The capital of Malawi, one of the world’s poorest countries, runs on aid. A city built in the 1970s by the World Bank, Lilongwe’s straight streets are filled with charities, development agencies and government offices. Informal villages house cooks and cleaners for foreign officials; the entrance to each is marked with the flag of its national sponsor. Over the past five decades, policymakers have reached a division of labour: Britain funds schools, Japan backs energy projects, Europe supports agriculture and Ireland nurtures a cottage industry of justice activists. In the health ministry, maintained with Chinese money, doors are labelled by donor, not department. Many read “USAID”.
Aid cannot make poor countries rich

Related Posts

Mahindra displays four concept SUVs eyeing global markets
August 16, 2025
1:09 pm
Data centre owners urge U.S. Treasury to keep renewable energy subsidy rules
August 16, 2025
7:05 am

RSB Retail India files draft IPO papers with SEBI; seeks to raise ₹1,500 crore
August 16, 2025
1:01 am