Monday, October 12, 2009

Strings may force Pakistan to reject US aid: Peninsula

ISLAMABAD: The debate on stringent conditions attached by the Obama Administration to the Kerry-Lugar Bill of aid is giving an option to Pakistan’s economic managers from barring the US to provide its aid in such a way where major chunk on the development projects — in the range of 50 to 60 percent of the $1.5bn per annum — is being spent and sent back to US in the name of consultancy and intermediatory costs.

All kinds of tough conditions have been incorporated in the Kerry-Lugar Bill to ensure strict audit in the name of transparency but it never touches the spending of money by the United States on consultancy, salaries and other intermediately costs to run the USAID funded projects inside Pakistan.

A relevant authority having knowledge on Pakistan’s economy is of the view that the US wanted to spend major chunk of the aid in its own bureaucratic way which in some cases rose to 65 to 70 per cent and certain projects currently being executed by USAID could be cited on this count.

For more on this article, please click on the following link: Strings may force Pakistan to reject US aid: Peninsula

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