I think that's what the Millennium Challenge Corporation compact for Ghana is trying to focus on. The thing that is really nice about the compact is that it's based on the premise that help will be given once they've already gotten to a certain level. Of course, there are areas in which it could be improved. For example, it doesn't reach the least developed countries.
Anyway, that's an incentive in the Millennium Challenge compact. The other thing that is nice about it is that they've built it much like the Marshall Plan in Europe. How slow some of these compacts operated was a subject of congressional criticism. Of course, they didn't have the same human capital that we did in Europe after World War II, but the idea was that the compacts would be built by the people of the country, not simply designed in an aid mission or in a foreign capital.
This has made a huge difference, and I think that's one of the things the Ghanaian compact is focused on.