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"Africa
needs justice not charity"
Green
Left Weekly
June 29, 2005
http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/2005/631/631p28.htm
Casual readers
of the newspaper headlines could be forgiven for believing that
the leaders of the richest and most powerful countries had miraculously
experienced a "road to Damascus’‘ conversion on the question of
how to end Africa’s lack of development and spiralling poverty.
If they are to be believed, the key decades-long demand of the global
justice movement -- debt cancellation -- had been agreed to, thanks
to an unlikely alliance between Tony Blair’s British Labour government,
leading aid agencies and pop "legends’‘ Sir (or is that Saint?)
Bob Geldof and Bono.
So, have the
world’s imperialist powers really undergone a change of world view
of Biblical proportions? The devil is in the details, as Green Left
Weekly’s NORM DIXON discovers.
"$55-billion
debts write-off agreed'', declared the June 11 British Guardian.
"Debtor nations freed of burdens'', the Los Angeles Times announced
on June 12. "Victory for Millions'', trumpeted the June 12 British
Observer. "Blair, Bono Win One for Africa'', cooed the June 13
Christian Science Monitor. "Debt deal just the beginning, says
Geldof'', assured the June 13 Sydney Morning Herald.
The hype was
in response to a June 11 agreement by seven finance ministers from
the Group of Eight industrialised countries (G8 -- United States,
Japan, Italy, Canada, Britain, France, Germany and Russia). The
ministers agreed to immediately cancel all the debts owed by 18
mainly African countries to the International Monetary Fund (IMF),
the World Bank and the African Development Bank (AfrDB). According
to the British government, this amounts to US$40 billion. In practical
terms, it should save these countries $15 billion in debt payments,
spread over 10 years.
The deal must
be approved by the G8 leaders’ summit being held in Gleneagles,
Scotland, on July 6-8.
The June 12
LA Times lavishly claimed the deal "fulfilled a decades-old dream
of anti-poverty activists'', reporting that US Treasury Secretary
John Snow had hailed the arrangement as "an achievement of historic
proportions''. The June 13 Christian Science Monitor’s article began:
"It’s been a long campaign of persistent persuasion by British
Prime Minister Tony Blair and Irish rock star Bono. But finally
... they won a victory for the world’s poorest continent.''
Most newspapers
quoted a gushing Geldof: "Tomorrow 280 million people will wake
up for the first time in their lives without owing you or me a penny
from the burden of debt that has crippled them and their countries
for so long. Money we didn’t even know we were owed, and never wanted
in the first place, and money they could never pay.''
Also widely
reported was Brown’s grandiloquent description of what had been
achieved: "It is the intention of world leaders to forge a new
and better relationship -- a new deal -- between the rich and poor
countries of the world and I believe that the advances that we have
made can be built upon ... This is not as time for timidity, but
a time for boldness, and not a time for settling for second best,
but aiming high.''
Stirring words
indeed, but tragically the hype does not match the reality.
The huge figures
most often quoted by the press, $50-55 billion, include IMF, World
Bank and AfrDB debts owed by around 20 of the other poorest Third
World countries, which may become eligible for debt cancellation
in the future; possibly nine more in 12-18 months, and another 10
or so at some undetermined date.
While the $1.5
billion a year made available will certainly be of use for the 18
poverty-stricken countries, it will only boost their collective
budget by about 6.5% per annum. The modest sum illustrates that
the Western media’s backslapping over their governments’ "generosity''
is more than a little exaggerated and somewhat premature. Those
18 countries account for only 5% of the population of the Third
World, and if all 38 countries become eligible in the future, it
will still only affect around 11%.
Britain’s annual
contribution to the debt write-off will amount to between $70 million
and $96 million, which is much less than the Blair government spends
on its occupation of Iraq each year, and just a shade more than
the $67.1 million it forks out each year in payments to maintain
Queen Betty Windsor and her dysfunctional family.
Washington will
need only find between $130 million and $175 million a year, which
is almost three times less than it spends each year just to run
its Baghdad embassy. The total 10-year cost for the US is around
what Washington will spend to build a new embassy in the Iraqi capital.
Washington alone spends $2 billion a month to wage war in Iraq.
If those figures
call into question the "historic'' scale of the West’s benevolence
towards Africa and the Third World, compare them to the US annual
"defence'' budget, which will be more than $441 billion in 2006
alone. Or to the G8's spending $350 billion year on subsidies to
its agribusinesses, which allows the of flooding Third World markets
with cheap produce that has devastated local producers. Or compare
it to Britain’s income from arms sales to Africa, which topped £1
billion (US$1.8
billion) in 2004. Or to US President George Bush’s cutting taxes
for the richest Americans by $200 billion a year.
It should be
also noted that debts owed to the Inter-American Development Bank
and the Asian Development Bank are not included in the deal, nor
are the Third World countries’ huge bilateral debt burden (that
is, debt owed to individual rich countries).
Even if all
38 nominated countries eventually have their multilateral debts
wiped, it will still represent just 18% of Africa’s total external
debt of $300 billion, and a tiny part of the Third World’s total
debt, which is estimated at a staggering $2.4 trillion! Pain outweighs
benefits.
But surely,
it’s a step forward? Not according to African anti-debt campaigners.
African Jubilee South (AJS) pointed out on June 14 that to qualify
for the G8 scheme, the initial 18 countries have had to pass what
is known as the Highly Indebted Poor Country initiative’s "completion
point''.
The 1996 HIPC
was the rich-country governments’ last much-hyped, now largely forgotten,
"debt forgiveness'' scheme. The 1999 G8 summit in Cologne promised
that it would lead to the cancellation of $100 billion in bilateral
debt. Just a quarter of that was actually delivered and the HIPC
countries are now poorer than when they began the program.
To reach the
HIPC completion point, explains AJS, "involves the implementation
of stringent free market reforms such as [health and education]
budget cuts, financial and trade liberalisation, privatisation and
other reforms'' that ensure, as the G8 finance ministers stated
explicitly on June 11, "the elimination of impedients to private
investment, both domestic and foreign''. "Twenty other countries
may qualify'', AJS pointed out, "but only if they are prepared
to go through the same pain that the 18 countries have already endured.''
In Tanzania,
45,000 public sector jobs have been lost due to privatisation. In
Zambia, the figure is 60,000. To reach the HIPC "completion
point'' Tanzania and Ghana were both required to privatise their
urban water supplies. Mali was forced to agree to privatise its
railways and cotton industry. The World Bank insists that Mali’s
state cotton company pay producers the "world market price'',
which is a big drop in income.
Mali’s railways
are now owned by a Canadian-French consortium, which has shed 600
jobs, closed two-thirds of the stations and decimated passenger
numbers, sharply curtailing the livelihoods of thousands who relied
on the lines as a source of customers and a way to get their products
to markets.
The AJS statement
declared: "The costs of structural adjustment programs and
creditor-imposed conditionality far outweigh the amount of debt
to be cancelled. Are we to cheer when these additional promises
can go the same route of other G8 pledges, i.e. unfulfilled? Should
we applaud when the 18 countries affected represent a tiny fraction
of the world’s poor? Are we to praise the [G8] when these debts
are not being serviced in any case (because of the countries’ inability
to pay), and when they would have been repudiated a long time ago
as illegitimate debts if our governments had real political and
economic independence. The illegitimacy of the debt resides in that
they were incurred by dictatorships of various kinds, were used
in consolidating and furthering their undemocratic regimes against
the interests of their people and in implementing policies that
have put millions of lives at risk.''
The Southern
African People’s Solidarity Network on June 17 bluntly stated: "the
so-called debt cancellations ... will lead to further accumulation
of debts [because] these countries still have to toe the line and
respond to demands to open up their economies for more exploitation,
capital flight and other related imbalances that come with further
liberalisation''. Aid
While the July
G8 summit is almost certain to endorse the debt deal, other proposals
floated by the British government, formulated by its Commission
for Africa in an attempt to meet a series of United Nations poverty-reduction
targets known as the Millennium Development Goals, will be frustrated
by opposition from the US, Japan and Canada.
In what Gordon
Brown refers to as a "Marshall Plan for Africa'', European
Union countries have promised to increase their aid budgets from
the present EU average of 0.33% of GDP to 0.56% by 2010 and 0.7%
by 2015.
If achieved, it would increase annual aid to Africa from $25 billion
to $75 billion in 2015.
As big-hearted
as this might seem, this has been a UN goal since 1970, yet Western
countries today are further away from achieving than ever. It was
a key recommendation of former West German Chancellor Willy Brandt’s
1979 North-South Commission.
However, the
Bush administration is refusing to boost its aid budget as a proportion
of GDP, which is currently a miserable 0.16%. Washington’s annual
African aid budget is $3.2 billion, which is about four days’ worth
of Pentagon spending. In contrast, Israel alone received $3.7 billion
in "aid'' from the US in 2003. The European Union spends $10.8
billion a year on Africa. Third World revolt
Why is the West
now attempting to be seen to address African and Third World poverty?
In the short term, it is being driven by soon-to-retire Tony Blair’s
opportunistic wish to go down in history as something better than
George Bush’s "poodle''. Blair’s heir-apparent Gordon Brown also
wants to begin his reign with the mantle of a visionary Labour reformer,
not a Blairite warmonger.
However, more
importantly, Blair, Brown, Bush and the G8 realise that a Third
World revolt against neo-liberalism is a distinct possibility and
need to act to defuse it. African Jubilee South summed it up when
they noted that the imperialist powers need to "give some extra
financial breathing space for the affected countries, while ensuring
their continued adherence to the dictates of the rich industrialised
countries and the plunder by their foreign multinational corporations.
Not just through the exploitation of our natural resources but through
profit repatriation, declining terms of trade, access to increased
financial and tax incentives.''
The resistance
is most advanced in Latin America. In Bolivia, one of the countries
that will "benefit'' from the G8 deal, millions of Bolivians
have flooded the streets almost continuously for months, demanding
the reversal of the privatisation of their natural gas and oil reserves,
which was forced on La Paz a decade ago by the dictates of the IMF.
The Bolivian people are demanding that the wealth be utilised to
benefit the people. In Venezuela, a revolutionary government has
rejected neoliberal austerity, and the people are mobilising to
demand the benefits of the country’s oil wealth.
The G8 leaders
fear that sentiment could spread to the rest of the Third World,
including Africa from which Western corporations continue the plunder
of the continent’s massive mineral and oil resources.
The signs are
there. In February, Mozambique defied an IMF-imposed cap on government
wages spending by hiring a further 5000 teachers. In May, Tanzania
repudiated the water privatisation contract with the joint venture
led by British company Biwater, after the company failed to deliver
services and investments on time. In June, three Biwater executives
were unceremoniously deported. Mali has delayed the final privatisation
of its cotton industry, against World Bank orders, until 2008.
Kenyan MP Paul
Muite, angered that Kenya was not included in the G8 debt relief
package despite having abided by all debt obligations, has proposed
that Kenya refuse to pay its annual $1.2 billion external debt repayments
for five years and "redeploy the money to needy sectors such
as education, health and infrastructure... We need to take radical
steps to re-energise our economy. One such step is to suspend repayment
of foreign loans'', he told the June 12 East African Standard. ‘Justice
not charity’
For Africa to
escape the nightmare in which it has been plunged by centuries of
slavery, colonialism and imperialist exploitation requires a new,
just and equal system of international economic relations. Western
governments deliberately confuse the symptoms of African poverty
with its causes in order to obscure a fundamental feature of the
world capitalist system: that the advanced industrialised countries
continue to derive much of their great wealth from the extreme exploitation
of the vast majority of the world’s population, who reside in the
Third World, and the plunder of their natural resources.
As the United
Nations Conference on Trade and Development’s 2004 report reveals,
"the continent received some $540 billion in loans and paid
back some $550 billion in principal and interest between 1970 and
2002. Yet Africa remained with a debt stock of $295 billion''.
African Jubilee
South and other Third World anti-debt campaigners propose some fundamental
demands, that are "a matter of justice and fairness, not charity'':
- The unconditional
and immediate cancellation of all African and other Third World
countries’ debt.
- An immediate
increase in Western aid budgets to 0.7% of GDP, to be provided
without strings attached.
- The abolition
of all IMF and World Bank conditionalities, under any guise, and
reparations for the costs of structural adjustment programs. It
is obvious that economic recovery in Africa is incompatible with
these institutions’ conditionalities.
- An immediate
end to Western pressure to open up Third World markets to subsidised
First World goods and produce. African countries want trade agreements
that allow them to choose if, when and how to open their markets,
and to implement any measures they feel necessary to protect and
develop their home industries. Western countries should provide
long-term preferential access to their markets for African and
Third World goods.
- The repatriation
of all the wealth stolen from the African people and kept in Western
countries in the past, and that resulting from corporate plunder
of Africa’s natural and mineral resources today. The restitution
of that wealth to its rightful owners, the African people, would
send the right signal to all potential looters and help Africa
in its recovery.
- African leaders
and policy makers must abandon destructive neoliberal policies
and explore genuine people-centred development, economic and trade
policies. Africa needs to reclaim its sovereign right to decide
on its priorities and its own path to development.
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