Dialogue
Between Nations
54. All nations must
initiate the dialogue which We called for in Our first encyclical, Ecclesiam
Suam. 56 A dialogue between those who contribute aid and those who
receive it will permit a well-balanced assessment of the support to be
provided, taking into consideration not only the generosity and the available
wealth of the donor nations, but also the real needs of the receiving countries
and the use to which the financial assistance can be put. Developing countries
will thus no longer risk being overwhelmed by debts whose repayment swallows up
the greater part of their gains. Rates of interest and time for repayment of
the loan could be so arranged as not to be too great a burden on either party, taking
into account free gifts, interest-free or low-interest loans, and the time
needed for liquidating the debts.
The donors could certainly ask for
assurances as to how the money will be used. It should be used for some
mutually acceptable purpose and with reasonable hope of success, for there is
no question of backing idlers and parasites. On the other hand, the recipients
would certainly have the right to demand that no one interfere in the internal
affairs of their government or disrupt their social order. As sovereign
nations, they are entitled to manage their own affairs, to fashion their own
policies, and to choose their own form of government. In other words, what is
needed is mutual cooperation among nations, freely undertaken, where each enjoys
equal dignity and can help to shape a world community truly worthy of man.
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