Adopting Latin American solution to an African problem could workBy MARCELO GIUGALE | Thursday, June 14  2012 at  11:05

Fifteen years ago, Mexico did something that, until then, only rich countries had dared to do; it began to transfer money directly to the poor.

The payments were conditional: the recipients had to help themselves by keeping their children in school, and vaccinating them.

Today, some 70 developing countries have followed the example, and most evaluations indicate that the idea works.

But direct money transfers can be more than a smart way to deliver social assistance.

In fact, they may provide Africa with a neat solution to its most urgent problem: How to handle the massive commodity bonanza.

High prices and vast discoveries of oil, gas and minerals, are turning the continent into a giant boom-town.

Big money is beginning to flow into governments’ coffers. The risk that it may be wasted — or stolen — is big.

The best way to hedge the risks is to upgrade public institutions like budget, investment and anti-corruption offices.

Politically complicated

But that will take time. Meanwhile, what can be done? Transfer part of the money directly to the people — universally and uniformly; same sum to each person, rich or poor, and call it “direct dividend transfers.”

Why would you do that? Will this not mean less money for schools, clinics, and roads? Not necessarily.

In fact, direct dividend transfers may lead to less poverty, less corruption, and more public services.

First, poverty. If a typical African government (think Gabon) distributed, say, a tenth of its hydrocarbon or mineral revenues, each citizen could get about $100 per year.

That may not be much for the well-off; they may not even bother to collect it.

But it would be a huge help for poor households, making a day-and-night difference in their effort to climb out of poverty.

Optimally, one would like to focus the transfer only on the poor, and away from the rich.

But, in most places, that would prove to be politically complicated, if not impossible. And anyway, the rich are very few.

Second, less corruption. The best way to understand why direct dividend transfers can make governments less corrupt is with a hypothetical explanation.

Say that you get home tonight and your spouse is waiting for you with a surprise gift — a brand new Ferrari. That will probably make you very happy.

But you will soon ask yourself, “Where did the money come from? I didn’t know that we had this kind of money!”

The same will happen to people if their government, all of a sudden, gives them money, say, 10 per cent of its mineral revenue; they will want to know what the government is doing with the other 90 per cent!

You will create a “scrutiny effect”, a popular interest in how the bureaucracy manages the national treasury.

In technical parlance, you will have fostered the “demand for good governance.”

Developing world

Third, more public services. A big argument against direct dividend transfers is that they would leave less money for the government to invest in “public goods” — things like primary education, basic health, and crime prevention.

Point taken. But whether that happens or not, depends on how much revenue the government is already receiving.

If your country is so poor that the state is unable to provide much, in terms of services (think of newly independent South Sudan), you may not want to take money away from it.

But how about countries where the government has for decades, appropriated all the revenues from commodities — billions upon billions of dollars — and has, by and large, wasted them?

Will sharing part of those revenues with people reduce the quantity of public services, or will it reduce waste?

Look at most hydrocarbon-rich economies, and you will get the answer.

So, the idea of adapting Latin America’s social transfers, into Africa’s dividend transfers, could work in theory.

But, can it work in practice? After all, Africa is not Alaska, where oil dividends have been distributed to residents since the early 1980s.

Well, the necessary technology is getting better and cheaper by the day. It costs about $4 to biometrically identify someone.

And with the viral growth in the use of magnetic cards and cellular telephony across the developing world, making payments is a non-issue.

More to the point, some 30 African countries already operate more than 100 money-transfer programs, as part of their social policy.

It is now a question of automatically and explicitly linking these transfers, to the source of income, from which they are paid; and extending them to all.

Of course, sitting governments have little or no incentive to do that.

More likely, direct dividend transfers will be championed by opposition politicians in contestable democracies (“…vote for me and the oil is yours…”).

In other words, the time is coming in Africa and elsewhere.

Follow Marcelo Giugale on Twitter: www.twitter.com/Marcelo_WB