With the discovery of oil, we are about to lose
the budgetary deficit support for our budgets that we
have depended on since independence.
We are always over-spending.
And this bill is taking us in the same direction.
The foreign donors may soon no longer tolerate a
policy that provides budgetary support to a potentially
oil-rich producing country like ours.
Awareness of this possibility must produce a
shock. But
it appears our politicians in parliament, both in
administration and in opposition, are not worried.
No need to worry because this budgetary support
fund has probably been open for abuses over the years.
And also no worry because the extra funds that
the support brings can be replaced by a flexible
“collateral” asset as already being proposed.
The corruptive intent in the collateral approach
has already been embedded in the minds of its proponent.
And soon it will be shared by some members of
both parties. That is why the bill has already been
named the "national wealth enhancement" scheme.
Africa has never disappointed anyone yet when it
comes to funds and resource mismanagement.
Oil discovery in Nigeria has set a perfect
example of how it is done.
The Nigerians got into trouble as soon as they
found oil.
The powers that were promptly devised ways to tap into
the oil wealth under the excuse for massive
infrastructure development projects.
The scheme went on to benefit the few in power
and their cronies.
The Shagari’s government (1979-1983), according to
Wole Soyinka in his book, “The Open Sore of a Continent
“ came up with a nationwide federal housing project for
low-income earners… a populist, caring idea.”
Soyinka said to “fulfill such an ambitious
project; you need a world of cement.”
The Shagari government knew beforehand that the
nation’s factories could not fulfill a minuscule of the
cement demanded by the scheme.
But they went
ahead “utilizing the infamous import license scheme,
which was the shortest cut ever devised for hemorrhaging
a nation’s foreign exchange reserves!”
And this is the test that is facing Ghana today
with the discovery of oil.
The Nigerians, always too clever by half, got to
the oil revenue without collateralizing it!
But Ghana is
seeking to collateralize its oil, an approach that is a
jump ahead of the Nigerian approach.
For the party in power, to “collateralize” will
mean having access to a vast pool of money to mismanage
and to use as leverage to purchase massive political
support for other things, like attaining power forever.
Even recalcitrant politicians in our current
culture of corruption can eventually be bought off.
Elsewhere, this would be called “pork barrel”
funding, as it is in the USA.
For us, it is plain "create and loot."
But after all, who would not want to bring the
bacon home to his constituency?
Or, which parliamentarian would want his or her
constituents to hear that he or she was the one who
blocked a bill that would have brought a bridge and road
construction to town?
Thus, the bill will eventually pass.
And the hemorrhaging of the national wealth
through corruption will continue.
There can be a better way to fund our
infrastructure projects without collateralization of the
oil. Earmarking some percentage of the same oil revenue
as they come in, year to year, to fund our desired and
agreed-upon projects could be a better approach.
We already know the oil revenue to be realized by
the projection presented in the collateral proposal.
Also Bloomberg projects “Ghana … will produce
about 1.3 million barrels this year as oil production
alone will add 11.8 percent to the country’s gross
domestic product”
The 11.9 percent is a good number to start with.
That's close to six billion a year from oil.
Why not a-set-aside of $600 million a year be enough
to start our planned projects?
We built the Bush Highway, a 14-kilometer six-lane
roadway, on a US MCA $100 million grant. With $600
million a year and for twenty years we could probably
link every major city with a first-class roadway by this
approach.
The format for the management of MCA grants can
also be useful here.
Its restrictive rules can be applied, as we shift
from one project lane to the other, with revenues
obtained from the oil sales intact and free from
collateralization debt.
The beauty of the above approach is we will own
the money to be used outright.
Therefore, there will be no interest payments on
loans.
E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher www.ghanadot.com,
December 2, 2010
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