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Date: 2024-04-20 Page is: DBtxt001.php bk007020000
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IRAQ ... A New Direction 2006
A Strategy for Peace
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Chapter 2: New Direction Strategy


Iraq – New Direction Summary
Introduction

This book about a new direction for Iraq is based on lessons learned over the past 40 years or so in as many as 60 different countries. It is based more than anything else on the idea that ordinary people want peace and a decent quality of life and not war, violence and mayhem.

There are just a few ideas:
    (1) focus on a civil economy;
    (2) a new strategy for military and police;
    (3) a role for organizations;
    (4) a role for people;
    (5) a role for community;
    (6) use of management information; and,
    (7) a structure to manage resources.


Focus on the civil economy

The civil economy of Iraq has a huge potential, but it will be wasted unless the country moves to focus away from military solutions to ones that embrace the civil society. Accordingly the primary focus for the new direction is to have multi-sector development in the civil economy as the driver of socio-economic progress. There is a great potential for the civil society of Iraq to have a durable enterprise driven equitable economy as long as it is encouraged and not sidelined by powerful interests both local and international that would prefer to see a failed Iraq. The civil society needs to have a priority for the economy more than for politics and the military.

A new strategy for military and police

The US and coalition forces have demonstrated that they have great power and can be successful in a military situation. History shows that a strong military capability does not transfer easily into the work of policing the citizenry of a whole country. The primary focus of the coalition forces going forward should be: (1) to protect contractors as they go about the business of building up the infrastructure of the civil economy; and, (2) to train and give support to the new Iraqi army and the police force. The goal is for security derived from the force of arms, to be replaced by a widespread security resulting from the good behavior of a civil people. A force of 20,000 doing the right things is going to be more effective than 150,000 tasked to do things that have little benefit.

A role for people

There are millions of people. Most people are seeking to have gainful employment, and the more there is economic opportunity the less the attraction of becoming associated with the militias and groups engaging in anti-social violence. People should have a full role in helping to improve their socioeconomic situation through both economic and political participation in governance at both the community level and at the national level. This is a valuable freedom that is worth fighting for.

A role for community

There are thousands of communities. All communities have some features in common and some features that are different. Each community is unique, and each community is where people live and have their friends and go about their daily business. Community is where priorities should be identified, and ways found so that local people and local organizations can become engaged in doing things that result in socio-economic progress.

People are the biggest resource on the planet, and it is in their community that people can have the most impact. A community is usually identified as a geographical place, but it is the dynamic of the people that makes the place special.

A role for organizations

There are many thousands of organizations. Every community has some, and there are thousands of communities. Every organization should be encouraged to expand so that the process of building the economy can be accelerated and more people in the country can be gainfully employed. Every organization should have an opportunity to be part of Iraq's success.

There are some organizations in Iraq that dominate parts of the economy because of their power and influence ... as there are in most places. These organizations should be challenged by a better understanding of the value dimension of the work they are doing.

A structure to manage resources

Iraq has had some of the biggest fund flows in all of history ... first its oil revenues and now its reconstruction revenues.

The structure to manage these funds has been inadequate ... in some respects, primitive. There needs to be a simple network of trustworthy organizations that commit to excellence in accounting and full reporting of fund received, activities funded and results achieve.

There needs to be adequate staffing and operational budgets so that there can be timely oversight of everything that is going on, and a capacity for internal check and internal audit so that funds are well managed. The structure needs to reach from the source of funds, local and international to the organizations that are doing the work and the communities where the results are to be seen.

There should be an accounting to the public ... information that is visible and understandable to the public as the primary stakeholder. The Central Bank and the Iraq Government Treasury should be a part of the network for accountability and a focal point for some of the information. The implementing organizations are also part of the network of accountability, and they should be doing adequate reporting and be the subject of appropriate oversight.


Management information

There needs to be an easy way for information about fund flows and socioeconomic progress to be accessible to both decision makers and the public. This information is the foundation for making it possible to hold decision makers accountable. The management information needed is not only the accounting for resources received and the disbursement or consumption of resources, but also assessment of the value of the results being achieved. The ultimate value of socio-economic progress is most clearly seen at the community level and in the quality of life of individuals and families.


More Focus on a Civil Economy
Civilians should be the focus

What are civilians doing in Iraq? Are they going about their business or are they going around in fear of everyone with guns. For most civilians, people with guns are bad news, and it does not really matter who is carrying the gun. When there is a lot of fire-power, guns do collateral damage.

So put a lot more focus on what is going on in the civil economy. Make sure that the civil economy is working, that the stores are open, and the trucks are moving and everything is working the way the civil economy wants.

Most of the people want peace and prosperity

Even if most of the people want peace and prosperity, there are usually a few that see violence as a better way to make progress. When guns are everywhere it is not easy for the peaceful majority to be winners, no matter that they are the majority.

When rule of law needs to be enforced by a military presence, there is something wrong. It is not usually fixed by more military, which tends to escalate the problem, but gets fixed by communication and dialog, by getting to understand what is wrong and taking non-military steps to fix the problem.

Who wants guns and mayhem?

There is a violent minority that are happy to use guns and create mayhem. There are issues that can easily be used to inflame tension and justify violence. But this violent minority does not reflect much of the will of the majority. Guns and mayhem are not family values ... and family values have a lot of importance in almost every community on earth ... including almost all the families in Iraq. Guns are, very sadly, a big part of the global market economy. There is a huge and nasty industry that makes guns and ammunition and distributes these deadly items to those that want to engage in making mayhem. Guns and ammunition have no legitimate place in a civil economy. Where guns are required for security ... civil society is already broken.

And follow the money.

Some of the major corporate organizations in Iraq are beneficiaries of major contracts to rebuild Iraq's infrastructure. The profits are substantial, and the use of these profits may or may not be in the interest of the vast majority of the people of Iraq.

Nobody seems to know much about the profits that are being generated in the Iraq emergency, but we should. And we do not know much about how these organizations use their profits, but we should. If profits fund guns ... and guns then win Iraq ... the prize is control of a country that can generate huge fund flows from its oil. The estimate for Iraq's government revenue from oil in 2007 is reported to be around $40 billion and control of this is a rich prize indeed. There was talk that oil control was the prize that motivated the US and the coalition to become engaged in Iraq ... nothing much to do with the global war on terror ... but everything to do with the control of oil. But if this talk is valid about the powerful in the world outside Iraq, the same question is just as legitimate with respect to those with wealth and power inside Iraq, and other parts of the region.

A durable prosperity can be achieved with everyone participating and not just a powerful elite ... but profiteering by any elite can become seriously destabilizing and end up with chaos for many and a dangerous minority of powerful people in control of everything.

Comprehensive civilian multi-sector investment

More than anything else. a comprehensive civilian multi-sector investment for socio-economic development is needed. Development can proceed when efforts are going on in all sectors. One sector’s success always depends on the capacity of the other sectors. Economic growth can only go as fast as the underlying capacity of the economy and critical constraints will allow. All the elements of a comprehensive development framework are well known, but rarely put together. The underlying objective is to create income generating opportunities and jobs. These investments go a long way beyond emergency intervention to building the community economy at all levels so that there are income generating opportunities and employment for all. It aims to improve the community at large by changing in a very real way the level of opportunity that exists in the local economy.

Respecting the causes of conflict

A new direction must work on understanding the cause of conflict. It is imperative in planning development that sources of the present conflict are addressed and sources of future conflict eradicated to the extent possible. A lot of work has been done on conflict resolution ... far too little on ensuring that the basic sources of conflict are addressed ahead of time. Two issues have been highlighted in my previous work with UN missions. The first is that most conflicts are rooted in economic disparities, though often manifested as religious, ethnic, ideological or other symptoms. The second is that most people do not want to be involved in conflict, especially violent conflict.

A new direction program should be designed to help to reduce tension and promote development so that security that has been such a problem in the area for such a long time can become a matter of history. The program is designed to allow a balanced allocation of development resources so that all areas and community groups are able to participate in an equitable way in the benefits of the program. This will be done through community participation in the development planning and resource allocation and overall program oversight of the resulting resource allocations.

Beyond conflict

The strategy for this program is not to be engaged in conflict but to have a proactive program to build the socio-economic foundation of the community ... and while doing this to be protected by military forces and police in the event of attack. The overt strategy for this program does not have a focus simply on hunting down the potential attackers but protecting valuable work in the event of attack. The aim is to achieve socio-economic growth and progress in this so that more people are attracted into employment and productive activities and less into missions of destruction. The aim is to strengthen the economic foundation of the community and area so that inappropriate external destabilizing efforts have little influence.


Less Focus on Military
Focus on economic development above all else

There has been success through supporting modest economic development activities ... but it is not systematic enough to get the most value for the effort and the money. These initiatives should be done in a framework that has the support and understanding of the community in all sectors deemed priority by the community. None of this is rocket science ... it is mainly applied common sense.

A lot of the work that needs to be done can and should be done by local contractors. Oversight can be provided by the funding source organizations and the military, and the military should also assist with security.

The public should be able to get easy information about the activities going on, and the progress being made. Above all else the public should be able to relate the spending of money with the results being achieved.

No Need for Cut and Run

I have been in several countries when coups and civil uprisings have taken place ... and in each case the immediate diplomatic response from the political leadership of the countries of the “north” has been to order evacuation of their citizens in the country.

I have argued that this usually means that violence is the speedy winner. Rather I would argue for getting the military to help so that expatriates ... most of whom are usually in the country trying to be of socio-economic or humanitarian value ... can be protected and can keep on doing worthwhile work.

This is not as silly as it sounds. A gun battle a mile away in the next valley does not kill you ... and economic activity can go on. More damage is done when all vestiges of law and order, and international eyes are removed and violence is used to wreck the economy ... steal the crops ... steal the animals ... burn the homes ... rape the women and abuse the children.

Define new objectives for the military

The primary objective of the coalition forces should be to protect the work of contractors working on rebuilding and development, both Iraqi and international, so that these contractors are safe and the work they do can progress efficiently. If the military is tasked to protect contractors ... this is peaceful ... this is valuable ... this is, in my view, legitimate. And just as important, it is something that the military knows how to do.

A second important objective is to train the Iraqi military and police. This is a very important job where the coalition military can be very valuable ... and something that the military can do. Training is a big part of any military force's strength, and this strength certainly exists in the US military.

Occupation and security should not be center stage ... the military is not good at it for any length of time, and in any event occupation and security should be subsidiary to the active work of rebuilding physical infrastructure and getting essential services so that they are available to people living in Iraq.

Do more of what works

The key to this strategy is to do more of what works and has local economic value, and less of initiatives that have only an anti-personnel anti-terror component. The economic support activities are easier ... and justify the presence of foreigners. The other component highlights the military and puts focus on their presence in the country. Rather the military should be in support of security for the development activities ... and can help when a community needs to have its security situation improved because of local security service weakness.

Success has rather little to do with military, and a lot to do with economy and society. Success has a lot more to do with the people throughout the society than the politics at the top of the society. Most families do not want violence and death and mayhem ... but powerful interests are willing to have these things if the end result is to their benefit.


People
Establish priorities that benefit people

To the public at large, in the “north”, the “south” and in Iraq, it appears that the priorities that have been established bring benefit to an “establishment” much more than they do to ordinary people. It seems that big contractors, the global oil industry and friends of friends in the international community are beneficiaries while ordinary soldiers, policemen and ordinary civilians are dieing and ordinary people see not very much of benefit.

Ordinary people rarely see much of the benefit of big programs ... it is the way things usually are. But what used to be normal in the 19th century need not be normal in the 21st century. We know how much military technology has progressed in that time ... and in fact, civil technology has progressed as much, though its deployment is delayed as entrenched interests struggle to maintain control over their turf.

What do people want?

People want to be safe and to have hope for an improving future. More than anything else people want their families to be safe and to prosper.

This needs to be translated in practical terms that are relevant to the community. A big step is to give people a chance to make local decisions that will enhance the community and be of benefits to the people in the community. This can be done in a community in part using the organizations that exist or new organizations that can be set up to facilitate a dialog.

Any planning that is done at the “top” without having a really good understanding of what people want is destined to be a failure.

Where is dialog with people?

As far as one can see, up to now there has not been much dialog with people. There have been visits to Iraq by “top” people in politics that have helped to drive a debate in the US and in the UK ... and presentations by the top brass of the military ... but not much about a dialog that involves much the people of Iraq.

When there has been dialog with the ordinary people it seems that all is not lost and possibilities are huge ... but less and less appreciated as the politicians and military chiefs get more and more frustrated that socio-economic progress is slow and violence seems to be escalating.

Where does dialog lead?

In order to be useful, a dialog must lead to some results. There has to be some sort of liaison with appropriate people from outside the community who have the ability to help turn hopes into reality.

This is a role for Government Ministries ... sector by sector. It is also a role for private and public sector intermediaries who are able to serve to bring tangible activities to the community. The intermediary arena is not simple and clear, but when it works best it is often chaos and competitive. A single monopolistic intermediary has the potential to be exploitive, and usually is. In chaos and with competition, there is choice and people can get what they want, and often on a good basis.

There is a role for good information. One of the best ways to reduce bad economic behavior is for the information to become public and to be easily seen.

Which leads to community

People are best served at the community level ... as close to where people live their lives as possible ... as close as possible to where people work ... as close as possible to where people have their homes, and go about their daily lives. And also information

Unless there is viable data about what is going on the decision making is going to be based on misinformation and spin rather than good facts. This must not happen. Good information is an essential component of society and should be given due consideration.

And organizations like the police

People need help in having a peaceful society ... one of the organizations that can help in this are the police. At their best, the police are friends of the people and help to make society civilized.


Community
Community Centric Planning

A good starting point for planning is to plan around the idea of community centric development ... in other words putting together multi-sector thinking around each community, and to do this for all the communities in the country.

Comprehensive Community Centric Development

In my experience socio-economic progress is much more practical when the community is made the central focus of analysis and support.

During some work in West Africa I was extremely impressed by the success of a community project in Shenge, Sierra Leone (described later ... page 155). This was a multi-sector project ... single sector initiatives do not work unless there is enough infrastructure and economic activity going on in the other sectors.

During some work in Namibia, I was impressed by a health sector plan prepared by the Ministry of Health that detailed what was needed in EVERY community in the country as regards physical infrastructure, staffing and working supplies. This made budget dialog easy around good information, and good plans could be made.

What is very clear in my own experience is that modest resources well used can support socio-economic progress that is substantially

Most people in a community may want one thing, and another part of a community may want something else. The community needs to decide what they want to do first and what to do next. The community must decide the priorities. This may not be instant ... but it is an important part of creating a sustainable future.

This is not easy. Iraq is an old and complex society, not at all easy to characterize in a few simple phrases. Families are mixes of religious sects and ethnicities ... while being Iraqis. Outsiders seem to have too much a simplified version of the mosaic of Iraq's religions and ethnicities.

Metrics about the community

One of the ways of minimizing the abuse associated with mis-allocation of resources away from good community priorities to more inappropriate use is to have good metrics about the community and its socio-economic situation. There are legitimate reasons for having disagreement over priorities at a planning stage, but good community metrics can show results and help to improve progress as time goes on.

Metrics about a community need to be accessible to the people of the community, as well as being easily accessible to the broader public. Transparency and accountability on top of metrics about the community can be a powerful incentive for socially responsible community progress.

Community governance

Local governance may be formal or informal, but there needs to be some structure that facilitates the process of deciding what needs to be done and to prioritize, and then some way to make implementation happen.

Rather than the military having a big security presence, it would be better if they deploy units to serve as liaison and help get socio-economic activities accelerated. Combining local people, local contractors and development finance has value in terms of creating jobs and salaries as well as creating things of value for the community. Done well, there can be significant community progress very rapidly.

Security considerations

As long as the security situation is reasonable the community development activities should be operating as fast and as big as possible. If security deteriorates, the activities of the civil economy should be protected as much as possible by effective police initiatives. If more intervention is required, then more aggressive military tactics should be implemented. If it becomes too dangerous for the civil economy to function, the contractors will close down, civilians will relocate and the location will go on a war footing.

The police is the organization that can help in a practical way to keep a security situation under control. In the broadest way, the police need to be part of the community, and able to respond to all the variety of threats that are designed to disrupt the security of the community.

Integrated ... multi-sector

A community needs to have everything that makes life livable. Every sector of the economy that serves people and families needs to be present. Every issue that affects life needs to be addressed.

Most of the energy of a community comes from its people. The work of development is to make it possible for the energy of people to build value for the individual, the family and the community. External inputs can make development progress possible and accelerate the pace ... but success, more than anything else is determined by the potential of people.

Who wants community to fail?

There are some people in Iraq and outside who want Iraq to fail ... and by proxy to have the US fail. As long as the US and the coalition forces operate with a blind faith in the military component of the work, those who want community to fail will win. This is a very unsatisfactory outcome.

At the moment the US and the coalition seem to be operating as if they do not know who is behind the violence ... and I cannot pretend to know for certain. But we would know a lot more if we knew about fund flows in Iraq and around the area and the profits of the various organizations that are operating in Iraq and surrounding countries.

Who wants community to win?

Families ... women ... children ... good people ... decent people ... the majority of the people ... wants the community to win. The wants of the majority are not going to be a driver unless there is a willingness to use information in ways that make bad decisions too hot to handle.

Community focus and area fairness

The new direction program is designed with a focus on community priorities. The initiatives must reflect community priorities. It is secondary that they might also reflect thematic development issues of international organizations and donor priorities. The strategy is for there to be ongoing community participation in development planning on an ongoing basis, using participation mechanisms that are suited to the community. For this to succeed, the program must be flexible and able to change to so as to reflect the real needs of the communities as seen by the communities.

In order to minimize conflict potential, all areas everywhere in the country should have the same access opportunity for socio-economic support and assistance

Fairness
At one time, as a UN adviser working in the Horn of Africa, and specifically Somaliland, I helped develop a comprehensive area development plan. But we scrapped it at the last minute because all the development resources were being allocated to an area controlled by one single ethnic group. We then reworked the plan so that all clan groups had equal opportunity to have resources based on specific need. The reworked version was fair, and these resources had a role in keeping the peace rather than fomenting conflict.
A multi-clan Cabinet quickly approved this revised plan and passed it to the Head of State. The Minister of Plan immediately recognized that the plan had been prepared, above all else, to be fair to EVERYONE in the country.
Another reason why this plan was successful and approved by the client country leadershp was that it was clearly a plan that recognised both the opportunities and the constraints of the country. This was accomplished in large part by having very active participation of local country experts whose ideas and issues were thoroughly integrated into the final plan.

Implementing Activities
Planning, organization and funding

The socio-economic activities of rebuilding, rather than the political involve planning, getting an organizational framework that will work and putting funding in place. These functional actions need also a management framework in order to be effective.

There are governance and security issues that the government should be addressing as a constitution is developed and the structure of government evolves. The police and the judiciary should be the institution that handles security under normal conditions, and where there are special circumstances and excessive violence in the society, there should be limited assistance from the military authorities.

Essential implementation structure

The first essential is some community consensus about some works that need to be done and some sense of priority.

Another essential is that there is an implementation structure that has the capacity to do what needs to be done. Contractors' work is based on contracts. In exchange for remuneration contractors are expected to do specified work.

Contractors must be good enough to do the work. Frequently, contracts have loop-holes that enable contractors to be paid, even though the work does not get done ... this is commonplace, but it is not good. In the case of international contractors the loop-holes are probably larger and even more subject to potential abuse. These abuses must be addressed and ended.

A further essential is a way for resources to be delivered to the community and to the contractor so that the works can be done. This can be through a development loan fund.

And lastly there needs to be some structure that provides oversight and can take a role in holding responsible parties responsible for the control and use of resources and the results being achieved.

Contractors ... that do the work

At the moment the public knows very little about what contractors in Iraq are doing ... what they are accomplishing. The reports are limited and seem to reflect conflicting information. Contractors ought to be working everywhere in the country to get the economic foundation back into shape so that basic services are working well. I am not at all sure that an adequate amount of infrastructure and basic services work has been accomplished in spite considerable funding ... but I just do not know ... and I don't think many others know either.

As an ordinary member of the public I have absolutely no idea what the contractors are doing. It is difficult if not impossible to find much information about how much money they are getting, even more difficult to find out much about what they are doing, and yet again difficult to find out much about the value of their work as perceived by either the funding organizations or the communities where the work is being done.

Media stories about contractors is not enough ... these stories may be interesting to the public at large ... but they are not the sort of information that is needed to assess performance.

Some Contractors Do Amazing Work

Over the years I have worked in places where local and international contractors were operating. Sometimes the security conditions were poor and the environment was dangerous ... but people got on with the job. Many of the organizations working on humanitarian relief for the UN are contractors whose people put themselves in harms way and do wonderful work that is much respected by all who know about it.

Of course, as in all fields, there are organizations that abuse the system ... and more than they should, are able to get away with it.

The Keynesian impact of getting support to contractors, especially local contractors, and into local payrolls, can be used to advantage ... but it needs to be done thoughtfully. A lot of money without it being related to a lot of work and a lot of value is irresponsible, naive and dangerous. Accordingly, the work of contractors should be supported, but there should be a management component so that contractors are using money well and the communities are getting value from the work.

Socio-Economic Dynamics

Keynesian thinking about economic dynamics has gone out of favor, but it is what I learned, and I have no reason to change my opinion of Keynesian economics based on my international experience.

The role of the multiplier is very important ... and valuable. It works to advantage as fund flows grow, but has equal disadvantage when fund flows decline.
As IBM used to advise in the 1960s and 1970s ... THINK.
There is not much information easily available about where contractors are working and what are they accomplishing. It should be possible to identify where contractors are doing work, and it should also be able to find out the impact of their work on the community. Knowledge is comfort a lot more than it is a security risk. Secrecy that is not absolutely needed is the first step in losing citizen support.

Projects are one way used to keep track ... but by good corporate standards the amount of information that is presently available about project performance is abysmal.

If the contractors are doing good work ... value adding ... there will be socioeconomic progress, and a first step in getting the citizenry hopeful about the future and grateful to the people who have helped.

Money resources ... a development loan fund

A development fund is a possible modality for funding community works. The resources available through a development fund will be used on a short term loan basis for activities that are requested by the community. This is a sustainable development model that uses financial resources over and over again. Financial resources available to the program will be used on a loan basis to help finance community projects of all types.

The funds will be used to purchase items that the community group would not normally be able to afford and allow the group to go ahead with some works that they consider important. Typically the group will provide labor and local material, with the funds being used to purchase non-local material and possible rent equipment. The funds can be re-used by the community if the loans are repaid to the fund. As an incentive to repayment, funds will be augmented if the repayment track record is good. Groups that do not repay development fund loans will be penalized by the permanent diminution of the loan fund resources.

The community can make use of the funds to build something they need, and then pay the loan back so that the resources can be used again. The community has the responsibility to make arrangements for repayment resources to be available.

The objective is not to build a lot of projects, but to build good projects that satisfy community needs. The objective is to encourage investment and establish the concept of saving and repayment as a sustainable modality for continuing development and improvement in economic performance and the quality of life.

This has been the tradition of the area for hundreds of years, but now severely damaged over the past two decades by the impact of humanitarian assistance. This assistance has been on a massive scale and provided in a “welfare” mode with no consideration to the unfortunate and very damaging message that it sends to the beneficiary community, particularly the laziest elements in the community.

The community development fund can become the basis for a national level community funding mechanism either run by government, the Central Bank or a private financial market.


Implementing - Management Structure
The function of management

The function of management is critical. It ensures that resources are used in an appropriate manner and that reasonable results are achieved. Management identifies problems and makes decisions to get them solved.

Who is in charge?

In most organizations the answer is that the person “at the top” is in charge, but in most successful socio-economic environments there are many people in charge ... all pulling the best they can ... and coordinated by common goals, similar purposes and the hidden hands of economics. Management is not “in charge” but management is a catalyst and management can play a very important role in helping to remove obstacles to progress.

Oversight structure

There needs to be the ability to do oversight, and this requires structure. There has to be a structure for oversight. This is much more than ex-post facto monitoring and evaluation ... this oversight is whatever it takes to ensure that the money disbursed is getting results.

When there is poor oversight, there is usually poor performance. People are human, and most will do as little as they can get away with. At the limit, when there is no oversight of any sort, people will do little or nothing. Why bother?

Standards of performance

In any good corporate organization there are standards of performance ... a lot of people in the corporate organization know what things should cost, and know how performance relates to cost ... and know how performance can be improved by better deployment of the organization's resources. But in the relief and development sector there is very much less of this type of knowledge.

In the information about Iraq's performance there should be a dataset about standards so that more people are in a position to understand how well different organizations are doing. This is critical to getting optimized performance because on the one hand there is local cost than is low, and productivity that is low as well ... and international costs that are high, but productivity higher. What is best depends on the facts. It should be evaluated.

Avoid attempting the impossible

There are a lot of things that are relatively easy to do, and some things that are impossible ... or at any rate, very difficult. It makes sense to choose to do things that are relatively easy, with people who want to cooperate. We need, therefore to avoid trying to do difficult or impossible things, and focus on doing things that are easier and have the most value.
Remember the Maginot Line
The Germans wanted to attack France and take Paris ... but France was protected by the formidable Maginot Line fortifications. What to do? The Germans knew their objective, and also knew that the Maginot Line fortifications were likely impossible to penetrate without unacceptably large losses.
Solution ... the Germans went round the fortifications through Holland and Belgium and were in Paris in a matter of hours.


Implementing - Management Information
Open access to information

We need to have information easily accessible about the socio-economic situation in communities ... and there needs to be dialog about how resources can best be used within these communities to improve the situation in the communities. At the end of the dialog, the priority should truly be the priority of the community and not the priority outsiders think that the community should have.

Performance measurement ... value adding

The most important metric is value adding which is the delta between the cost and the value of any activity. But rather few people think in terms of value adding and what this means for activity design and the best way to use resources. Most people understand the idea of cost as a component of performance ... usually less cost is better than more cost ... and in general this is right. But this idea is also limited. With this idea doing something that costs nothing ... staying in bed ... in the ultimate in performance, and this clearly is not the case.

What is important is the delta between the value being generated and the cost being incurred. To measure the value adding, it is therefore necessary to measure the value. Value is, of course, subjective, but it is also the most important. What value do people in a community see when the contractors are spending money and doing the work? This is why work done that reflects what people need and people want is so important. If people can see value ... or even if people have reasonable hope for value ... then the work of contractors is worth paying for.

Accounting and accountability

Accountants should be required to do much more to report information for public accounting and accountability. To the extent there is no requirement in law, it makes sense for the public to agitate to get the information. It also makes sense for decision makers to call for better information because they are aware that there is going to be an accounting and the people who are responsible will be held accountable. People avoid responsibility and accountability if the opportunity to do so exists. It is a reason why there needs to be a robust structure to ensure that accountability does not get left out.

Reason for Accounting

My approach to accounting is simple. Assume that everyone is a crook. Design a system so that even in a world where everyone is crooked and corrupt, the money stays where it is meant to be, and is used in ways that are intended and that value is received from the use of money. And the same goes for other parts of the system that are needed to control other valuable assets, especially inventory and easily movable assets. One of the key elements of control in a good accounting system is the idea that not financial transaction can take place without two people being involved and that everything is checked. I like to see an additional measure, and that is the amount of resources consumed should have a right relationship with the amount of value in the transaction.

The idea of “transparency” and “accountability” needs to be put into play as a practice rather than merely being conceptual dialog. What this means is that there needs to be easy and open access to a lot more information. If there is adequate and quite basic accounting applied everywhere, then there will not be space for corruption and abuse, and they will be substantially diminished of not completely eliminated.

Though accounting and technology are both less costly and easier to implement than at any time in history, there are vast areas of the global economy where this information is either non-existent or very secret and not accessible to the public. When it comes to setting the stage for peace ... these sorts of information are powerful in terms of demonstrating that the funds are being disbursed and being used in ways that are of value to the community.

Community information

People who live in a community have a lot of ideas about how their community can be improved ... but there is rarely any support for these local ideas. Once there is a mechanism in place so that local ideas can be turned into local action, it is amazing how much latent potential can be mobilized.

One of the keys is to figure out how the potential of people can be maximized ... and then the potential of the place. Some places are richly endowed with resources, other places are less endowed. And it is essential that planners understand the difference.

As much as anything there needs to be a lot more information about socioeconomic status and performance. This information needs to be about the civil economy at the community level. This information includes all aspects of the local civil economy including the accounting of relief and development fund flows, their use and the value of the interventions.

Accessible information

The idea that information about fund flows into relief and development activities in a community should be secret is nothing more than a huge excuse for hiding information about performance, and indeed incompetence, and corruption. Make this information easy to access, and a big part of the problem of corruption will go away.

Specifically, there should be an easily accessible database about all the communities in the country with some key metrics about the community and its socio-economic status, together with some basic information about all the community development activities that are going on, and the fund flows associated with them. What this database will show more than anything else is how little money can make a big difference in the quality of life of a community when it is used well, and how large amounts of money often do very little. This is a dirty little secret of the international relief and development community, and the big spenders in big government and especially the military establishment.

In order to have a new era of accounting and accountability, there should a public version of the corporate idea of an “open books” policy. In other words, all these fund flows should be visible to the public, and accounting and explanations available. The accounting principles are not complicated at all ... and the technology to keep track of accounting transactions ... the relational database ... has been around for almost 30 years, but now vastly faster and more powerful since it was first described in 1978 courtesy of Moore's Law and the rapid increase in power and the decrease in cost.

Information ... Intelligence

There may be some differences between information and intelligence, but more of both is needed. Without adequate information the civil economy does not progress, and without intelligence military activities are not successful. Getting intelligence to ensure security for the community is impossible when the community is at war with the police and the military ... and indeed, at war with itself.

But getting intelligence in a community that is embracing a civil economy and getting help in accelerating socio-economic progress is quite possible. A community that has hope and is progressing rarely wants to have the future compromised by violent intervention ... by guns and mayhem. Successful policing depends on intelligence, and this comes from the police knowing their community and learning things slowly and right.
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