Bill Gates Rubbishes Author’s Book on Africa
31 May 2013
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The founder of computer software giant company Microsoft, Bill Gates has rubbished a book written by prominent Zambian author Dr Dambiso Moyo saying it promotes evil.
The billionaire Gates, who has been involved in multiple projects working to alleviate poverty in an interview said Dr Moyo’s book which criticises aid giving to Africa is one in a number of books that “promote evil”.
Dr Moyo’s book titled “Dead Aid” criticises many actions of western business people and celebrities who have been sending billions to Africa for several decades. The problem is that a lot of that aid goes into government coffers and is squandered, she argues.
Video of Bill Gates’ criticism of Dambisa Moyo below:

Dambisa Moyo has in response written a rebuttal firing back at Mr Gates. Below was her statement:
On May 28th, 2013 during a Q&A session at the University of New South Wales, Bill Gates, co-Founder of Microsoft and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, made some shocking and inappropriate ad-hominem attacks against me and my book Dead Aid.
In this video excerpt, Mr. Gates answers a question about Dead Aid: Why Aid Is Not Working and How There is A Better Way for Africa by claiming that I “didn’t know much about aid and what it was doing” and that my work is “promoting evil”.gates412x232
I find it disappointing that Mr. Gates would not only conflate my arguments about structural aid with those about emergency or NGO aid, but also that he would then use this gross misrepresentation of my work to publicly attack my knowledge, background, and value system.
I would like to take this opportunity to address both of Mr. Gates’ claims here:

  1. I wrote Dead Aid to contribute to a useful debate on why, over many decades, multi billions of dollars of aid has consistently failed to deliver sustainable economic growth and meaningfully reduce poverty. I also sought to explicitly explain how decades of government to government aid actually undermined economic growth and contributed to worsening living conditions across Africa. More than this, I clearly detailed better ways for African leaders, and governments across the world, to finance economic development. I have been under the impression that Mr. Gates and I want the same thing – for the livelihood of Africans to be meaningfully improved in a sustainable way. Thus, I have always thought there is significant scope for a mature debate about the efficacy and limitations of aid. To say that my book “promotes evil” or to allude to my corrupt value system is both inappropriate and disrespectful.
  2. Mr. Gates’ claim that I “didn’t know much about aid and what it was doing” is also unfortunate. I have dedicated many years to economic study up to the PhD level, to analyze and understand the inherent weaknesses of aid, and why aid policies have consistently failed to deliver on economic growth and poverty alleviation. To this, I add my experience working as a consultant at the World Bank, and being born and raised in Zambia, one of the poorest aid-recipients in the world. This first-hand knowledge and experience has highlighted for me the legacy of failures of aid, and provided me with a unique understanding of not only the failures of the aid system but also of the tools for what could bring African economic success.

To cast aside the arguments I raised in Dead Aid at a time when we have witnessed the transformative economic success of countries like China, Brazil and India, belittles my experiences, and those of hundreds of millions of Africans, and others around the world who suffer the consequences of the aid system every day.
In conclusion, I am disappointed that Mr. Gates would choose the route of personal attacks rather than a logical counter argument about the role of aid in modern Africa. Such attacks add no value in the important discussions on the challenges the world faces to deliver economic growth, eradicate poverty, combat disease, and reduce income inequality, to name a few.
As I have always maintained, I respect the views of others and am open to having logical and meaningful debates with the ultimate goal of finding sustainable solutions to Africa’s economic problems.
Thank you,
Dr. Dambisa Moyo

6 Replies to “Bill Gates Rubbishes Author’s Book on Africa”

  1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-WjxvaWhLM&feature=player_embedded
    while Bill Gates looks at aid from a charity point of view, Dambisa looks at trends and outcomes.
    Its like debatimg whether its good to spend money on treating cancer or preventing cancer. You can’t leave cancer patients without therapy but obviously preventing cancer or finding are cure is the most important thing.
    Bill Gates is knows investing in marginalised markets is the long term solution. Off cause as a rich person it doesn’t hurt if he gives dead aid. It saves lives while the MDC government is looking for a long term solution to avoid dependency.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-WjxvaWhLM&feature=player_embedded

  2. I did not know that Dambisa Moyo’s father Steven Moyo(former DG at ZNBC) is Zimbabwean.Even her Musician younger sister Marsha Moyo is equally Zimbabwean. In her interviews, Dambiso, does not say she is a Zambian, rather, she insists that she was born in Zambia, but is actually Zimbabwean. Brilliant girl, stop claiming her for Zambia.
    Haggie is obviously a poverty stricken Zambian seeking international recognition. Maybe Bill Gates will one day hand you 2000Dollars!

  3. Even a billionaire blunders when he speaks outside his area of competency. Being a major donor and philanthropist does not confer one expertise in the area of development. Being respected for ones achievements and high net worth has its limits. Also lets not forget that those that would like to become developed must put in the necessary commitment and effort from the lowesy person to the greatest person in that land. If a nation is however seduced by corruption it becomes infinitely harder to achieve any meaningfull development.

  4. ey! Dambisa Moyo does not have an ounce of Zimabwean blood.She is Zambian!…How could you lie to people this way! This goes to show your poor level of journalism,now we have a reason to doubt most of your reporting! This magnitude of misinformation does more harm than good and indirectly you kind of people are the ones who incite violence among Africans,or in cases Zimbabweans….please be genuine

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