If we did a proper cost-benefit-analysis of the mining industry in
Ghana, taking into account the environmental and social cost, we’d be
getting nothing” - Daniel Owusu-Koranteng, Executive Director of WACAM
(credit: DanWatch and Concord Danmark Report, 2010)
Known to be the proprietor of valuable natural resources in the world,
the African region was expected to be a haven that would soothe the
excruciating pains of tattered penury amongst its people. Contrary is
the situation on the ground. With potentially large oil fields and
abundant mineral reserves, poverty continues to have a firm grip on
majority of the people. In Paul Collier’s “The Bottom Billion”, the
scholar defines the ‘bottom billion’ as the lowest-income segment of the
world’s population, living in countries with seemingly intractable
economic and political problems and long track records of poverty and
stagnation. Nearly a third of these people live in countries where
resource extraction dominates the economy (World Gold Council, 2009).
Against the backdrop of this paradoxical phenomenon, the polemic of the
resource curse has been kept much alive in resource-rich economies
especially in the African region. The issue of intrinsic consideration
has been whether or not the presence of natural resources has been
beneficial or detrimental.
For centuries of gold mining and other mineral extraction in Ghana, it
is widely argued that the prospects of these mineral resources have not
left any easy blueprint for ensuring sustainable development and poverty
alleviation. Though mining constitutes the largest source of foreign
direct investment and that minerals are the leading export earner, the
sector has not helped reduce poverty and other development challenges.
With the influx of multinational mining companies, the situation has
been development that largely benefits these companies to the neglect of
people and the economy at large. Despite boom in demand and prices of
minerals, the woes of people and countries in the African continent
especially Ghana keeps deepening with no end in sight. The deserving
question to pose is that what has been the devil in the details of
operations of mining that has brought this untold hardship to people?
In a report by DanWatch and Concord Danmark titled “Golden Profits on
Ghana’s Expense – An example of incoherence in EU policy” in May 2010,
“substantial growth has eluded the African continent by reasons of
loopholes in the EU’s tax legislation, limited regulation of tax havens
and lack of transparency in accounting standards for multinational
companies. These have allowed massive illicit financial flows from
Africa to tax havens in Europe and across the rest of the globe”. In
that same report, it is stated that new research shows that over the
period 1970-2008, Africa lost US$854 billion in cumulative capital
flight just enough to wipe out the region’s total outstanding debt and
leave US$600 for poverty alleviation and economic growth. From 2000 to
2008 the illicit outflows from Africa accelerated by 25 percent
coinciding with boom in natural resource prices and international trade.
In furtherance of this dreadful development, as stated in the report,
on a global scale approximately US$1 trillion is now illegally moved out
of developing countries every year, about two thirds of it due to
commercial tax evasion. The capital flight from poor countries amount to
eight times total global development assistance”
In essence, these facts justify why poverty abounds in the African
region especially Ghana even in the presence of potential mineral
resources. These are the blunders associated with mining that has
exacted huge costs on the region. Is there any hope for the future for
economies in Africa? What about Ghana? Mining has brought in its wake
funds passing under the bridge and has steadily plundered the country’s
deserved wealth.
BREAKING THE CURSE
Even in the midst of identified challenges in the mining industry in the
African region, evidence suggests that Botswana has been able to
sustain its economy to the path of growth and stability using diamond.
This indicates that after all, when prudent strategies are fashioned
out, the sector can see a broad day light.
The missing ingredient behind the doom of resource-rich countries is
financial transparency. Transparency is perhaps the most innovative and
most talked-about aspect of the global fight against the resource curse.
Let us narrow the arguments to Ghana. Being the second largest producer
of gold in Africa, it goes without saying that Ghana is a victim of
dishonest capital flight and untaxed or under-taxed revenues. In her bid
to fight the impacts of the resource curse, the country accepted to be a
candidate of the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI),
an independent and voluntary standard for creating transparency, in
September 2007. However, the mining sector has experienced long periods
of gruesome secrecy.
There has been a milestone step towards financial transparency that
would serve to benefit the African region and Ghana to be specific. The
U.S. Congress has passed the financial transparency law as part of the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act which includes
a provision that requires oil, gas and mining companies registered with
the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to disclose how much
they pay to foreign countries and the U.S. government for oil, gas, and
minerals. The provision was based on the Energy Security through
Transparency Act (S. 1700), which was championed in the U.S. Senate by a
bipartisan group of legislators led by Senators Benjamin Cardin (D-MD)
and Richard Lugar (R-IN), with Patrick Leahy (D-VT) introducing the
provision as an amendment during the conference negotiations for the
bill (PWYP-United States).
Now, President Obama has signed the bill into law on July 21, 2010 at
the massive Ronald Reagan Building. The US President on that Wednesday
said “Today, thanks to a lot of people in this room, those reforms will
become the law of the land." This signals the
turning point for the sweeping overhaul of financial regulations in the
extractive industries around the globe.
This has been described as unprecedented considering the nagging
challenges the fight for transparency and openness have experienced. As
part of the legislation, all oil, gas and mining companies registered
with U.S. stock exchanges will be covered. According to Publish What You
Pay-United States, the measure covers 90 percent of the world’s largest
internationally operating oil and gas companies, and eight of the
world’s ten largest mining companies. It will, as a result, provide
citizens in nearly every country around the globe with much needed
information. In Ghana, many mining, oil and gas companies that operate
within the borders of the country are registered with SEC. For example,
Newmont Mining, Anglo-Gold Ashanti, Gold Fields Ghana, Goldenstar
Resources (and others) are registered with the SEC.
There is therefore every reason to believe that the revenue distribution
in the mining sector to sub-national governments will witness an
enormous change with regard to the right amount these companies pay and
the amount government receives. The local people would now be equipped
with a unique tool to hold their leaders to account. It still remains a
fact that mining in Ghana has rarely had a glorious history. Obuasi,
Tarkwa and other typical mining towns with their huge contribution to
mineral wealth have nothing special to boast of. Infrastructure
development and livelihoods are in tatters and environmental damages
have been rendered normal.
THE MOMENT IS NOW!
This is an opportune moment for the country to track all revenues in the
sector to ensure that basic services like healthcare, education, job
creation do not continue to be a mirage. The legislation requires that
companies that engage in the commercial development of oil, natural gas
or minerals, will have to include in their annual reports filed with the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) the type and total amount
of payments made for each project; and, the type and total amount of
payments made to each government for the purpose of commercial
development of oil, natural gas or minerals.
It is responsible that multinational and local mining companies
operating in the country adjust their structures to best suit the
implementation of this reform. Financial transparency would provide the
right tool to check underpayments in extractive industry revenues, tax
evasions and illicit financial flows from the country. These are
precisely the issues behind the country’s underdevelopment hinged on the
mining sector. In the light of these strategies, the institutions in
charge of tracking revenue flows should be adequately capacitated to
carry out better revenue reporting without any form of inducement or
favour.
According to the report by DanWatch and Concord Danmark, Ghana
is amongst the ten low-income countries in the world that lose most of
their entitled taxation as a consequence of price fixing. Since 2007
Ghana has thus lost approximately 36 million euros. These are hefty
amounts that could solve the country’s financial incapacities to
infrastructure development.
CONCLUSION
It is about time the country restored the lost glory of the mining
sector. Revenues that accrue from the mining sector should be channeled
to providing basic services to the poor. It now behooves the civil
society groups and organizations to shed light on revenues and overall
operations of mining companies and government to set the stage for
accountability and prudent management of the people’s money. The
comprehensive publication of revenue flows will ensure a level playing
field that would extirpate unwarranted contentions and suspicions.
Certainly, Ghana ought to use the benefits of the sweeping US Congress
financial transparency reforms to reverse the unmerited mining blunder.
The transparency legislation will clearly provide momentum for
sorely-needed changes in the mining sector and even the emerging oil and
gas sector. Ghana can make it if we change the order of things now!
BIBLIOGRAPHY
World Gold Council (2009), The Golden Building Block: gold mining and the transformation of developing economies. With an economic life-cycle assessment of Tanzanian gold production, September, 2009
DanWatch and Concord Danmark (2010), “Golden Profits on Ghana’s Expense – An example of incoherence in EU policy” May 2010
Publish What You Pay, PWYP Press Push for U.S. Transparency Legislation – Some Points for PWYP Coalition Press Releases, July 13, 2010 United States