A Nobel Prize well deserved but badly chosen
Carlos Alberto Montaner
The
Economist does not agree with the Swedes' choice of Muhammad Yunus, founder
of the Grameen Bank in Bangladesh, for the Nobel Peace Prize. It is not a
question of Mr. Yunus being undeserving of the appreciation of mankind;
rather, his work does not have a direct relationship to peace. The bank he
created, which was later successfully imitated in dozens of countries,
grants microcredits to people who are desperately poor, almost always women
who head one-parent households, so they may start small entrepreneurial
activities that will enable them to make an honest living and take care of
their children. That is commendable, but its relation to violence and war is
altogether too tangential.
I agree with The Economist, as I usually do
when I read the analyses that appear in its publications. But I would add an
important shading: the award Mr. Yunus deserved was the Nobel Prize for
Economics. I don't find it wrong that in the past the Nobel panel selected
brilliant mathematicians such as Milton Friedman, historians of economics
such as Douglass North, or thinkers endowed with a penetrating sociological
vision such as Gary Becker -- three of the intellectual giants of the 20th
Century -- but sometime the panelists needed to reward a practical and
compassionate banker who went beyond academic economics and penetrated the
heart of this pseudoscience: how to create wealth for the benefit of the
masses.
I expect Friedrich Hayek, Economics prize
winner in 1974, and his teacher, Ludwig von Mises, also would concur. The
great mathematics formulations, the statistical curves, the complex
equations and the rest of the econometric instruments somehow help take a
snapshot of the economy at a given moment, and maybe they're useful to
explain trends and predict (very timidly) possible evolutions, but that
intense academic activity has little to do with the creation of
wealth.What's important there is human action, the intelligent and unique
eye of someone who sees an opportunity to satisfy a need or propitiate a
demand and, in quest of his own benefit, creates for that purpose a product
or a service. That's why Mr. Yunus deserves the Nobel Prize for Economics.
What good are one thousand brilliant economists who graduated from Harvard
and Chicago, or the best economics model proposed by the World Bank, if
there are no agents willing to create wealth with their enterprises, be they
microscopic, medium-sized or large..
Furthermore, with his ideas Mr. Yunus has
benefited not only millions of microentrepreneurs throughout the world by
granting them credit. He has benefited all of us, because when a family is
rescued from misery and becomes a producer of wealth, it is simultaneously
transformed into a consumer of goods and services generated by other
economic agents. The woman who, with a loan from Grameen Bank in Bangladesh
or Mi Banco in Panama (a glorious and remote Central American descendant of
Yunus), gave her family an upward push, today consumes footwear and blouses,
while her children and grandchildren go to school and exponentially increase
the available human capital.
It is almost amazing that the governments
and political parties fail to realize that the only way to reduce poverty
and create societies dominated by vast middle classes is to stimulate the
social, legal and economic conditions so the entrepreneurial fabric can grow
incessantly and furiously. There is a truism that should be repeated until
everyone understands it: There are no poor or rich countries. Some countries
have a thick, varied and efficient entrepreneurial fabric; others lack such
fabric. What makes the United States great is General Electric, not the
Pentagon and its million bombs. The Pentagon and the world's 100 best
universities and hospitals exist in the United States because that country
has the world's most efficient and refined entrepreneurial pool, thanks to
the institutional and cultural environment that serves as a culture medium.
There is no other secret.
Mr. Yunus and his followers work from the
same premise, but they do so within the poorest segments of Third World
countries or in very marginal sectors of any society. It is a tremendous
accomplishment that deserves a Nobel Prize. But it should be for Economics,
not Peace.
October 24, 2006
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