This is in response to Dr Spencer Kenyi's long critique
of the proposition by an American Senator that our crude oil could be
transported by trucks to Djibouti. I am inclined to think that the Honorable
Texan was joking.
In our current gloomy mood, we need some comedy.
Unfortunately our guest did not choose his joke well. You do not jokingly tell
a starving man that the stones are about to turn into bread. It is not amusing
to report to a sick person the 'good news' that the prices of coffins have
dropped.
Brother, let not your heart be troubled. Even if our good
guest was not joking, do not be dismayed by such an impossible proposition.
When I was a child, I cried and threw myself down when my sister told me that
the tamarind seed I had swallowed was going to germinate in my stomach and grow
on my head. If I had known that it was a scientific impossibility, I would have
laughed at my sister.
The Senator is suggesting that we drive one thousand
heavily laden tanker trucks from Bentiu daily though the swamps to the
Ethiopian highlands. This requires a fleet of at least 30,000 trucks to sustain
a monthly cycle. Can't you see this must be a joke? What happened to your sense
of humour? You know very well that even if our good American and Japanese
donors built for us another road and another bridge, there are numerous other
impossibilities. Let me rephrase what you have correctly pointed out:
•
Malakal is 1,291 feet above sea level. Addis
Ababa is 7,761 feet above sea level. Our trucks or pipeline would be facing an
uphill task, literally.
•
Average temperature in Malakal is between 20 and
40 degrees Centigrade. That of Addis Ababa is between 10 and 20 degrees
Centigrade. Our minimum is their maximum. We would have to contend with frozen
crude on transit.
•
There is no border crossing into Ethiopia, or
Djibouti, or Uganda or Kenya with the capacity to process one thousand trucks
daily even if there was no other business for the customs and immigration
officials to do.
•
No country in this region, no matter how
friendly, can allow another to feed 1,000 heavy trucks into their road daily.
We have not been able to build a road in our own country and are forbidden from
doing so in someone else's territory.
•
We do not own any sea port under the sun. The
port is the main asset Djibouti has. They cannot surrender it to us? There we
cannot use the weapon "we liberated you".
Dr Kenyi, you think the Senator was serious but that his
proposition is impossible. Some people, who also took the Senator seriously,
are warming to the idea so they think the proposition is possible. Invite the
proponent and supporters of this idea to conduct an experiment; load crude onto
a truck in Bentiu and drive it to Djibouti tomorrow. The outcome would settle
the arguments about time, topology, gradient, temperature and viscosity. That would
leave them with the 'smaller' matters of procuring tens of thousands of trucks,
border processes, sovereignty and port ownership.
Many people share your observation that we have been
mesmerized and inebriated by the glut of oil dollars and political victory.
Consequently we have illusions and delusions about what we are and what we can
do. To us nothing is beyond our means and capacity anymore. We think that we
deserve preferential treatment by the world. We award ourselves rights to
almost everything even in other peoples' lands, cities and homes. The common
talk is that graft or 'rent seeking' as you call it, has superseded patriotism
and the national interest. Nevertheless, do not drive yourself crazy over this
proposition. We need you and your brain. Impossible plans cannot be forced to
become possible by mere passion for the proposition. They may be attempted at a
terrible cost to society but in the end reality will always prevail.
The 'Dutch Disease' of our oil boom will not be similar
to what happened in Holland and this is why. Holland had a real economy;
agriculture and manufacturing, before the oil. The rise in the exchange rate of
the local currency (guilder) made Dutch products uncompetitive in the world
market. Industry collapsed, unemployment ensured and the population had to
survive on State welfare transfer payments. The redundant youth took to
substance abuse and other vices. In South Sudan the real economy does not exist
in the context of international trade.
The oil revenue is 'eaten' by a few. In a best case
scenario, the privileged elite will partner with foreign investors to create
enterprises in the primary, processing and service sectors. A few individuals
related to the investors will be employed. The rest will have to create an informal
real economy as the only means of subsistence. They will continue cracking
granite with their bare hands, catching fish, cutting bamboos, tilling the
land, burning charcoal, hewing water etc. Hopefully this can eventually develop
into a parallel sector. It is this dualism of the formal and informal sectors
that eventually converged and caused the emergence of a competitive
manufacturing sector in Kenya.
When oil wealth is not invested in the domestic economy
and the none-oil sector fails to support livelihoods, in the long run the
depraved masses lose their temper and vent it on those they perceive have
stolen their wealth. It is therefore in the personal interest of the political
elite to invest sufficiently in the real economy to avert a disaster. In this
scenario, everyone loses, including those who 'saved' their loot in foreign
banks. Call it the Mobutu phenomenon.
As for graft my friends, do worry but do not kill
yourselves. South Sudan will not be swallowed by the greedy humans. On the
contrary, South Sudan is the animal that swallows people.
No comments:
Post a Comment