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Beltway Bandits.(Business)(for-profit aid)

Newsweek International

| December 03, 2007 | Wolverson, Roya | COPYRIGHT 2007 Newsweek, Inc. All rights reserved. Any reuse, distribution or alteration without express written permission of Newsweek is prohibited. For permission: www.newsweek.com. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Byline: Roya Wolverson

Thanks to the Bush administration, for-profit aid work is a booming -- and controversial -- business.

Blackwater Worldwide is only the tip of the iceberg. The private security firm, now a target of controversy over allegations that its agents gunned down civilians in Baghdad, has raised questions about whether services like security should be privatized. Education, space exploration and foreign aid are just a few of the government operations the Bush administration has privatized during its tenure, turning the outskirts of Washington into a sea of private firms that live off public contracts. And it's not only the security services arousing controversy. Here, we focus on the big firms in the business of foreign aid, a group that has been labeled "the new Beltway bandits" by their nonprofit rivals.

Some of the most notable private foreign-aid providers are Blackwater itself, the Louis Berger Group, BearingPoint and Chemonics International -- names designed more to evoke the brisk efficiency of private-equity groups or Silicon Valley than the compassion of the NGOs they are displacing, like CARE and World Vision. Their selling point is that they can execute aid contracts -- for food and water delivery, new roads, schools and hospitals -- more cost-effectively than either NGOs or the federal government. And a conservative administration in Washington has been very receptive to this pitch. In the past four years, the top 10 for-profits working for the U.S. Agency for International Development -- the chief conduit of U.S. aid -- have received nearly $5.8 billion in contracts. That's twice as much as the top 10 nonprofits, and more than 10 times the amount the for-profits received in the previous four-year period.

To an extent, the privatization of aid predates George W. Bush's arrival in the White House. In the 1970s, conservatives led by Sen. Jesse Helms began targeting waste at USAID, shrinking its budget and pressuring the organization to produce results. USAID turned to private firms, which proved more likely than NGOs to simply focus on meeting contract terms and less likely to question official development goals. But the trend accelerated dramatically under Bush, as contracts for work in conflict zones like Afghanistan, Sudan and Iraq ballooned.

Between 2001 and 2005, Chemonics's revenues grew an average of nearly 25 percent each year. BearingPoint's public-sector division (of which USAID contracts are a part) has recently averaged nearly $1.3 billion a year in revenue, roughly one sixth the $8 billion pool of USAID funds for 2006. Meanwhile, NGOs, purposely cut off by the administration or turned off by the Iraq war, have increasingly moved to private sources of funding.

A rising profile has brought new scrutiny to private firms. The basic critique from established NGOs is that private firms parachute into developing-world hot spots to build x number of classrooms or drill y number of wells without the long-term (and costly) follow-up and commitment to the people they are meant to serve. NGOs tout their permanent country offices as proof that they are more neutral and in touch with local needs. "Our primary client is the people with whom we work in-country, which is very different [from contractors]," says Jim Bishop, CEO of the nonprofit ...

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