There are those who believe that if the corrupt are busy building little bars, hotels, sharing their loot with malayas, etc., then all is well---that the money is being "invested", and there is, therefore, an overall benefit to the country. A friend I had drinks with this evening tried to sell me the same line, and it is one that I have seen on Nipate too:
RV Pundit:
But isn't that corruption feeding into the private sector dynamism we see in Kenya. Aren't our fatcats re -investing corruption proceeds as capital investments in banks,insurance companies, Telcom companies, hotels, industries,real estate and the NSE. Of course some of it probably end up being stashed in foreign swiss accounts...thankfully this is happening less and less. Eng Kamau has reinvested his proceeds from China roads,bridges and railways into upcoming Radisson Blue hotel..and so are the other fat cats like Chirchir chicken is currently building a tea factory...etc etc.
http://www.nipate.org/index.php?topic=1947.0RV Pundit:
All the money stolen nowadays get somehow invested back....or well like my cousin cop...it ends up in local bar and with sluts..and it oils that economy....so the net effect is nearly the same...economy wise.
http://www.nipate.org/index.php?topic=2307.0A response:A short paper---"
The Importance Of Leadership In Fighting Corruption In Uganda"---by Augustine Ruzindana, a well-known anti-corruption fighter in that country, ought to be enough by way of an explanation. (See the section on "Deleterious Effects of Corruption".)
You will find it here:
www.piie.com/publications/chapters_preview/12/7iie2334.pdfThe China argument:One sometimes hears that China is doing well, a great deal of corruption notwithstanding. In order to dismiss that argument, it is not necessary to note that China, unlike African countries, takes the matter very, very seriously and routinely sends people to the gallows on that basis.
First: The issue is not merely whether corruption exists or not, and it does exist, to varying degrees all over the world; it is how harmful it is. Where, as in Africa, it is extremely damaging, it is simple-minded to shrug it off, with pointers to other places.
Second: The leaders of the Chinese government do not take the cavalier attitude that they are doing just fine even with the existence of corruption. Instead, what focuses their minds is this question: "
How much better could we do without all the corruption?". (And on that basis they act.) Africans too need to ask themselves that question.