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Dan M's avatar

I work at USAID, and agree wholeheartedly with the last two paragraphs. While there are many moderate to progressive types at USAID, even those of us who are on the left see the agency as a valuable tool that can be shaped to meet the needs of a more progressive, anti-imperalist administration should we ever get one. Dismantling it will effectively dismantle the only viable tool for projecting American largesse abroad, even if it also dismantles one of many tools of imperialism.

It's also important to remember that USAID is compelled to justify its existence to a hostile Congress. Much of the Rhodes argument is a result of that need to cater both to those who believe we owe something to the world given our position and history and those who feel that all U.S. Government spending must directly advance U.S. power. Essentially every USAID employee falls into the former category, but we are subject to the policy demands of Washington and shape our message and our programming in order to protect what good work we can.

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Amanda's avatar

Most of your criticisms could be addressed through effective design, monitoring, evaluation, and learning work (which is underfunded throughout the world, not just by USAID or the U.S. government). It's often considered "overhead" or otherwise outside of project implementation costs. If we spent more money on designing effective, sustainable, and impactful projects that truly addressed needs and then monitoring, evaluating and learning from them in ways that improved the likelihood of success, we could avoid many of the criticisms leveled at USAID and development work more broadly. Rather than burning it all to the ground, we should use evidence to make it work better.

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