Doing More with Less, or a Stunt?

AuthorHarrop, William

Faced with inadequate funding, US embassies in the developing world regularly hear the refrain "Do More with Less." In the late 1970's, as ambassador to Guinea, I worked with the socialist/communist President Sekou Toure. He had banned commerce of any sort. As a result, Guinea must have been the only country in Africa without markets, without women seated behind mounds of nuts, vegetables and grains, without the bustle of trading activity. The countryside and villages of what had been a relativity prosperous French colony were dirt poor and unhappy. Sekou Toure blamed that on the Guinean people. He complained to me on one occasion: "I am fed up with my Guinean people. I tell them to work and produce for the good of everyone, not just their own families, and they won't do it"! I refrained from replying that national collectivism might not be the best way to encourage productivity.

the Cold War, and, partly as a consequence of his policies, Guinea hosted a Soviet mission of 1200 (sic!), which included engineers, mining and agricultural experts, medical advisors, railroad technicians and more. The Chinese mission, in competition with the Soviets, numbered 700, which included construction laborers engaged in erecting a splendid government center and theater. By contrast, my embassy had sixteen American staff members.

How could our pint-size embassy possibly compete with the scale of presence of our Cold War adversaries?

Well, in the 1970s USAID was providing a sum of $25,000 to every American ambassador to direct as he or she thought best to the development of their country of assignment. In traveling about Guinea, I had seen youth in every village playing the universal sport of...

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