge of local circumstances, without any consultation with or
reference to the South NGO.
Southern NGOs also point to failures on the part of northern
funders to gather information and consult with NGOs and their networks before
making decisions on priorities, interests, policies and funding. The result is
that some resources end up in the hands of fraudulent operators, or at best,
certain favoured organisations receive the greater part of the available
resources year after year. This undermines NGO networking, as organisations see
themselves as either competing with one another, or failing to secure resources.
Allied to lack of information from funders about their objectives, priorities
and current interests, this has led to a good deal of disillusionment, mistrust
and scepticism among southern NGOs. Many feel unable to raise their concerns
with the funders, on whom they are after all dependent, especially in countries
where local funding sources are few in number or non-existent.
While many governments welcome the resources they contribute (in
some countries resources contributed by external funders represent a significant
proportion of gross domestic product), some have become mistrustful of northern
funders. Others have special registration and regulatory procedures which enable
foreign funding to local NGOs to be monitored closely. Some NGOs feel that the
effect of this is to penalise them for the secrecy and other inadequacies of
funders which caused the regulations to be introduced by the government.
Dependence among South NGOs upon North NGO funders is, in poor
countries, inevitable, because of the nature of the global economy and trade
system, historical atrocities such as slavery and apartheid, and the legacies of
colonialism. All these have left an entrenched inequality between developed and
less developed countries. If the kinds of practices which many South NGOs report
are to be modified it is clear that to a large extent it is incumbent on the
funders themselves to put their houses in order. But South NGOs recognise that
there are steps they must take themselves. A large NGO in a Southern African
country has published what it expects from its donors and other development
partners, and these have improved its relationships with them. Networking and
collaboration among South NGOs is growing and can also help deal with some of
these problems, as discussed in the previous
chapter.