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WSWS : News
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& South Pacific : Papua
New Guinea
Papua New Guinea slashes budget to provide corporate tax breaks
By Will Marshall
3 December 2002
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After intensive discussions with Australia, the World Bank
and the IMF, the Papua New Guinea government handed down a budget
last week that granted huge tax exemptions to investors in mining
projects, while imposing drastic spending cuts on the public service
and education.
For the petroleum sector, the budget is a bonanza, slashing
the present sector-specific corporate tax rate of 45 percent by
a third to 30 percent. It also offers a string of other financial
benefits to all mining companiesincluding the abolition
of additional taxes after a project achieves a set rate of return,
as well as additional deductions for exploration and depreciation.
The changes are aimed in particular at securing the construction
of a $6 billion pipeline from gas fields in the PNG highlands
to the northern Australian state of Queensland. Prime Minister
Michael Somare is currently in Australia to push the project,
which his government regards as crucial to salvaging the floundering
PNG economy. Additional financial incentives include a reduction
in stamp duty and the removal of customs duty on most materials
used in the pipelines construction.
Somare is addressing a PNG investment conference in Sydney
this week in a desperate bid to attract further mining investment.
In 2000, mining and petroleum accounted for 77 percent of exports
and about 21 percent of the countrys GDP. But over the past
five years, exploration has virtually come to an end. Within 10
years, without the opening up of new projects, only the Lihir
gold mine will still be functioning.
To fund the huge concessions to mining corporations, the PNG
budget makes deep inroads into social spending, puts further privatisations
on the agenda and raises the general corporate tax rate from 25
percent to 30 percent.
Public sector wages and recruitment will be frozen for 2003.
An expenditure review has been established to save a further K84
million [$US24 million] by cutting government departments and
agencies. The government will scrap its free education policy
and cut education funding from K135 million to just K60 million.
As a result, many more parents will be unable to afford to send
their children to school.
Somare has restarted the extensive program of privatisation,
begun by the previous government headed by Mekere Morauta. According
to the budget papers, the government plans to raise K200 million
by selling Telecom and the Harbours Board in 2003.
These measures come on top of a supplementary 2002 budget,
handed down in August by Treasurer Bart Philemon, which contained
cutbacks totalling K376.5 million or the equivalent of 10 percent
of the budget.
Somare won national elections in July by exploiting widespread
hostility to the economic restructuring policies of Morauta. He
commented in August that privatisation had destroyed the
PDM [Morautas party] but the new government has since
come under strong international pressure to proceed.
The budgets basic framework was set out for the Somare
government at an Australia-Papua New Guinea Ministerial Forum
held on 14 November, attended by six Australian ministers headed
by Foreign Minister Alexander Downer, as well as representatives
from the IMF and World Bank.
Faced with a major financial crisis, Somare requested a new
loan of $20 million from Australia and an extension for a $100
million repayment due next year. Downer bluntly turned down the
requests and insisted that the PNG government implement the Structural
Adjustment Program developed by Morauta at the behest of the IMF.
We will need to see some runs on the board before we make
any further commitments, he contemptuously declared.
The economy is already mired in recessionthe GDP contracted
by 3.5 percent in 2001 and is expected to decline by a further
2.5 percent in 2002. The IMF has recently described the public
debt, which exceeds 70 percent of GDP, as unsustainable. More
than a quarter of the budget is allocated to paying loans. Since
Somare came to office in August, the PNG currency, the kina, has
lost a third of its value and has reached all time lows against
the US dollar. Last month, Standard & Poors downgraded the
countrys credit rating to negative.
As soon as he took office, Somare pledged to continue Morautas
austerity measures. The Australian government, however, which
had strongly backed Morauta, a former merchant banker and head
of the PNGs reserve bank, viewed Somare with a degree of
scepticism. The ministerial meeting in mid-November was to ensure
that Somare proceeded with the Structural Adjustment Program.
The program drawn up by Morauta in 1999 includes the sell-off
of most of the government assets and mass sackings of public servants.
To fully comply with the program, the Somare government will have
to cut the public sector by between a fifth and a third, and carry
out thousands of further retrenchments. Already, however, the
impact on the countrys limited social services has been
severe.
Each of the 20 provinces operates with administrations that
are hopelessly undermanned. Commenting on the rundown of social
services, the Melbourne-based Age pointed out: Infrastructure
has been in a state of decay for much of the 1990s. There are
almost no funds for maintenance. In the Gulf district, 42 per
cent of primary teaching posts are vacant. Eleven high schools
in the Western Highlands Province have closed due to a lack of
funds.
Retrenchments in the public sector have contributed to the
countrys high levels of unemployment, which is estimated
at 80 percent in urban centres. The falling value of the kina
has fuelled sharp rises in prices. In the first two weeks of November
the cost of rice rose by 25 percent Almost one in three people
are undernourished. The poorest 25 percent of the population eat
less than 2,000 calories a day and 62 percent of children are
growing up stunted.
Lack of money for health services will only compound the countrys
emerging HIV/AIDS epidemic, which appears to be following African
patterns. According to a World Health Organisation estimate, 22,000
people are currently infected. A recent survey in Port Moresby
showed a 1 percent infection rate for women giving birth during
the last six months.
Canberras insistence that Somare slash spending to fund
financial incentives for giant international mining and oil corporations
will worsen what is already a severe social disaster in the former
Australian colony.
See Also:
Unstable government formed
in Papua New Guinea
[20 August 2002]
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