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Debt relief’s bet is not on violent revolutions

 

E. Ablorh-Odjidja

June 15, 2005

A reprint from ThisWeekGhana

 

President Kufuor noted, in reaction to the momentous decision by the G8 to rid Ghana and 17 other African countries of their crippling foreign debt for good, that:

 

 "We opted for the HIPC Initiative in 2001 to allow us breathing space to recognize our priorities and this is the reward."

 

Before 2001, the term HIPC was too much of a putdown.  As such, Ghana, a proud country, reacted negatively to the label.

 

The rejection must have been sound emotionally, but not very realistic reasoning.

 

We couldn’t possibly be labeled as “HIPC;” meaning a Heavily Indebted Poor Country. Ghana, a very rich country, had all the necessary natural resources for wealth creation.  But the facts on the ground were different. We have been “broke” and for a long time. 

 

We could travel back through the generations and administrations, at least through all the years of Rawlings, and the prideful count on our natural wealth, but the effort wouldn’t have altered the fact that we were a “broke” and a heavily indebted nation.

 

In the 90s under Rawlings and with the amiable aid of the World Bank that was desperate to describe Ghana as a success story for its own ends, we put up the appearances of being well off while under the heavy burden of debt.

 

Then came the Kufuor administration after 2000, it became glaringly clear to them that we were in dire economic circumstances.  And President Kufuor said so boldly to the world.

 

So, on Saturday, June 11, 2005, the G8 finance ministers, who had now recognized the need, responded.  They declared that their nations would recognize and support the HIPC concept as proposed.

 

The end was debt relief for 17 HIPC countries in Africa and other nations.  In agreement with the G8 ministers were The World Bank, the IMF, and the African Development Bank.

 

The agreement would also extend to 20 other countries put on the list, provided these countries met targets for "good governance and corruption-fighting,” the G8 said.

 

It will help to note that the HIPC debt forgiveness came close on the heels of the June 4th celebrations in Ghana; a day for the remembrance of a coup by Flt. Lt. J. J. Rawling, that had shed unnecessarily a lot of blood in the name of eradicating corruption and poverty, but failed spectacularly in doing so.

 

Juxtaposing Rawling’s June 4th fiasco against what was achieved without a single bullet being fired, or a drop of blood being shed under this HIPC debt forgiveness program should undergird the growth of the depth of our political maturity under Kufuor.

 

On the PBS Jim Lehrer’s News Hour television show in the US to emphasize the significance of the debt forgiveness program was his guest, Dr. George Ayittey of Free Africa Foundation.  

 

Ayittey said the package was “a step in the right direction.  Everybody knows that Africa is in a very deep crisis. …. “

 

And continued, that “It doesn't address Africa's long-term fundamental needs and how to put Africa on the right track to development. What Africa needs to do is to grow out of debt. What this does is simply stabilize the situation.”

 

Indeed, HIPC, as understood, would only stabilize the situation,  But it also offered the opportunity and the platform on which to grow our economy.

 

The Economist, describing the opportunities said “In total, the agreement could be worth more than $55 billion” to African countries.

 

Of this amount, some $4.1 billion will accrue to Ghana’s coffers.  While Kufuor saw HIPC as the platform and the opportunity to grow Ghana, others had seen only derision in the name.

 

It should be apparent now that there is not much left in the name to deride, but more for a cause for celebration – and laughter – all the way to the bank.

 

But caution. Some may not find pleasure in debt forgiveness because misery dies hard.

 

They may even be disappointed that it has happened at all; that it didn’t happen on their party’s watch.  Or that the excuse to grouse against the sitting administration, for hardships and perceived mismanagement, has been taken away. 

 

Indeed, the reality with HIPC is that it is a windfall. But our treasury is back to health. 

 

And also, it is time to caution those who would use the opportunity to abuse the treasury from now on, or give reasons for the cries of mismanagement and the “Wadala” marches to return.

 

Ghana has a fairly decent government now and that was the first reason that brought the debt forgiveness.  But there a recognition that is left for Ghana alone to acknowledge; that a heavy debt burden has been lifted from the nation’s shoulders.

 

The injustice of a heavy debt is something that has been with us for a long time. 

 

General Kutu Akyeampong was one of the first to recognize it in the 70s.  “Yen tua,” meaning our nation must “refuse to pay,” he had cried out in the vernacular.

 

The good General had come to power by a coup.  His approach was the simple "bravado" politics of a soldier.  But underlying this soldier’s response was also that of an anguished nation.

 

Then in the 90s, George Ayittey provided the missing intellectual explanation that Akyeampong’s argument against the debt lacked.  He described it as “Odious Debt” to cover what was also owed by the Third World nations.  

 

Ayittey's explanation was based on intellectual and ethical reasoning.  But his effort had limitations, since the professor was not in a position to cancel debts, or lacked the sovereign authority and the political power that could appeal to a body like the G8.

 

So, over the years the “odious debt” theory became an overhang into Rawlings and the Kufuor administrations.

 

Kufuor, rather than simply saying “Yen tua,” took a chance on a confluence of events, the guilt that the notion of "odious debt" brought and the competence that his administration displayed in handling matters relating to the HIPC issues.

 

And with astute personal diplomacy, Kufuor was able to elicit from the G8 the compassionate feelings that then could accept the benefits and the promises of debt forgiveness under the HIPC arrangement.

 

For Ghana, the arrangement resulted in 100% debt forgiveness, the biggest in its history and a proud legacy for Kufuor.

 

Underlining all this achievement was one remarkable achievement.  Kufuor’s election victory in 2000, marking it the country's first real democratic transfer of power in decades.  A political achievement of a courageous leader who could then go on to opt for the HIPC initiative as he had described it.

 

This year, Kufuor was at the White House in Washington with Presidents Pohamba of Namibia, Guebuza of Mozambique, Mogae of Botswana, and Tandja of Niger as witnesses to the largesse embodied in the HIPC.

 

"We believe by removing a crippling debt burden, we'll help millions of Africans improve their lives and grow their economies," said President Bush, the host.

 

“These leaders have made (a strong statement with their administrations) about democracy and the importance of democracy on the continent of Africa,” Bush continued.

 

Unspoken by President Bush was the fact that the US was already the biggest economic aid giver to Africa in the world.

 

At the White House reception were many African citizens. Among them were proud Ghanaians who were filled with joy to hear their president mentioned as a fighter for democracy in Africa.

 

Of course, one may argue that Ghana is not a stronghold of democracy yet, but one cannot deny that it is certainly on its way to becoming one.

 

E. Ablorh-Odjidja, Publisher,

 www.ghanadot.com, Washington, DC, June 15, 2005.

Permission to publish: Please feel free to publish or reproduce, with credits, unedited. If posted at a website, email a copy of the web page to publisher@ghanadot.com. Or don't publish at all.

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