“The primary aim of development [is] to satisfy man's spiritual and material needs in the context of respect for human rights”. The majority of the Commission on Human Rights of the United Nations, in making this pronouncement, held that “a development strategy based on political repression and the denial of human rights might contribute to the realization of some economic objectives but could never lead to full and genuine development”. They noted the importance of participation both in the process and benefits of development. These statements contrast with a presumption widely held among economists, philosophers, and politicians, that respecting fundamental human rights, especially individual political and civil rights, is somehow incompatible with rapid economic development. Until fairly recently, it was assumed by a preponderance of Western and other development strategists that the benefits of economic growth would sooner or later trickle down to the poor majority in Third World countries, provided that sufficient wealth was generated; it was implicitly assumed that in these circumstances, “human rights would look after itself”. “In many respects the achievement of specific development objectives and of respect for human rights has been foiled by the failure of the trickle-down theory”.