12 October 2007

AID from the US government

This was on a USAID grant application we were helping with:

"... (d) Source, Origin, and Componentry of Goods. If the recipient plans to purchase any goods/commodities which are not of U.S. source and/or U.S. origin, please indicate below (using a continuation page, as necessary) the types and quantities of each, estimated unit costs of each, and probable source and/or origin... The "origin" of a commodity is the country or area in which a commodity is mined, grown, or produced. A commodity is produced when, through manufacturing, processing, or substantial and major assembling of components, a commercially recognized new commodity results, which is substantially different in basic characteristics or in purpose or utility from its components. Merely packaging various items together for a particular procurement or relabeling items does not constitute production of a commodity. Any commodity whose origin is a non-Free World country is ineligible for USAID financing..."

We thought this guessing the origin of fax machine components was an exercise in ridiculousness. Plus they never explained what a "non-Free World country" was. I'm guessing Burma. And I doubt they make many fax machines.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

welcome to the politics of foreign aid! This stuff happens all the time, there is a very strong bias against using US funds for AID work that benefits other countries.