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Billionaire, UN expand EA village project Development Scheme in EA

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By KEVIN J. KELLEY, Special Correspondent  (email the author)
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Posted  Sunday, October 9  2011 at  14:58

The United Nations, an American billionaire and a renowned economist are jointly expanding an experimental project that, they say, has brought major development gains to targeted villages in Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and other African countries.

Jeffrey Sachs, the economist, and George Soros, the billionaire investor, outlined the new phase of the initiative at UN headquarters in New York.

The Millennium Villages scheme, launched five years ago, “has made tremendous breakthroughs in achieving the Millennium Development Goals in places that were written off as hopeless,” Mr Sachs told reporters.

He cited dramatic advances in maize yields, use of anti-malaria bed nets, and prevention of stunting among children in many of the original 10 Millennium Villages, two of which are in Kenya, with one each in Tanzania and Uganda.

Additional cash

Mr Soros said he is giving $27.4 million to help finance the expansion of the Millennium Villages. He is also making available $20 million in loans to support businesses in the villages. Mr Soros previously donated $50 million to the initiative.

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That earlier gift was made despite strong opposition on the part of the board of directors of Mr Soros’ charitable foundation, he pointed out.

Some researchers say that claims made for the success of the project are overblown.

“Comparing trends at the [village] intervention sites in Kenya, Ghana, and Nigeria to trends in the surrounding areas yields much more modest estimates of the project’s effects” than do findings presented by the project’s sponsors, a pair of development specialists wrote in a paper last year.

Michael Clemens and Gabriel Demombynes, both associated with an international development think tank in Washington, suggest that more rigorous evaluation of the project is essential in order to gauge its actual impact.

“The project costs large amounts of money — $1.5 million per village in very poor areas, spent annually at a rate that exceeds the size of the entire local economy,” they wrote.

Asked at the UN press conference about these less flattering evaluations, Mr Sachs dismissed them as “armchair criticism that is not really a reflection of the reality of this project.” He said that “peer-reviewed scientific investigation” has affirmed the success of the undertaking.

Many African countries not represented in the first phase of the project are asking that it be introduced in their own rural areas, Mr Sachs added.

One of the new projects was recently launched in Pemba in Zanzibar. Tanzania has one of the original Millennium Villages, Mbola in Uyui District.

In 2008, health workers visited all 6000 households in the Mbola cluster, according to the Millennium Villages website. More than 12,000 of the 39,000 local residents have received malaria treatments, the project says.

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