Growth
and diversification
in mineral economies
Regional workshop for mineral economies in Africa
Background |
Programme |
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Summary | Participants
Summary
of workshops discussion
(version
française)
The following summary of comments
and proposals by participants has been prepared by the UNCTAD secretariat
on the basis of notes taken during the discussions. Where possible,
ideas that received wide support from participants have been identified.
The summary is intended to assist UNCTAD and participants during
the follow-up to the workshop, particularly in identifying areas
for future work and cooperation.
Theme 1: Attracting and retaining investment in the
mining sector
Legal
and institutional framework
1.
There is a need for African governments to establish simple and
transparent legal and regulatory frameworks that clearly define
the respective roles of the Government and the private sector. Elements
of such frameworks include:
·
The
establishment of counterpart agencies (“single window”) to deal
with mining investors;
·
Enacting
investment codes that take into account the specific characteristics
of the mining sector, such as long lead times, the particular configuration
of risks and the need for security of tenure;
·
The
development of active regional co-operation with a view to harmonizing
policies and capitalizing on synergies.
Mining
taxation
2. It is important
to pursue mining taxation policies that serve to attract and retain
investment. To this end, African countries need to:
·
Design
simple and unique mining sector fiscal regimes, which should be
both stable and predictable over time;
·
Insure
that investing companies are able to recover survey/exploration
funds during the mining phase;
·
Ensure
that governments receive at least some revenue over the entire life
of mining projects, for instance, through royalties, while also
ensuring that the distribution of tax payments over time meets the
requirements of investors;
·
Establish
means for systematic auditing of mining companies accounts to insure
accuracy of information provided for taxation purposes;
·
Make
sure that fiscal incentives provided to mining investors also take
into account the requirement for a balanced central government budget.
Investment
promotion and information
3.
It was widely recognized that access to geological information is
a cornerstone of any mining investment promotion campaign.
There is an urgent need to repatriate geological data retained
outside Africa by the administrations of former colonial powers,
research institutions or mining companies which have surveyed all
or parts of the territories of African countries in the past.
In this regard, African governments should call upon the
good will of industrial nations to facilitate the transfer and appropriation
of data from airborne surveys and other remote sensing geological
data as part of any development assistance package to Least Developed
Countries. Practical measures to promote investment should include:
- The
dissemination of country mineral inventories and information about
mining legal frameworks through active participation in international
investment fora and trade shows;
- Attracting
interest from multilateral donors by demonstrating geological
potential and submitting concrete project proposals;
- Promoting
a positive image of African countries’ business environments;
- Taking
advantage of financing instruments offered by international financial
markets;
- The
Third LDCs Conference 2001 should provide for adequate financial
and technical assistance to allow the LDCs to strengthen their
national geological survey organizations and networking among
them, and provide them with the means to make the results of airborne
surveys and other remote sensing geological data accessible to
all potential investors.
Theme 2: Mining as an engine of growth and the management
of mineral revenue
Macroeconomic considerations,
governance, trade and industrial policy
4.
It was noted that macroeconomic management poses particular problems
in mineral dependent countries, but that some countries, including
Botswana, Chile and Papua New Guinea, had managed these problems
successfully. The following courses of action were discussed and
recognized as useful:
·
Mineral
resources should be used to promote growth and development for the
whole economy;
·
The establishment
of a dialogue between the government, the parliament and civil society
on the management and investment of revenues;
- Legal
and institutional mechanisms to prevent corruption should be established;
·
Countries
should conduct active monetary policies to avoid the effects of
a rapidly appreciating exchanged rate on non-mining sectors;
·
Countries
could negotiate with the donor community the conversion of debt
into an Economic Diversification Fund;
·
Funds
could be established whereby mineral revenues would be invested
on international financial markets in boom periods to generate income
to be used in bust periods;
·
A portion
of mineral revenues could be used to develop the private sector
through a credit scheme to small and medium sized industries;
·
Capital
should be allocated efficiently through the market to the projects
showing the highest expected return;
·
In order
to overcome barriers to vertical diversification, African countries
should use the WTO forum to negotiate effective policing of anti-dumping
measures which developed countries tend to use to discourage imports
of value added products and to deter the use of non-tariff measures
(the case of Gabon’s wood exports which will have to be certified
as to the type of forests exploited was mentioned as an example);
·
Advantage
should be taken of existing financing mechanisms such as the one
offered by the Common Fund for Commodities (CFC), to obtain funding
for example for R&D projects aimed at improvement of productivity
and quality;
·
Labour-intensive
mining activities should be encouraged;
·
Cost-reduction
measures such as energy saving technologies in furnace processes
should be explored;
·
Countries
should exploit the advantage provided by their low cost energy to
develop competitive products;
·
Innovative
technologies adapted to small-scale miners such as gold extraction
without mercury should be disseminated and widely utilized.
Mineral
revenues management and decentralization
5.
The distribution of regulatory authority and of mineral revenues
between different levels of government and between regions is an
important problem for mineral economies. There was broad agreement
that the following ideas were worth pursuing:
- Negotiate
with mining companies royalties to be paid to local communities
as a contribution to their development and mitigation of any damage
to their environment;
- Follow
the national budget unity principle to insure equitable allocation
of resources among regions according to their respective development
priorities;
- Try
to achieve a balance as regards both spatial revenue distribution
among regions and temporal distribution between generations through
investment and savings;
- Recognize
the importance of the role of the national government in insuring
the provision of basic socio-economic infrastructure while agreed
revenue quotas at different levels of decentralized government
should help local communities to mitigate negative effects of
mining activities on their livelihoods.
Theme 3: Diversification and development in local regions
dependent on mining
Role
of the Government in regional diversification
6.
With regards to the role of the national Government, participants
underlined its two components, regulation and development. The Government
should take the leadership role in long term planning, including
setting general policy directions, and provide for the legal framework.
It should also provide basic infrastructure, including roads,
geological mapping, and telecommunications facilities. The experiences
of several countries with respect to government initiatives to promote
regional diversification were discussed:
·
In
Mali, indicative agreements are signed with mining companies at
the outset, encouraging sub-contracting with local suppliers to
increase linkages and develop skills;
·
In
Tanzania, a five-year tax exemption on imported goods is given to
mining companies; such a scheme should, however, be devised so as
not to crowd out domestically produced goods;
·
In
Congo Democratic Republic, state ownership by GECAMINES gave way
to joint-ventures with overseas companies through divestiture thereby
increasing management efficiency and linkages to the local economy;
·
In
South Africa, the construction of a railroad from the north helped
turn that region into the world's largest manganese producing region;
·
At
the international level, regional co-operation can be a good catalyst
for the development of cross-border deposits; the construction of
the Maputo corridor is an illustrative case.
7.
Different types of actions that could be taken to promote diversification
included:
·
In cases
of mine closures or downsizing, a social plan should be established
to retrain mine workers; this type of training should include developing professional and entrepreneurial skills among mine workers
to facilitate their eventual movement into other sectors;
·
Vertical
integration by downstream processing should be promoted so as to
increase the value added retained in the country. The success of
Morocco in this area was the result of sustained investment in engineering
education which facilitated gradual mastering of the technologies
required for processing phosphates into phosphoric acid;
·
Para-mining
or non-mining activities should be developed to broaden opportunities
for mining dependent regions; one example from Morocco was noted,
where a 70 year-old coal mine’s washeries are to be re-exploited
through sub-contracting to former mine workers upon the mine’s closure
in 2002;
·
Support
should be given to the development of cluster activities requiring
skills similar to the ones developed in the mining sector;
·
Mineral
revenues should be used to support the creation of small and medium
sized enterprises both in mining and in other sectors of the economy.
Regional
development stakeholders: Government, Companies, NGOs and local
communities
8.
Programmes based on a multi-stakeholder approach provide a good
framework for coping with problems stemming from downsizing, mine
closures, unemployment and poor public health in mining regions
and in surrounding areas that supply labour to the mines. Such programmes
should aim at fostering cooperation between the government, mining
companies, NGOs and local communities in the design and implementation
of an agreed socio-economic development plan aiming at transformation
of the regions concerned from mineral-dependent local economies
to communities with broad-based sustainable economic development.
NGOs have a crucial role to play in this process, since they provide
an interface between the public sector, the private sector and communities.
In this context, the following South African experiences were particularly
noted:
·
The
development of small scale economic activities such as food production
clusters (vegetables and fruits growing/processing, lobsters farming
for export) by NGOs working together with local communities;
·
Government
provision of funding for an anchor project in a mining dependent
region around which local initiatives can flourish;
·
Partnerships
with communities managed by stakeholders' steering committees;
·
Facilitation
of community participation through cooperation between small scale
miners and large mining companies in the area of training, financing
and sub-contracting;
·
The
existence of a monitoring and evaluation system for diversification
related activities, used by the Government and the mining companies;
in this regard, a geographical information system (GIS) is used
by mining companies to locate mine workers' across the country after
closure or downsizing to guide follow-up programmes;
·
Encouraging
mining companies to improve their public image through worthwhile
development initiatives.
9.
It was noted that mining companies have taken several successful
initiatives for local development projects in a number of countries.
These include social programmes with communities in the areas of
education and health. There were also instances of companies providing
consultancy services for the implementation of an agreed regional
development programme.
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