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modernize." Over the past fifty years, international development has taken many forms, usually focusing on projects to make "underdeveloped" economies more similar to "developed" economies, with specific efforts in such areas as infrastructure development, industrial capacity, governance, poverty reduction, market reform, education, health care, and economic restructuring.
Development is generally distinguished from foreign aid or disaster relief in that development is a transformative project; "give a man a fish and he'll eat for a day, teach him how to fish and he'll eat forever."
As a contemporary project, international development began in 1949 with the inaugural speech of Harry S. Truman on January 20th:
However, the very notions of "developed" and "underdeveloped" have proven problematic, because they seemingly sidestep notions of rich and poor, colonizer and colonized, to create almost a consumerist dynamic between have and want. Development is, first and foremost, the cure for underdevelopment, and many theorists see most development efforts as ultimately neo-colonial.