Red Cross Changes its Role in Haiti

This the story of the Red Cross assistance to Haiti.  It is noted that the Red Cross plans to spend $200 million initially, but it will continue to assist the country for three to five more years.  I understand that the Red Cross collected more than $400 million for the emergency, so they will turn themselves into a development agency to spend the balance, a change that I am not to sure is the best practice–collect monies during an emergency and then spend it slowly over a long time.

In the first six months following the January 12th earthquake, the American Red Cross spent or signed agreements to spend $148.5 million. Responding to needs, about 38 percent of the money has been spent on food and emergency services; about 35 percent on emergency and transitional/semi- permanent shelter; 10 percent on livelihoods and host family assistance; 8 percent on health and disease prevention programs; 5 percent on disaster preparedness activities, as well as 4 percent on providing clean water and sanitation. At the same time, the American Red Cross continues to add staff in Haiti, and we now have 117 staff members, including 100 Haitians, dedicated to our earthquake recovery efforts.

The American Red Cross expects to spend more than $200 million to meet the survivors’ immediate needs – mostly in the first 12 months after the earthquake. The remainder of the funds raised will go to longer-term recovery over the next 3- 5 years. Our spending plans likely will evolve to respond to changing needs. We know that shelter will get the largest share, but we also expect to spend significant amounts on disease prevention, water and sanitation, disaster preparedness, and grants, loans and other financial assistance.

via Inside the Red Cross Efforts in Haiti.

US Latin American Policy–What is it?

The weakness of the US policy toward Latin America is refered to in an article today El Pais.  I recently attended a presentation of the Subsecretary of State for Latin America that confirmed that our policy toward Latin America is not well focussed but accommodating to many different subregional issues.

En América Latina está pasando de todo. El dinamismo en la economía, los negocios, la política, la sociedad, en sus relaciones internacionales, y hasta en la criminalidad, es obvio. En contraste, la política de Estados Unidos hacia América Latina es letárgica, poco imaginativa y sorprendentemente irrelevante.

via Mientras Washington duerme… · ELPAÍS.com.

On “Seven More Years of Hard Times?”

Cogent conclusion of an interesting (somewhat technical)  review of some important recent research on periods of economic recession and financial crises.  In short, we are in this for the long haul.

It is not true that if you break a mirror, you will have seven years’ bad luck. That is a superstition. But if you allow a financial market to spin wildly until it breaks down, it really does seem that you run the risk of years of economic malaise. That is a historical pattern.

via Seven More Years of Hard Times? – Project Syndicate.

“The (Blogging) People” – NYTimes.com

Worth reading Thomas Friedman’s account of the China blogosphere–what a powerful and expansive mode of communicating at all levels. Much depends on leaders understanding the value of communicating with this wider population.

“China for the first time has a public sphere to discuss everything affecting Chinese citizens,” explained Hu Yong, a blogosphere expert at Peking University. “Under traditional media, only elite people had a voice, but the Internet changed that.” He added, “We now have a transnational media. It is the whole society talking, so people from various regions of China can discuss now when something happens in a remote village — and the news spreads everywhere.” But this Internet world “is more populist and nationalistic,” he continued. “Many years of education that our enemies are trying to keep us down has produced a whole generation of young people whose thinking is like this, and they now have a whole Internet to express it.”

via Op-Ed Columnist – Power to the (Blogging) People – NYTimes.com.