Veronica
Maele
Since last week’s stinging observation by United Nations (UN) Special
Raportuer on the Right to Food Olivier De Schutter regarding Malawi’s
Kayelekera Uranium Mine deal, two elusive culprits remain pretty much intact in
their hard shells. It is as if the country’s most guarded contract between government
and Australian company, Paladin Africa Ltd has not been unravelled as the worst
possible swindle.
De Schutter’s rebuke of the Kayelekera agreement might have further dismantled
the whole concept of ‘tax incentives’ to foreign
investors in poor countries, but, there is one thing still buried - suspected bribes.
We all know that for decades, the extraction of Africa’s precious resources
has become a hideous lucrative business flourishing on the corruption of
Africa’s political elite by western investors.
Just recently, you just had to look at the stubborn faces and dodgy speak
of government officials when asked about the Kayelekera uranium deal and listen
to the jumpy rhetoric from Paladin officials to appreciate the existence of
black spots in the pact. According to Paladin, ‘the original request for the
Development Agreement to be kept confidential was made by Government.’ The two have evaded transparency and used
secrecy and misinformation - a mentality that might not be subdued by the UN
Raportuer’s damaging criticism.
Despite growing public dissatisfaction purporting to the full-terms and
conditions of the Kayelekera mining contract, Paladin angrily reiterated that
Kayelekera is a done deal at the beginning of this year. It cannot be
renegotiated until the expiry of the 10 year period of the current contract. Of course, to poor Malawians the only thing that
explains such savage attitude of greed and exploitation is the parasitic
motivation enshrined in ‘bad capitalism’ that it doesn’t matter whether one is
milking the thinnest hungry cow.
The company’s General Manager (International Affairs), Greg Walker, good
at his job has often walked out of the Kayelekera labyrinth waving this or that
piece of information, explaining a jargon and technical processes or putting
across a strong declaration that anyone listening would have thought his
aggrieved audience must be residents of a fire-lit cave of the Dark Ages. In
the past, Walker was quoted in the media as saying:
‘The fact
that Malawians think they got a raw deal doesn't necessarily mean they did get
a raw deal.’
Until De Schutter’s remarks, opposition politicians and civil society
activists who have ceaselessly highlighted Kayelekera as a raw deal were being
mocked as a bunch of noise-makers seeking undue attention and lacking the
intellect to understand the economics of mining. By the way, Kayelekera
has been operating on massive losses due to low world uranium prices!
When in 2011, former Reserve Bank Governor Perks Ligoya lambasted the Kayelekera
deal and outlined that Malawi gave out ‘a lot of concessions and funny
conditions’ to Paladin, the company responded putting up its usual card.
Kayelekera was a ‘high risk investment’ and concessions to the company, which
the Government of Malawi voluntarily granted, reflected the company’s role as a
‘pathfinder.’
Now, Government and Paladin, the two evasive culprits who have long
played hide and seek in front of poverty-stricken Malawians have been thoroughly
undressed and forcefully given bitter tablets of shame to swallow. And who is
the first to partly pull his head out of the sand? The Minister of Mining, John
Bande, of course.
Bande has already jumped to the rescue and in his attempt to wipe government’s
embarrassment revealed last Wednesday that actually, ‘ignorance’ is the major
reason why the country signed bad contracts. He has further underlined that
efforts are underway to tighten laws to curb ‘mineral robbery’ and ensure
proper handling of mining deals.
But Bande seems to deliberately confuse ignorance, lack of mining
expertise, poor negotiation skills with negligence and corruption. Hand on
heart, didn’t kickbacks loosen the bolts and nuts of the Kayelekera contract? Possibly
following De Schutter’s frank talk one ruling party ‘village idiot’ might reveal
how he was flown to Sydney on the sidelines of the Kayelekera deal where his
promised suitcase stashed with US dollars was never given to him. Does government
really care about negotiating a fair win-win deal for its people? Of course,
not.
When confronted by exploitative
western negotiators who talk through their noses government representative find
themselves giving away the bargain more so when they have been palm oiled with foreign-currency
denominated tokens. It does not occur to our leaders that they need to maximise
the return on our resources by signing fair deals because their personal
interests matter most. The Keyelekera scam has shown that lack of national interest
in our leaders is the underlying reason why Malawi remains poor.
Thus, De Schutter’s
is right to condemn Malawi for failing to collect maximum remittances from
Kayelekera because of ‘too favourable’ incentives to Paladin. Why is Government
pampering foreign investors with incentives and intrinsic loopholes which are aiding
tax evasion and illicit financial flows? All of that leading to loss of funds
which could have been allocated to critical national programmes, for instance,
food security in poor households who at the moment are vulnerable due to
rocketing maize prices and looming hunger.
Little wonder, with
the begging bowl out and about, government has failed to allocate K18.3 billion
to the National Food Reserve Agency (NFRA) to purchase the requisite 80, 000
metric tonnes of maize in the 2013/2014 national budget, and instead only assigned
a meagre K1.3 billion. This, against the loss of revenue from special tax incentives to Paladin
estimated at almost K67 billion (US$205 million) since the installation of the
mine.
More obscene is the projected
loss of almost K92 billion (US$281 million) which Malawi will
incur over the company’s 13-year tenure. In
contrast, the country is presently still experiencing drug shortage in hospitals including serious
lack of crucial clinical equipment, medical supplies as well as school blocks,
teaching and learning materials. Over the past six months, government has
accrued K1.3 billion of un-paid salaries for 7 849 newly recruited primary
school teachers.
Of course, after swindling poor countries like Malawi, western companies
bank their profits in global capitals and off-shore tax havens. They buoy their
shares, making a fortune as their listed firms stand perched on the guild of
stock exchanges. Then, western governments concomitantly apportion proceeds
from their financial systems lubricated by revenue from poor countries and
patent ‘aid packages’ back to the so-called poor countries.
Tax incentives which have been part of an unfair economic paradigm
promoted by western fiscal pillars IMF and World Bank, have helped the west
control business and own capital in poor countries. But, with western economies
in turmoil and surviving on cut-throat austerity budgets, aid dependency is no longer
a viable option for Malawi. Tax revenue matters more than ever before.
The Kayelekera fiasco speaks volumes
of domestic negligence and international exploitation. At one point, it was
reported the Malawi Government did not know the quantity of uranium which was
being exported by Paladin. In fact, Paladin bought vital geological information
regarding the Kayelekera Uranium Mine from a USA firm, PRI at a cost of US $10,
0000 (K3, 973, 583. 63). This, after government’s failure to provide the key geological
information for Kayelekera through the Department of Mines, a situation which led
to loss of revenue including inability to further collect 15% withholding tax.
Besides environmental concerns, Paladin has been dodged with reports of salary
disparity between local workers and expatriates. One would speculate that
though employees have resorted to striking before, they have also feared
aggressively demanding better working conditions because if they did, they
would either be fired or if they vehemently protested, find themselves facing a
similar fate like South Africa’s 2012 Marikana
mineworkers shot randomly by police. That is the story of how African
governments continue to neglect the very needs of their people in favour of satisfying
the gluttonous desires of foreign investors.
In this respect, one cannot underestimate the ‘politicking’ surrounding
foreign investment. There is the brainwashing and fear that African leaders
endure in their struggle to appease donors who are sometimes capable of clamping
on aid or trade deals if a poor country like Malawi is ‘hostile’ to western
investors. In the un-coded diplomatic language of foreign investment it means,
treat business clients from the west well and we will handle your aid and loan
cheques accordingly.
Western leaders have continued to hypocritically talk about fair trade
and dealings with Africa whilst winking an eye to their investors. And, tightening
the shackles of neo-colonialism on their behalf has been IMF - convincing poor countries
to lure foreign investor with a portfolio of incentives. Just last year, IMF advised poor Gambia to reform
its tax system so that the country avoids discouraging foreign investors with
many taxes. Resident Representative, Meshack Tunee, noted:
‘Our assessment
through the technical assistance of IMF in The Gambia [has] indicated that the
tax system is a little bit outdated. There are so many taxes that don’t even
yield enough revenue to warrant collecting them’.
In De Schutter’s observation, customs
and excise duty exemptions, value added tax on mining equipment and special
deals on the rate of royalty owed to government have proved to be fiscally
absurd. With growing ridicule over western-imposed economic policies, some poor
countries have started to abandon incentives to foreign investment. It has been
an inevitable shift with the entrance of the aggressive Chinese dragon into
global trade. Equally exploitative but offering a new approach to trade and
investment China might, however, like the west be wantonly reaping off Africa.
On his recent African tour, US
President Barack Obama tried to dampen suspicion that his country is threatened
by China’s growing trade and investments on the continent and instead advised
that Africa should strive to get a fair deal, of course, as if his government
would have said the same 20 years ago.
Interestingly, with increasing
mobility of investors and fading barriers to global capital flows rich
countries are assertively reforming their tax infrastructure to ensure maximum
collection of revenue from foreign companies. Speaking on 15th
June this year at the pre G8-Summit, British Prime Minister David Cameron openly
advocated for ‘proper companies, proper taxes and proper global rules’ that
guarantee transparency so that both rich and poor countries equally benefit.
In
his 'Open for
Growth - Trade, Tax and Transparency' speech attended
by some African leaders, Cameron emphasised
that the issue of tax matters because when companies don’t pay
their taxes we all suffer as a result. But lacking similar seriousness are poor African
countries like Malawi.