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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific : Papua
New Guinea
Papua New Guinea budget targets public sector workers
By Frank Gaglioti
11 January 2000
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The Papua New Guinea (PNG) budget brought down last month is
setting the stage for confrontations with public sector workers
as the government prepares to implement its sweeping plans for
privatisation and job shedding.
Already administrators are preparing the ground for layoffs
with a vitriolic campaign against government employees. On January
3, Central Province deputy governor, Anthony Ikupu, declared that
some public servants were "parasites" who were "sucking
juice out of the government system and must be weeded
out at all costs".
PNG Prime Minister Mekere described the budget brought down
on December 7 as "perhaps the most austere that has ever
(been) brought down in Papua New Guinea. It adds to the
spending cuts imposed in the mini-budget introduced last August
soon after Mekere ousted previous prime minister Bill Skate.
Central to the budget is the privatisation of all significant
government enterprises within three years. The proceeds from the
sale will be used to repay the government's debt, which stands
at $US836 million. The Australian National University is currently
preparing a white paper, due for release in March, which will
used as a blueprint for the PNG privatisation.
The most profitable companies, including Telikom, the country's
telecommunication carrier, Post PNG, Air Niugini and the PNG Banking
Corporation, have been earmarked for an early selloff. Others
include the PNG Harbours Board, the Civil Aviation Authority,
public health services, superannuation funds, the Rural Development
Bank, and prisons and correctional services.
The privatisations will undoubtedly result in major cuts to
jobs and conditions as the government prepares the public corporations
and services for sale. In an early indication of what is in store,
Air Niugini summarily sacked its entire engineering workforce
last July for taking industrial action for higher wages. Around
60,000 workers out of the country's total workforce of 220,000
are currently employed in the public sector.
The PNG Trade Union Congress (PNGTUC), which has advised the
government in drawing up privatisation plans and took no action
to oppose the August budget cuts, is growing increasingly concerned
over the reaction of its members.
Union officials lobbied parliamentarians during the budget
session, urging them to reject the 2000 budget. They have also
circulated a petition calling for a review, the removal of employment
contracts and the reinstatement of the Air Niugini aircraft engineers.
The union has attacked top executives calling for a reduction
in their salaries and privileges. Strikes have been threatened
at the country's ports.
Underlying the fears of union bureaucrats is a growing anger
among the working class and rural poor at the decline of their
living standards. The kina, PNG's currency, has not recovered
from the drastic depreciation it suffered during the Asian economic
crisis. Export industries, primarily owned by major transnationals,
have benefited from the currency depreciation due to increased
international competitiveness, but within PNG there is runaway
inflation. Kerosene, used for cooking and heating, increased in
price by another 41 percent to $US0.87 a litre in early November,
and phone services jumped in price by over 20 percent on January
5.
The Bank of PNG governor, Wilson Kamit, stated on December
29 that the economic conditions had "forced most companies
to reduce the size of their labour force, cut down on operational
expenditures and delay new investments".
Despite the rising cost of living and the growth of unemployment,
the minimum wage has remained at 45 Kina ($US17) per fortnight
since 1992. Such is the decline in real wages that urban workers
are forced to sustain their families by maintaining vegetable
gardens.
Other aspects of the 2000 budget also directly impact upon
the living standards. Despite an inflation rate of 18.2 percent
throughout the second half of 1999, most government departments
have not had their budgets increased. Significantly two of the
areas to have increased allocations are the Police Department
and the Department of Corrective Institutional Services which
had its budget for running the prison system boosted by 77 percent
to $US8.75 million.
Changes to the tax system further shift the tax burden off
corporations and onto the working class. The introduction of Value
Added Tax in July 1999 enabled the government to remove tariffs
and import duties. Now the interest withholding tax on petroleum
companies has been abolished altogether. The government is desperate
to attract further investment in mineral exploration, which plummeted
to $US14 million in 1998 compared to US$83 million in 1988. Investment
in petroleum products exploration has declined from $US150 million
in 1988 to just $US40 million last year.
Mekere presented his budget plans for approval at a Consultative
Group Meeting held in Port Moresby in early November, which was
attended by the IMF, the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank
and the "Friends of PNG" group that includes Australia
and New Zealand. Their agreement was necessary to receive the
necessary supplementary loans to balance the budget$US200
million from the World Bank and the IMF, plus a further $US200
million from international donor countries, including Australia,
which contributed $US80 million. Over 22 percent of the total
budget, some $US299 million, has been allocated to servicing the
national debt.
The funds from the various international agencies and the Friends
of PNG group were only released on the basis of a Structural
Reform Program (SRP), which sets out a far-reaching restructuring
program for the PNG government. A National Planning Committee
has been established to ensure that the government bureaucracy
meets the provisions of the SRP program.
Further government borrowing from the central bank will be
severely restricted. The public service will be restructured to
enable the streamlining of government functions. Many current
government services will be contracted out, leading to a further
reduction in public sector jobs. New recruitment into the public
service has already been suspended.
An indication of the growing chasm between the country's politicians
and the majority of the population is that the 2000 budget was
carried with virtually no opposition. Former prime minister and
now opposition leader Bill Skate dubbed the budget as being for
the "elite and the business community" and presented
a critique of the budget papers. But he and his party abstained
from the vote and the budget was carried by an overwhelming majority
of 55 votes. Since the budget was passed Skate and Mekere have
sought to form a political alliance. Skate has offered to work
with the government "without any conditions attached,"
effectively eliminating any parliamentary opposition in PNG.
See Also:
As Papua New Guinea
government prepares to privatise
Air Niugini sacks engineers
[27 August 1999]
New PNG government
implements IMF's economic restructuring demands
[19 August 1999]
Bankers' man installed
as PNG Prime Minister
[17 July 1999]
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