SOYMB blog has posted a number of articles critical of
philanthropy by the wealthy therefore we were not surprised by the contents of
this new report which accuses the Gates Foundation of funding privatised health
and promoting an increased role for private education providers. The danger,
the report says, is that it “turns basic needs into commodities controlled by
the market”; such services are likely to be accessed mainly by the rich. The
Gates Foundation has spent around $34.5bn since its inception.
Far from a “neutral charitable strategy”, the Gates
Foundation is about benefiting big business, especially in agriculture and
health, through its “ideological commitment to promote neoliberal economic
policies and corporate globalisation,” according to the report published by the
campaign group Global Justice. Its influence is “dangerously skewing” aid
priorities, the group says. The group accuse the Gates Foundation of using its
massive financial clout to silence international development experts and groups
which would criticise its practices. The Gates Foundation “often appears to be
a massive, vertically integrated multinational corporation, controlling every
step in a supply chain that reaches from its Seattle-based boardroom … to
millions of end-users in the villages of African and south Asia.”
“The world is being sold a myth that private philanthropy
holds many of the solutions to the world’s problems, when in fact it is pushing
the world in many wrong directions,” the report claims. The Gates Foundation is
“being allowed to speak too loudly, and too many actors in international
development are falling into line with the foundation’s misguided priorities.”
Bill Gates, the report claims, “who has regular access to
world leaders and is in effect personally bankrolling hundreds of universities,
international organisations, NGOs and media outlets, has become the single most
influential voice in international development.”
It is critical of emphasis on single diseases and points out
that this is being done at the neglect of basic health care systems. It also
points out that during the Ebola outbreak in West Africa, basic healthcare
collapsed completely in parts of the region. The report is critical of the
close working relations between the Foundation and major international
pharmaceutical corporations and points out many of the same firms have been
criticised for their over-pricing of life-saving vaccines. It warns that
philanthropic influence is skewing health priorities “towards the interests of
wealthy donors (vaccines) rather than resilient health systems”. It accuses the
Gates Foundation of promoting specific priorities through agriculture grants,
some of which undermine the interests of small farmers. These include promoting
industrial agriculture, use of chemical fertilisers and expensive, patented
seeds, and a focus on genetically modified seeds. The Foundation is the world’s
biggest funder of GM crop research, the report claims. Huge corporations
including Monsanto, Syngenta, Bayer and Dupont, are major beneficiaries of its
projects. “The Gates Foundation is, in effect, preparing the ground for them to
access new profitable markets in hitherto closed-off developing countries,
especially in Africa. The Foundation is especially pushing for the adoption of
GM in Africa,” it warns.
“Much of the Foundation’s work appears to bypass local
knowledge,” the report claims. The criticism Vandana Shiva who called the Gates
Foundation the “greatest threat to farmers in the developing world.” The
Foundation’s emphasis on “technological solutions” often ignores real solutions
involving social and economic justice, it argues. “This cannot be given by
donors in the form of a climate-resilient crop or cheaper smartphone, but must
be about systemic social, economic and political change – issues not
represented in the foundation’s funding priorities.”
No comments:
Post a Comment