TED Day 1: Bono Heckles the Stage
The elite technology show has come to Africa. Africans are pleading for investment, which angers the Irish rock star.
Jason Pontin 06/05/2007
- 9 Comments
![]() Credit: 3ality |
Technology, Entertainment, Design, Chris Anderson's invitation-only conference for the good and great of technology, has come to Africa, but on the first day we heard very little about technology.
Anderson somehow convinced about a thousand people to come to rural Tanzania.
Many of the princes of Silicon Valley are here, including Google's Larry Page, the venture capitalist John Doerr, and Jay Walker, the founder of Priceline and Walker Digital. The rock star Bono (who suggested to Anderson that he host an African show) turned up. But there are people here from 40 countries, including (mercifully) many Africans.
Anderson says the purpose of the show is to tell the story of an Africa that is newly entrepreneurial, growing in wealth, more and more tech-savvy, and increasingly politically stable.
He says, "It's a story that is unfolding in villages, towns, and cities across the continent--and it's a story that's not well known outside of Africa."
So far, the show has been bluntly promotional. I felt I might have been attending a meeting of the heads of different African Chambers of Commerce. Indeed, the first speaker was the U.S. head of the South African Chamber of Commerce.
There have been some consistent themes. The first is that the media is morally culpable for propagating images of African poverty, famine, war, and despair. This made me feel impatient. Surely we can agree that while there are other, more benign stories in Africa, journalists are not misrepresenting reality when they write about poor, hungry, beaten, and despairing Africans?
But the second, more interesting theme--echoed by every speaker--is that traditional aid and charity, whether distributed by nation-states or nongovernmental bodies, have failed. Andrew Mwenda, a Ugandan journalist and social worker, now a fellow at Stanford, made the case most strongly. He argued convincingly that 30 years of Western aid to Africa has achieved nothing at all. More, he said that the persistence of African poverty could be explained, in part, by aid. He explained that aid had convinced the brightest Africans to work for corrupt governments rather than as entrepreneurs, and it had "distorted the incentive structure."
"What man or nation," Mwenda asked, "has ever become rich by holding out a begging bowl?"
Far better, he said, is finding Westerners to invest in African entrepreneurs or businesses, which would create wealth. Mwenda, like other speakers, described at length the investment opportunities in Africa. (I half expected the pitch to be directly addressed to Doerr et al.)
This line of argument enraged Bono, however, who began heckling Mwenda.
"Bollocks!" he shouted. "That's bullshit."
Bono is a strong supporter of intelligently managed aid. When it came his turn to speak, he said that Ireland's current prosperity is explained by government investment in its people, particularly education. He said that listening to Mwenda was like listening to an African Margaret Thatcher.
Oh, and everything you've heard about Bono's height is entirely true: he really is remarkably short.




Buckwheat469
34 Comments
Bono may be wrong, and right... it's a paradox
Andrew Mwenda made the point "What man or nation, has ever become rich by holding out a begging bowl?" This is exactly what shouldn't have happened for Africa to bring them out of poverty. We shouldn't continue to provide free food, free aid, free resources with no turnaround. We should help them, with building dams for water control, power stations, industries, self-sufficiency. This is the point that I got out of the article, but Bono may have heard something different.
The article states "Bono is a strong supporter of intelligently managed aid." It also says that Bono states "that Ireland's current prosperity is explained by government investment in its people, particularly education." This seems to be a paradox, because he's saying that he supports intelligent aid, as opposed to aid in general, but he also says that the government should support itself by investing in itself.
I wholly agree that giving out aid will not solve the underlying issues of the government, but the hope was to give the people enough time to change the government slowly. The government won't change overnight, but joining together as industrialized countries do and building simple resources that can change the economy of Africa is not that difficult for us to do. A single dam can save thousands and reduce the amount of money we give to them by millions per year. Simple things are the things most commonly overlooked.
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backtomac
1 Comment
Re: Bono may be wrong, and right... it's a paradox
I wasn't there and so it's hard to comment as his reply could be taken out of context. However, I would agree with the speaker who supports investment in Africa. This will eventually lead to a self sustaining economy and hopefully result in less war and famine.
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