Chemonics Inc. / USAID

My day job introduces me to many fascinating institutions, but this one really gave me pause.
Let's start with their cheerful founder, Gerald D. Murphy, whose brother David worked for the CIA during the Cold War(s). He was profiled by NYT in 1993, and at that point, 98% of Chemonics income came from one source: USAID, which despite vast pretentions of charity is little more than a CIA cut-out.
Gerald isn't a coy boy.
22 years later and Chemonics is bigger than ever, billing itself as "Employee Owned" and boasting a very interesing board -- two members of note:
In terms of actual results, Chemonics is remarkably consistent: there are none. Their recent work in Haiti has been attracting attention because, even by the lavish standards of "international aid," their work is a gaping black hole with zero accountability -- which is probably why they spend so much time talking about "transparency." (The homie Barack Obama has hit upon a similar career path.)
Report on attempted audit of their Haiti activities:
http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/rel ... onicsagain
A gem:
Let's start with their cheerful founder, Gerald D. Murphy, whose brother David worked for the CIA during the Cold War(s). He was profiled by NYT in 1993, and at that point, 98% of Chemonics income came from one source: USAID, which despite vast pretentions of charity is little more than a CIA cut-out.
Gerald isn't a coy boy.
The A.I.D. loan is but one example Mr. Murphy cites of how his company has benefited from official connections that Erly's Chemonics subsidiary has developed through its aid agency work.
Mr. Murphy said he started Chemonics in 1976 because "I've always wanted a way to do two things: one, have my own C.I.A., and two, be helpful to people."
His recipe for cooking up business, he said, was to send the new unit's president to Washington to call on members of Congress, announcing he was a consultant looking for business.
Chemonics, whose staff includes former A.I.D. and Agriculture Department officials, has more than quadrupled its revenues in the last decade. It has been hired by the aid agency to work on issues close to Erly's heart, ranging from trade policy in Jamaica, where Comet was trying to increase its rice imports, to alternative crops in Honduras, where Erly was considering a citrus project.
Thanks to Chemonics contacts with top-level ministers of foreign governments, Mr. Murphy said, Erly executives "have an open door to walk in and sit down and talk about whatever seems sensible." And Chemonics "has given me an appreciation for the political process in Washington in a different way," he added.
"It's obviously a political process," he continued. "A.I.D. contracts just don't happen."
22 years later and Chemonics is bigger than ever, billing itself as "Employee Owned" and boasting a very interesing board -- two members of note:
Dov S. Zakheim, Board Member
The Honorable Dov S. Zakheim is a Senior Advisor at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and Senior Fellow at the CNA Corporation. The former Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) and Chief Financial Officer for the Department of Defense (DoD), Dr. Zakheim developed and managed Departments budgets, negotiated five major defense agreements with U.S. allies and partners, and served as a principal advisor to the Secretary of Defense. He also served as the DoD’s coordinator of civilian programs in Afghanistan. Dr. Zakheim is currently serving as the Vice Chairman of both the Center for the National Interest and the Foreign Policy Research Institute, as well as being a board member of Search for Common Ground. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations; the International Institute for Strategic Studies, and Chatham House/The Royal Institute of International Affairs and a Fellow of the Royal Swedish Academy of War Sciences. Dr. Zakheim holds a doctorate in economics and politics from St. Antony’s College, University of Oxford, where he held three graduate and post-graduate fellowships.
Eric Howell, Chief Financial Officer
As chief financial officer, Mr. Howell is responsible for corporate financial planning and management. He joined Chemonics in 2005 as a director in the Europe and Eurasia region, overseeing projects in Kosovo, Tajikistan, and Kyrgyzstan. Prior to working for Chemonics, Mr. Howell served as chief of party for a land privatization project in Ukraine and a privatization project in Belarus, and worked as an investment banker for Salomon Smith Barney in New York and Hong Kong.
In terms of actual results, Chemonics is remarkably consistent: there are none. Their recent work in Haiti has been attracting attention because, even by the lavish standards of "international aid," their work is a gaping black hole with zero accountability -- which is probably why they spend so much time talking about "transparency." (The homie Barack Obama has hit upon a similar career path.)
Report on attempted audit of their Haiti activities:
http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/rel ... onicsagain
A gem:
When the AP asked for a budget breakdown, FHI 360 spokeswoman Liza Morris said, "We were pulling that for you but were told that it was proprietary by our funder."
Who is the funder?
"Our funder," she said, "is USAID."