PNG - Beware The Pitfalls Of Privatisation
Beware The Pitfalls Of Privatisation
Source: The National (PNG)
PORT MORESBY: The privatisation debate enters a crucial stage.
Soon [Papua New Guinea's]
Parliament will meet for the all-important
Budget 2000
session.
Privatisation is expected to be a crucial feature
of the budget because
the proceeds are expected to retire
much of the domestic public debt
incurred by successive
governments.
On that point we would like to know what mad
man or mad woman could
claim leadership and incur runaway
debts that threaten to bankrupt the
nation and force us
to mortgage the future of our children.
At the very least
it is criminal negligence - but what happens to
such
individuals or groups of individuals? They will
inevitably get off
scot-free.
But that is by the way.
The issue is privatisation - and because of its
importance to the next
budget we fear that determined
efforts to resist the process is already
a useless
exercise.
We can only hope that this Government will not
try to correct the
mistakes of past mad governments with
rash decisions of its own that
history might judge in a
similar light or worse.
The leaders spearheading this
drive must look beyond the immediate need
to retire debts
to the future privatised and deregulated market
economy
they envisage for us.
They must look to a
privatised Telikom and a privatised Elcom providing
for
the needs of not only residents of Port Moresby, Lae, Mt
Hagen and
Lorengau but also the greater needs of the
Telifomin, the Baining, Jimi,
and the Kaintiba.
They
must see a privatised Air Niugini and PNG Harbours Board
finding it
profitable to deliver services to Kerema,
Daru, Oro Bay and Finschhafen
as well as the main
ports.
For these are the real concerns. Under direct state
control these
institutions have, as yet, been unable to
fulfill their statutory
obligations, so it is a big
question whether these privatised,
corporatised entities
will be able to do better with a profit motive.
How will
the Government pull this one off and still continue its
push
for rural electrification, rural housing, rural
telecommunications among
scores of others.
There is no
great wealth awaiting some enterprising company to set up
a
telecommunication system profitably.
Will
privatisation suddenly create the instant wealth that would
be
necessary for expansion of the economy which would
increase demand and
therefore ensure there is room for
competition and not the emergence of
monopolies.
For if
it is a monopoly that will eventually emerge, it would be
better
left in the hands of the state rather than in
private hands which might
find it tempting to succumb to
the march of global mergers.
In the end it is not the
emotional question of ownership of these
institutions. It
is a question of capacity, the capacity of
individuals
and companies to invest in these companies,
capacity of the newly
privatised companies fulfilling the
needs of the people; the capacity of
the economy to
expand quickly enough to provide all the ingredients of
a
free market economy that presently do not exist.
And
it is the question of whether or not this act can, in the
medium or
long term, deliver the nation from the clutches
of poverty, from the
clutches of ignorance and dismal
living standards.
These are the questions our good
Government and the architects of the
privatisation moves
need to address very carefully.
For, therein lies the
dangers which may gather to deliver a body blow to
the
nation at some future date.
Article provided by the Journalism Programmme, University of the South Pacific. Pasifik Nius.