The Moral Imagination

Ep. 58 William Easterly Ph.D. : Poverty, Technocracy, and the Tyranny of Experts

Apr 25, 2024
William Easterly, NYU development economist known for critiquing technocratic aid, discusses how top-down development can harm rights and agency. He questions aid flows, the paradox of aid, and technocratic social engineering. Conversations cover Hayek’s knowledge problem, dispossession in development projects, market vs planner approaches, and when aid may do more harm than good.
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ADVICE

Don't Funnel Aid Through Corrupt Governments

  • Avoid giving aid solely through recipient governments when corruption and autocracy prevail because funds will be misused.
  • Target assistance to contexts with accountability or use channels that don't subsidize bad governance.
INSIGHT

The Paradox Of Aid Effectiveness

  • Easterly summarizes Peter Bauer's paradox of aid: aid fails where it's most needed and works where it's least needed.
  • Aid routed through mismanaged, corrupt, or autocratic governments often gets stolen or perpetuates bad governance instead of alleviating poverty.
ANECDOTE

World Bank Project Dispossessed Ugandan Farmers

  • William Easterly recounts villagers in Mubende Uganda being marched away at gunpoint because a World Bank forestry project seized their land.
  • The farmers had held the land for generations and had no court or political recourse against an IFC project that labeled the land project property.
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