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G8:
How the rich world short-changes Africa
Norm
Dixon
July 06,
2005
http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/2005/632/632p16.htm
The mass media
hype about "a new deal between rich and poor", in response
to the powerful Group of Eight industrialised countries’ plan to
cancel multilateral debts owed by 18 mainly African countries, has
led many people to believe that a new era of international social
justice has dawned. The deal is expected to be ratified by G8 leaders
in Scotland on July 6-8.
The uncritical
endorsement of the plan by large international aid agencies like
Oxfam, the driving force behind the Make Poverty History (MPH) coalition
of non-government organisations, and big-name celebrities like Bob
Geldof and Bono, has reinforced this hope.
Across the globe,
there has been a genuine outpouring of popular solidarity and sympathy
with the people of Africa, symbolised by the tens of thousands who
attended, and the millions who watched, the Live 8 concerts.
Unfortunately,
celebrations to mark what British deputy PM Gordon Brown described
as "the intention of world leaders to forge a new and better
relationship between the rich and poor countries of the world"
are premature.
The G8's promises
fall far short, and contradict important aspects, of MPH’s demands
as detailed on its web site (<http://www.makepovertyhistory.org/whatwewant/>)
— "Trade justice", "Drop the debt" and "More
and better aid".
MPH demands
that "the unpayable debts of the world’s poorest countries
should be cancelled in full" and "poor countries should
no longer have to privatise basic services or liberalise economies
as a condition for getting the debt relief they so desperately need".
Yet, the much publicised British government-brokered deal only cancels
the multilateral component of the debt of 18 of the world’s poorest
countries (with another 20 that may become eligible in the future).
But this "relief" comes with the very strings that MPH
opposes — strings that will ensure that poor countries remain trapped
in dire poverty.
As the grassroots
anti-debt coalition African Jubilee South explained on June 14,
eligibility "involves the implementation of stringent free
market reforms such as [health and education] budget cuts, financial
and trade liberalisation, privatisation" and, as the G8 states
explicitly, "the elimination of impedients to private investment,
both domestic and foreign". (For a detailed critique of the
G8 debt and aid scam, visit <http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/2005/631/631p28.htm>)
Trade justice?
MPH calls
for rich countries to stop imposing trade rules that prevent poor
countries from choosing "the best solutions to end poverty and
protect the environment". "These will not always be free
trade policies", MPH notes. Yet, even as Brown, Geldof and MPH
were lauding the G8's "historic" debt decision, rich-country
governments were pushing ahead to impose "trade liberalisation"
on African and other Third World countries.
The European
Union is now negotiating bilateral "economic partnership agreements"
(EPAs) with the 77 African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) countries.
These will replace the existing agreement that gives ACP countries
some preferential access to EU markets. Under the new free trade
agreements, the EU insists that ACP countries throw open their markets
to EU products.
The British
advocacy group Christian Aid in April warned that, "with their
diverse range of products and muscle in the marketplace, European
producers can outstrip ACP rivals in their domestic markets. European
producers have enjoyed decades of subsidies, support and protection
from their governments and have built strong, lean, competitive
industries. ACP countries ... stand to lose existing industries
and the potential to develop new ones as products from Europe flood
their markets."
The US government
too is pushing for bilateral and regional trade agreements with
African countries to gain greater access for US corporations.
The EU, US and
other Western countries spend billions every year to subsidise their
capitalists’ agricultural exports, which are often dumped in African
and other Third World markets at ridiculously low prices. This practice
lowers world commodity prices, upon which poor countries depend
for survival.
In 2003, governments
in the 30-member Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD), another rich-country dominated club, subsidised farm exports
to the tune of $350 billion (compared to providing just US$22 billion
in aid to Africa). That’s almost $1 billion a day! The EU gives
its agribusinesses around $100 billion a year in subsidies and grants.
The obscene scale of this comes into focus when you consider that
each European cow gets $3 a day in subsides, while 50% of Africa’s
people must live less than $1 a day.
The US government
in 2002 alone provided $3.7 billion in subsidies to its cotton agribusiness,
three times the entire US aid budget for Africa at the time. It
is estimated that African cotton-producing countries — which include
Benin, Burkina Faso, Chad, Togo, Kenya and Mali — in 2004 lost up
to $400 million in potential export revenue as a result. In 2003,
Malian cotton farmers received just 33 cents per kilogram for their
cotton, whereas subsidised US cotton producing corporations received
$1.45.
US rice growers
receive a US government refund of 72 cents in every dollar they
spend to produce rice, according to the British Financial
Times.
The Financial
Times on June 22 reported that the Mozambican sugar industry,
which employs 26,000 people, is in jeopardy due to the EU subsidies
and tariffs. This is despite the fact that Mozambique can produce
cane sugar for between $108 and $144 a tonne, whereas European beet
sugar costs $577 a tonne to produce. The EU gives subsidies to its
big sugar companies, such as British multinational Lyle and Tate,
of $990 million a year.
The EU imposes
import tariffs of more than 200% on non-EU cane products. This impacts
harshly on sugar-producing African countries like Mozambique, Ethiopia,
Malawi and Zambia. On top of this, European overproduction of sugar
results in 5 million tonnes being dumped on world markets, driving
prices down, in many cases to below the cost of production in Third
World countries. A small amount of sugar is bought from poor countries
at preferential prices, as a result of a 2001 agreement, but the
EU wants to slash the price it pays by 40%.
In 1990, many
Senegalese made a decent living growing tomatoes. After the introduction
of "free trade", prices farmers got for their crops were
halved and production tumbled from 73,000 tonnes in 1990 to just
20,000 in 1997.
The market was
flooded with cheap bottled European tomato products, which caused
local factories producing tomato paste and other value-added products
to close.
In Ghana, the
local poultry industry collapsed, impoverishing 400,000 small farmers,
after the market was flooded with cheap, subsidised EU and US frozen
chickens, which sell at half the price of fresh local chooks. In
1992, local farmers supplied 92% of the market; by 2001 their share
had plummeted to just 11%. Ghana’s attempt to raise tariffs to prevent
this dumping has been blocked by the IMF and WTO. The EU gives annual
subsidises its poultry producers of $52 billion a year. Cameroon
and Senegal have also had their markets flooded with cheap EU chooks.
Real cost of
‘free’ trade
On June
20, Christian
Aid released a study that revealed that the last 20 years of trade
"liberalisation", a condition for aid, loans and debt relief,
have made sub-Saharan countries a massive $272 billion worse off than
they otherwise would have been. The figure represents the income lost
as a result of being forced to open their markets to heavily subsidised
imports from rich countries.
This amount
is about the same as sub-Saharan Africa has received in aid during
the same period. It could have paid off much of the region’s $300
million debt, or allowed all of its children to go to school and
be vaccinated against major diseases, Christian Aid notes.
In 2000 alone,
sub-Saharan Africa lost income worth $28 billion, enough to halve
the number of people living on $1 day, based on United Nations estimates.
While in 2000, Africans lost almost $45 per person due to trade
liberalisation, aid per person was just $20.
The Christian
Aid study found that contrary to promises of the advocates of free
trade, when poor countries phase out measures such as tariffs, quotas
and import duties designed to protect their local industries and
consumers, imports climb sharply and local producers are priced
out of the market by cheaper, often subsidised, Western goods. This
also depresses prices.
Demand for the
things that African countries export — cash crops, raw materials
and minerals — tends to stay relatively constant. Income from any
small increase in exports is lost via ever-falling prices. For example,
from 1980 to 2000, the world price of sugar has fallen 77%, cocoa
by 71%, coffee by 63% and cotton by 47%. So the overall impact is
less local production and less income. This simply compounds poor
countries’ debt problems as they have to borrow because they must
spend more than they earn.
After 14 years
of "free trade" policies, Ghana’s GDP in 2000 was almost
$5 billion. Christian Aid estimates that without "liberalisation",
its GDP would have been $850 million higher. Ghana has lost $10
billion since 1986, which works out at $510 per person.
Between 1991
and 2000, Uganda experienced a total loss of $5 billion. Christian
Aid found that, without liberalisation, its 2000 GDP of almost $6
billion would have been more than $735 million higher than it was.
That’s more than its combined health and education budget for that
year. In 2000, aid to Uganda amounted to $35 per person; it lost
$32 per person that year through "free trade".
Mali’s GDP in
2000 was $191 million less than it otherwise would have been without
trade liberalisation,; $191 million is more than Mali’s annual health
budget. Losses since 1991 add up to $1.4 billion.
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