PHOTO |
FILE Tullow Oil engineers work
at the oil
rig at Ngamia One Well in Turkana
County in
2012. The discovery of oil in the
arid region
has raised the locals’ expectations
and its is
prudent for the government to manage
them
early. NATION MEDIA GROUP
|
Friday, October 25, 2013, By Nic Cheeseman
Recent
finds of oil and gas across East and West Africa mean that by the end
of the next decade, almost all African economies will be dominated by
natural resources.
With the discovery of large oil
deposits in Turkana, Kenya has now joined the club of resource-rich
states. Making the most of this opportunity depends on the willingness
of the government to save the proceeds of oil and gas and invest them in
the future.
The importance of natural resources to the
continent is growing by the year. Following the recent oil and gas
discoveries in Africa, an issue that was previously only relevant to a
small number of countries is now at the top of the political agenda for
many more.
We are no longer just talking about the
classic “resource economies” — DRC, Nigeria and South Africa. In the
future, the debate about the impact of oil and the resource curse will
focus on Ghana, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania.
How well
African countries manage their natural resources over the next decade is
the single most important factor that will determine whether the
continent manages to sustain its fragile economic recovery.
Given
this, we must redouble our efforts to understand how African countries
can best manage their extractive industries. But these efforts should
not just focus on what African governments can do. Multinational
companies and international governments have often pursued
self-interested policies to the detriment of African people.
To
push this inclusive agenda forwards, I joined forces with OXFAM to
organise a one day workshop at the African Studies Centre of Oxford
University last Thursday. We invited speakers from a wide range of
backgrounds, including the Ugandan Foreign Affairs Minister Sam Kutesa,
Ghanaian High Commissioner Kwaku Danso-Boafo, former Prime Minister of
Zimbabwe Morgan Tsvangirai.
The chief economist of the
African Development Bank and representatives of Rio Tinto, Tullow Oil,
the Ford Foundation, and the Global Alliance for Tax Justice also spoke.
At
the workshop, OXFAM Executive Director Winnie Byanyima said, “The
resource curse has never been so stark and, with new mineral discoveries
happening every day in Africa, has never been so vital to tackle. These
huge new finds could mean tens of billions of dollars of taxes to pay
for schools and hospitals— but only if this new wealth remains in
Africa. Too often it has ended up in Zurich not Zambia, London not
Liberia.”
PUBLIC SERVICES
But
what should governments do with their resources? How much should they
spend on improving public services? How much should they save for the
future? These are some of the most pressing questions facing the Kenyan
government today. Tony Venables, Director, Oxford Centre for the
Analysis of Resource Rich Economies at Oxford University, had some
answers.
Venables accepts that governments will
naturally want to earmark some proportion of resource windfalls to
alleviate the suffering of their people. However, he argues that in the
long-run oil and gas will only benefit African economies if governments
save the majority of their resource revenue and invest in the wider
economy.
If a government spends all of its resource
revenue on services such as healthcare, its people will be better off in
the short term but the amount of revenue available to the government
will not increase. But if the government saves for the future, using
resource income to stimulate activity in other parts of the economy, it
can generate new forms of income.
In the long run,
creating more revenue streams will enable the government to spend even
more money on public services. So the best way to serve ordinary Kenyans
is not to spend all of the oil revenues now, but to carefully plan how
to invest them for the future.
If a government decides
to follow Venables’ advice, what should it invest in? The Norwegian
Government invests a large amount of its oil money abroad. But it has
already developed a strong economic base, so it can afford to invest
abroad.
Venables argues that African states are not in the same position. They, therefore, need to invest more in the domestic economy.
This is not only important to promote economic growth, it also has spill-over benefits. As infrastructure improves, foreign and private investment is likely to rise— creating additional drivers of economic growth.
This is not only important to promote economic growth, it also has spill-over benefits. As infrastructure improves, foreign and private investment is likely to rise— creating additional drivers of economic growth.
But governments may not be able to invest in
the right areas at once. It may take time to prepare the economy so that
it can handle new levels of investment. Venables suggests that because
of this, it is usually a mistake for governments to spend all of their
newfound resource wealth at once.
A far better strategy
is to identify the key parts of the economy that would benefit most
from investment, and to stagger expenditure in order to make sure that
the right foundations are in place before the government starts to pour
in resources. But this requires people to have patience.
This
does not happen naturally. When oil is found, popular expectations are
often hard to contain. Local communities demand new services, middle-men
expect a bigger cut of the action, and voters expect greater rewards in
return for their political support.
PUBLIC EXPECTATIONS
Venables
argues that to correct these expectations, it is essential that the
government moves early to manage public expectations. Political leaders
must take their people with them in order to build public support for
their policies. Voters will only see the value of saving and investing
in the future if the government engages in an information campaign to
explain the benefits of this policy to them.
So far,
the Kenyan government has made it clear that it does want to plan for
the future. Kenya’s Vision 2030 sets out a long-term strategy for
economic development based on investing in a range of sectors, including
agriculture, tourism, manufacturing, and IT.
But the
government has said much less about how it wants to use oil revenues
when they start to flow. To an extent this is understandable. Oil was
found relatively recently and it is not yet clear exactly how much money
the government will get, and when.
It would be a
mistake to remain silent on these issues for long. Early action by the
Ghanaian government has been very successful at generating public
support for the idea that oil revenues should be saved to help the
country cope in times of economic hardship.
The Kenyan government will find it much easier to use oil resources for the long-term benefit of the country if it follows suit.
Dr Cheeseman is the Director of the African Studies Centre at the University of Oxford
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