you should read the actual documents. Although the goals sound good in principle, this particular proposal is VERY problematic (as should be expected with anything coming out of the Bush white house).
MCA aid will go only to governments that buy into the whole neoliberal agenda -- "economic freedom" in the words of the administration. They MUST accept what the US sees as the proper economic policies, which in fact have proved disastrous in country after country.
Here's a good critique of the entire proposal:
http://www.coc.org/pdfs/coc/cf/2003/cf160_603_poverty.pdfThe Millennium Challenge Account:
Unlearning How to Make Aid Work?Reprinted from the Center of Concern’s
quarterly newsletter, CENTER FOCUS,
Issue # 160, June 2003
<snip>
The approach to the selectivity on which the MCA so heavily
relies is very troubling. Such selectivity implies that aid is
more effective in producing results when directed to countries
that have in place “good policies” which is, of course, true.
The question, however, gets tricky as soon as one begins try-ing
to determine what those “good” policies are and who has
the right and the knowledge to decide what is “good.”
For example, there is widespread agreement today that there is no
such thing as a universal model of development. Different
countries have developed using different policies. Hence, there
is need to allow countries the policy space to discern their
own mix of policies, tailored to their respective endowments
and their social and political circumstances.
But the MCA
assumes that there is a one-size-fits-all set of policies that is
“good” for all countries everywhere and acts as a precondition
for growth.It is also widely accepted that policies can only be successful
when they are owned by the government and the society in a
country. However,
it is clear that under the MCA proposal, a
country whose government and society have achieved a democratic
consensus on a set of policies that they find suitable
might not be eligible for aid unless the policies they “own”
reflect the U.S. government’s model policies.EDITED BY ADMIN: COPYRIGHT