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New Guinea
Papua New Guinea liquidity crisis sees new calls for Australian
intervention
By Will Marshall
16 June 2003
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The Papua New Guinea economy is headed for its fourth consecutive
year of contraction, producing a full-blown liquidity crisis for
the government of Prime Minister Sir Michael Somare. Treasury
and Finance Minister Bart Philemon last month told the Business
Council of PNG that the economy was still shrinking despite his
previous forecast of two percent growth.
Facing a shortfall of K340 million ($US95 million) in the 2003
budget, the government has borrowed domestically at commercial
rates just to pay the wages bill for doctors and teachers. The
withholding of an Asian Development Bank (ADB) loan and lack of
anticipated revenue from privatisation have intensified the governments
problems.
Starved of government funds, hospitals and other service providers
have been forced to scale down operations. According to the PNG
newspaper Post Courier, at the end of May the Angau Hospital
had no money for food while nationally 5,000 teachers, as well
as all first-year doctors, had not been paid.
More generally, social infrastructure is rapidly deteriorating.
The availability of rural health services has declined over the
past decade. Primary education enrolment rates are well below
the regional average with nearly 75 percent of young children
leaving school between grades Eight and Twelve. Almost two-thirds
of children in the poorest 25 percent of households are under-nourished.
The governments domestic borrowing has intensified the
already rampant inflation. The cost of living rose by 6.9 percent
in the three months to the end of March, sending the annual rate
to 20.7 percent. Food, drinks and tobacco are the worst affected
and have the greatest impact on households. Food costs rose by
23.7 percent in the 12 months to March.
These results will only worsen because PNGs major revenue
earners, mining and petroleum, are in decline. Last year saw the
poorest export results for a decade, almost K200 million less
than 2001.
International financial pressure on the government is mounting.
The ADB withheld the K140 million loan, accusing the government
of replacing National Fisheries Authority head Dr Anthony Lewis,
an expatriate Australian, with retrenched officer Molean Chappau
as a political rather than merit-based appointment. The ADB and
World Bank are intent on undermining PNGs old political
ties and patronage and imposing economic restructuring.
A senior government official quoted in the National
on June 5 highlighted the sharpness of the fiscal crisis. The
government has yet to come up with a contingency plan to save
itself from inevitable collapse. Right now, we are struggling
to get funds for basic things. There is no money to meet costs
of recurrent expenditure. The public servants are not working,
they are not performing because they have no resources to do their
job.
A number of businessmen have publicly aired their dissatisfaction
with the Somare government. PNG Chamber of Commerce and Industry
president Michael Mayberry drew a pointed comparison with neighbouring
Solomon Islands, where the economic and political structure has
all but collapsed. Businesses are really struggling. Tragically
were heading the same way as the Solomon Islands.
On May 6, an Australian Financial Review article observed
that some interest rates had reached 33 percent and that the PNG
business community, after giving the new government eight
months grace was now raising a despairing voice about
the countrys future.
Calls for Australian intervention
The economic decline in PNG has been the subject of a number
of Australian reports demanding a more aggressive approach from
Canberra toward its former colony. In March the conservative Centre
for Independent Studies (CIS) released the Papua New Guinea
on the Brink report, advocating a more activist approach.
If necessary, the Australian government should ignore charges
of neocolonialism and intervene militarily to prevent the
country descending into terminal decline. This call
caused a furore in PNG. One of the co-authors, Mike Manning, a
major business figure in PNG, was hauled before a Parliamentary
Privileges committee to face possible charges of contempt of parliament.
A month later, CIS Senior Fellow Professor Helen Hughes, previously
a World Bank director of economic analysis, released another document,
entitled Aid has Failed the Pacific. She argued that Australia
should suspend all aid to PNG in order to force the government
to impose harsher austerity measures. Removing aid flows
from budgets is essential if Pacific governments are to reform
their economies and hence balance their budgets, she insisted.
In PNG, where the health system relies on external funding,
this policy would rapidly lead to the deaths of thousands of people.
Hughes declared that such a policy change would be unlikely, saying,
radical policy changes will be difficult.
Her next best option was for funds only to be disbursed
on the evidence of met targets and audited expenditures
and under the principle of mutual obligation. In other
words, aid would be forthcoming only if PNG pursued even more
energetically policies such as privatisation, cuts in government
expenditure and the opening up of the economy to investment.
Another report, Our Failing Neighbour, released on June
10 by the Australian governments Strategic Policy Institute
called for a multinational force of about 150 police, led by Australia,
to restore law-and-order in the Solomons. The report underscored
the extent to which the Australian government has dispensed with
formal adherence to national sovereignty. As the Australian
pointed out, the new policy sends an unmistakable message
to the rest of the South Pacific: Australia is prepared to intervene
if necessary.
The Murdoch-owned Australian of 29 May put the case
for intervention most bluntly: Papua New Guinea, and even
more so the Solomon Islands, have huge numbers of utterly alienated
young men with poor education, no prospects, a violent society
and access to guns in large numbers. If we have to help these
societies it will almost certainly involve the army.
Political instability
Only eight months old, Somares shaky 13-party coalition
government faces an intractable dilemma. It has vastly inadequate
resources to deal with the massive social problems, including
a predicted AIDS epidemic. At the same time, Australia holds the
purse strings of desperately needed funds and is demanding the
continued imposition of an IMF-backed Structural Adjustment program.
These policies are creating the social nightmare that underpins
PNGs chronic instability.
The economic pressure has already exacerbated divisions within
the ruling coalition. According to the Post Courier, Somares
party the National Alliance has for some time
operated as three splinter groups. During May, a rift
opened up within the National Alliance between Somare and Philemon.
During one parliamentary session, Philemon took an open swipe
at Somare when he was asked to explain the failure to raise the
budgeted K200 million from the sale of government enterprises.
I really dont know what the government position is,
he declared, knowing that Somare has equivocated on the selling
of government assets and holds the privatisation portfolio.
Several articles in the PNG media predicted that Somare was
about to reshuffle his cabinet, sacking Philemon. According to
the Post Courier, it was a pre-emptive move against a potential
leadership challenge.
The National Alliances failure to win any of the six
seats up for grabs in the recently completed Southern Highlands
election campaign added to the rifts. Not only was the result
a slap in the face for Somare who campaigned personally in the
final weeks of canvassing, it added to the instability by changing
the balance of forces within the coalition. The Peoples Labour
Party, Peoples Action Party and Peoples Progress Party each won
a seat, making it likely they will expect more say in the allocation
of major cabinet positions.
In a surprise move at the end of May, Somare announced that
Philemon was not in line to be sacked and would eventually succeed
him as National Alliance leader. This was warmly welcomed in the
business community where Philemon is seen as pro-business, having
served as treasurer in the previous right-wing Morauta government.
Rumblings are continuing within the government. In March, its
parliamentary backbenchers threatened to withhold support for
the government on major legislation because they had not received
their Development Funds of K500,000 each. MPs control of
these slush funds is regarded as crucial to securing re-election.
While the government is legally obliged to pay the grants, it
claims that there is simply not enough money in the coffers.
With the international financial pressure thus destabilising
Somares coalition, the conditions are being created for
an economic and political breakdown that could serve as the trigger
for direct Australian intervention.
See Also:
Papua New Guinea reacts angrily
to call for direct Australian intervention
[6 May 2003]
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