Who says aid doesn’t work?

The Independent reports Bob Geldof’s recent trip to Ethiopia:

Though 35 per cent of Ethiopian children are malnourished, and 40 per cent are stunted when they start school, the number who die below the age of 5 is down 40 per cent on what it was 15 years ago. A shocking 381,000 children died from preventable causes last year but there is clear progress. Cases of malaria have been reduced by two-third since 2006, with the number of deaths halved thanks to the government spraying a million houses and the Global Fund and the Gates Foundation distributing a massive 20 million bednets.

“Who says aid doesn’t work,” spluttered Geldof as he leaves the clinic.


3 responses to “Who says aid doesn’t work?”

  1. D. Watson avatar

    An interesting article. Thank you. I always appreciate hearing good news.

  2. Matt avatar

    I think a pertinent question is: what happens if that aid stopped tomorrow? Or even better: what would happen if all that aid became un-earmarked general budget support tomorrow?

  3. Sam Gardner avatar

    Good point Matt. All “good examples of aid” are actually politically incorrect under the Paris Agenda steering most of the donor budget nowadays.