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Zambia: The Privatisation Saga

President Edgar C. Lungu

By Henry Kyambalesa*

1.  Introduction

In this article, I wish to tender my views concerning recent calls by some segments of Zambian society for a “Commission of Inquiry on Privatisation,” an idea which our brother President Edgar C. Lungu is apparently eager to pursue.

A bird’s-eye view of Zambia’s changing economic scenarios since independence in October 1964 follows.

Thereafter, I have briefly discussed matters relating to Zambia’s Privatisation Act No. 21, reasons why Zambia should consider privatising its current State enterprises, and the need to ditch the idea of constituting a “Commission of Inquiry on Privatisation” partly in view of the fact that some expert personnel from development partners and citizens who participated in the privatisation process have passed on and will, therefore, not be available to be interrogated.

1.1   The UNIP Era:

As Fundanga and Mwaba (1997:5) have observed, our beloved country adopted a  fairly  prosperous  economy  at independence—an economy that had  a  well-established  private  sector  dominated   mainly   by   large expatriate   business entities. And, as Bigsten, Mulenga and Olsson (2010) have noted, our country was one of the richest of the newly independent developing countries in Africa at independence in 1964.

Currently, however, three out of four citizens in the country live in extreme poverty and, according to USAID (2020), the country faces a multitude of challenges, including high unemployment, low agricultural productivity, inadequate transportation and energy infrastructure, and limited government capacity to plan and manage national development.

The country’s economic problems started soon after the country’s political independence from Great Britain. In April 1968, August 1969 and November 1970, former presi­dent, Dr. Kenneth D. Kaunda, made policy pronounce­ments in his addresses to the Nation­al Council of the Uni­ted National Inde­pen­dence Party (UNIP)—pronouncements which were aimed at nationalising privately owned enterprises.

By the end of 1969, State ownership of business entities encompassed all industrial and services sectors of the country’s economy, including agriculture, airline and bus services, baking, hotels and tourism, milling, mining, real estate (partly the construction of houses), the timber industry, and utilities—including the supply of water and electricity.

Essentially, UNIP’s socialist policies barred both local and foreign private inves­tors from medium and large-scale commer­cial and indus­trial sec­tors of the countr­y’s econo­my from the mid-1960s to 1991. Naturally, the monopolistic position enjoyed by State companies in the country’s economy culminat­ed in com­placence and gross inefficien­cy because, in the absence of competi­tion, they appar­ently found it unneces­sary to seek or use technologi­cal inven­tions and innovations that would have improved the quality and quantity of their outputs.

The culmination of such a state of affairs was a national economy that was characterised by rampant and unprecedented shortages of commodities, and, among other socioeconomic ills, an escalation of black markets for the commodities.

1.2   The MMD Era:

The unprecedented socioeconomic problems facing the country during the UNIP era partly prom­p­t­­ed the next govern­ment of the late President Frederick T. J. Chiluba to embark on an ambitious priva­tisa­tion programme upon his inaugu­ration in October 1991 in an attempt to boost competi­tion in com­merce and indus­try.

In making the transition, he summed up his thinking about the role his administration was going to play in the creation of an economic system in which commercial and industrial activities were the pre­ponderance of the pri­vate sector in the following words: “Never shall the Government allow the selling of soap and foodstuffs to be its business” (Nyakutemba, 1992:32), and “We will pri­vatise everything … from a toothbrush to a car assem­bly plant” (Ham, 1992:41).

As Chilipamushi (1994:16) has noted, privatisation was expected to stimulate private investment, give econom­ic power to a greater number of people through stock ownership, promote competition and encourage efficiency in commerce and industry, beef up government coffers through the sale of govern­ment holdings in state enterprises, as well as ease the financial burden of state compa­nies on the public treasury.

And, as Pitelis and Clark (1993:7) have maintained, the reduction of govern­ment involvement in commerce and industry that would follow the privatisation of State enterprises was expected to result in reduced public-sector borrowing and government spending.

And, to paraphrase Muuka and Abubaker (2002:16), State-owned enterprises could easily become vehicles for embezzlement and bribery for personal aggrandisement, often at the expense of the implementation of aid-financed projects, and could also foster the development of cronyism through patronage at the highest levels of government.

Moreover, they could bolster the siphoning-off of public resources for party, political or factional purposes, as well as trigger the packing of public enterprises with supporters of the ruling political party without regard for genuine personnel requirements.

The following excerpts should provide some of the other worthwhile bene­fits associated with privatisation: “Privatisation of state enter­prises is an extension of democracy because it removes politi­cal inter­fer­ence from the running of business­es” (Chitalu, 1996). And “There are heavy costs associ­at­ed with the conversion of a State-controlled economy into a free market system, such as increased unemployment; in the long run, however, the free market system holds great promise for everyone” (Mwewa, 1996:36).

1.3   The PF Era:

During the late President Michael C. Sata’s administration between 2011 and 2015, the Zambian government changed course and reverted to economic policies pursued by UNIP between 1968 and 1991 by creating the Industrial Development Corporation (IDC) in 2014—a Corporation that is different from the Industrial Development Corporation (INDECO) that was established by the UNIP government in abbreviation only.

According to the Patriotic Front (PF) government, IDC is a state-owned enterprise (SOE) charged with the mandate to spearhead the country’s commercial investments agenda aimed at strengthening the country’s industrial base and job creation. It is wholly owned by the government through the Ministry of Finance.

And, like its predecessor, IDC’s operations encompass all industrial and services sectors of the country’s economy, including agriculture and forestry, energy, financial services, healthcare, information and communications technology, infrastructure, manufacturing, mining, real estate, tourism, and transportation and logistics.

It took almost 20 years of State ownership of major economic units through INDECO from the late 1960s to the late 1980s for the country to experience the following dour effects of extensive State ownership of economic units: (a) unprecedented shortages of essential commodities; (b) evolvement of black markets for essential commodities; (c) chronic loss-making operations by SOEs; (d) a shortage of foreign exchange reserves due to failure by SOEs to generate foreign reserves through exports; (e) deepening government deficits partly emanating from government’s efforts to bail out loss-making SOEs; and (f) escalation of smuggling of essential commodities into and out of the country.

IDC has been in existence over the last 6 years. If the government cannot change course by re-privatising the SOEs under the IDC group of companies, we should eventually not be surprised to witness history repeating itself sooner or later.

2.   Privatisation Act No. 21

In July 1992, the Zambian Parliament enacted the Privatisation Act No. 21, which promptly established the Zambia Privatisation Agency (ZPA) as the sole institution charged with the responsibility of privatising State-owned enterprises.

The Agency was to be governed by a Board of Directors to be constituted from civil society and government institutions, and was granted the autonomy to determine how the State enterprises and assets were to be sold and the prices that were to be paid for them, while Cabinet’s role was confined to the approval of the sequence of the privatisation process.

Specifically, the purposes of the ZPA Board of Directors, according to Anglo-American (2002), were to plan, manage, implement, and control the privatisation of State-owned enterprises by selling them to individuals and institutions with the wherewithal and expertise to run them on a commercial basis.

With respect to the overall divestiture or privatisation programme, the following is a summary of the companies privatised by October 31, 1996 cited by Fundanga and Mwaba (1997:11) and sourced from a press release by ZPA (1996): (a) 18 companies were sold to Zambian individuals through competitive bidding; (b) 41 companies were sold to Zambian companies through competitive bidding; (c) 13 companies were handed back to previous Zambian owners; (d) 16 companies were sold to Management buy-out teams; (e) 5 companies were sold to foreigners with Zambian minority participation; (f) 14 companies were sold to foreigners on the basis of Pre-emptive rights (outside the control of ZPA); (g) 16 companies were sold to foreigners on competitive bid basis; (h) 12 companies were disposed of through winds-up and liquidation; and (i) 16 companies were disposed of by public flotation through ZPA efforts.

Clearly, the privatisation process conducted mainly through competitive bidding does not seem to have provided any room for anyone wishing to steal or corruptly obtain any assets or enterprises on offer, let alone pocket the proceeds from the privatised assets or enterprises, since such proceeds were directly collected by the Zambia Revenue Authority—which assumed the functions of the Department of Taxes and the Department of Customs and Excise from the date of its establishment on April 30, 1993 by the Zambia Revenue Authority Act No. 23 of 1993.

3.   Reasons to Re-Privatise

In practically all affluent nations of the world today, privately owned and operated business under­takings are the major institu­tions that are in the forefront searching for efficient and effec­tive ways and means for application in the creation and delivery of a cornucopia of high-quality goods and services at competitive prices.

In these nations, business entities, as Davis and Frederick (1984:454-455) have noted, are greatly depended upon to keep the stream of discover­ies flowing in the form of consumer goods and services. This certainly calls for compet­i­tive business systems, which are generally and conspicu­ously lacking in countries whose economies are based on socialist ideals and monop­olis­tic govern­ment policies.

History, and what has happened to countries worldwide whose economies are, or have been, based on socialist ideals, should offer us guidance. The following examples of socioeconomic ills associated with government ownership of the means of production and distribution should give us the impetus to re-privatise SOEs under IDC group of companies:

(a)  Cuba:  The country’s economy is dominated by state-run enterprises. The government owns and operates most industries in the country. Currently, the country is currently experiencing the worst economic crisis in its history. Akin to Zambia’s unpalatable experiences during the late 1980s, stores in Cuba no longer routinely stock products including eggs, flour, chickens, cooking oil, rice, powdered milk, and ground turkey. These basic commodities disappear from shops for days or weeks. Hours-long lines appear within minutes of trucks showing up with new supplies, and shelves are often empty the same day.

(b)  East Germany:  East Germany had a command economy—an economy captained by State enterprises. It experienced economic problems similar to those experienced by other socialist countries worldwide. Prior to the end of World War II in 1945, a War that started in 1939, East Germany and West Germany were one country. After the War, Soviet forces occupied eastern Germany, while French, British and U.S. forces occupied the western half of the country. The Berlin Wall was constructed by East Germany with the help of the now-defunct Soviet Union in 1961 to prevent the socialist country’s citizens from escaping to the more affluent and democratic West Germany.

At least 171 East Germans were killed trying to defect to West Germany, while more than 600 border guards and 4,400 other refugees “managed to cross the border [illegally] by jumping out of windows adjacent to the wall, climbing over … barbed wire, flying in hot air balloons, crawling through … sewers, and driving through unfortified parts of the Wall at high speeds”—History.com Editors, 2019.

The introduction of perestroika and glasnost in the former USSR by the Mikhail Gorbachev administration in 1987 and the eventual break-up of the USSR on December 26, 1991 occasioned the dismantling of the Berlin Wall, which separated communist East Germany and capitalist West Germany, in November 1989 and eventual reunification of the two countries into a united capitalist Germany upon the signing of a reunification treaty on August 31, 1990.

(c)  Venezuela:  Shortages of regulated food staples and basic necessities are widespread mainly following the country’s enactment of price controls and other socialist policies. The severity of the shortages has led to the largest refugee crisis ever recorded in the Americas. There are shortages of milk, meat, coffee, rice, oil, precooked flour, butter, toilet paper, medicines, and personal hygiene products. Hours-long lines have become common, and those who wait in them disappointingly go back to their homes empty-handed. Some citizens have resorted to eating wild fruit and garbage.

The country has been governed for the past 20 years by the socialist PSUV party. From 1999 to his death in 2013, Hugo Chávez was president. He was succeeded by his right-hand man, Nicolás Maduro. During its two decades in power, the PSUV has gained control of numerous key economic institutions.

On September 24, 2019 in a speech delivered at the United Nations General Assembly in New York, Jair Bolsonaro, President of Brazil, uttered the following words relating to the socioeconomic ills facing Venezuela: “It is fair to say [that] socialism is working in Venezuela—they are all poor.”

(d)  Zimbabwe:  The economic history of Zimbabwe began with the transition to majority rule in 1980 and Britain’s ceremonial granting of independence. The new government under Prime Minister Robert Mugabe promoted socialism and Marxist-type rule. Within 20 years, the country has had unprecedented socioeconomic woes, rampant corruption and political instability, which have continued to haunt the country to date.

(e)  The Soviet Union:  The Soviet economy was based on State ownership of the means of production and distribution. In May 1985, newly “elected” Mikhail Gorbachev delivered a speech in which he publicly criticised the Soviet Union’s inefficient socialist / communist system. This was followed by a February 1986 speech to the Communist Party Congress, in which he talked about the need for political and economic restructuring—that is, Perestroika—and called for a new era of transparency and openness—that is, Glasnost.

It was reasoned that the lack of open markets which could have provided price signals and incentives to direct economic activity led to waste and economic inefficiencies. The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) ceased to exist on December 31, 1991.

4.   Development Partners

The successful consummation of the work of the contemplated Commission of Inquiry on Privatisation is going to require the involvement and interrogation of expert personnel from the Danish International Development Agency (DANIDA), the German Technical Cooperation Agency (GTZ), the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD), Official Development Assistance (ODA),  the United Nations Development programme (UNDP), the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), and the World Bank who directly participated in the privatisation process.

I do not think these foreign agencies will be willing to go back 24 or so years and provide inputs to the contemplated Commission of Inquiry. Besides, the experts who were involved in the privatisation process are probably no longer working for agencies of the development partners, and some of them could have actually passed on.

In Zambia, too, a lot of the citizens who were involved in the privatisation process over 24 or so years ago must have passed on and will, therefore, not be available for interrogation by the contemplated Commission of Inquiry on Privatisation.

So, if the Commission of Inquiry on Privatisation will actually be constituted and consummated and some Zambians who were involved in the privatisation process are found wanting but have passed on, will the deceased culprits face the law posthumously? And what will happen to any of the foreign experts who will likely be found to have corruptly gained from their participation in the privatisation process?

It is absurd that we should be considering the prospect of going back 24 or so years and through the Chiluba, Mwanawasa, Banda, and Sata administrations to investigate citizens and foreign experts who were involved in the privatisation process. If we do not have a Statute of Limitations for crimes and misdemeanours in any of our country’s legal statutes, it is perhaps time for Parliament and/or the Republican president to seriously consider the prospect of enacting such legislation.

Also, one wonders how any individual could have been crafty enough to succeed in corruptly gaining access to any of the assets and/or enterprises under the surveillance of all the members of the ZPA’s Board of Directors and all the expert personnel from the six or so agencies sponsored by development partners!

And, incidentally, the World Bank, cited by Fundanga and Mwaba (1997:8), rated our beloved country’s privatisation programme in 1996 as having been “the most successful” in sub-Saharan Africa, and that it offered “many examples of best practice.” Why, then, should we start casting doubts about the probity and veracity of the people who presided over, as well as those who performed the various tasks of, a process that was highly rated by the World Bank—a highly reputable and genuine global institution—24 years later?

In conclusion, I personally do not think there is a good and justifiable reason to spend time and our beloved country’s meagre financial resources on a Commission that will apparently not benefit the citizenry. Besides, the Anti-Corruption Commission (ACC) could have adequately investigated any corruption-related issues and matters arising from the privatisation of State enterprises during the Chiluba administration, or during the reign of the late President Levy P. Mwanawasa.

Politicians, government officials and other members of society who could have suspected or witnessed cases of asset-stripping and/or the misappropriation of proceeds from privatised State enterprises during the privatisation process should have alerted ACC personnel preferably during the late President Chiluba’s administration.

Anyway, who am I to expect to have any of my views considered in decisions made by those who wield the reins of power in our beloved country?

Allow me now to end this discussion with the following opinion of Winston Churchill (former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom) regarding the “virtue” of socialism and the “vice” of capitalism excerpted from his speech to members of the House of Commons on October 22, 1945: “The inherent vice of capitalism is the unequal sharing of blessings. The inherent virtue of socialism is the equal sharing of miseries.”

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Bigsten, A., Mulenga,  S. and Olsson,  O., “The  Political  Economy  of Mining in Zambia,” Mimeo (World Bank: Washington DC., 2010).

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*The author, Henry Kyambalesa, is a retired academic. He has pursued studies in Business Administration and Management at the University of Zambia and Oklahoma City University, Mineral Economics at Colorado School of Mines, and International Studies (including the fields of International Business, International Economics, International Relations, and International Technology Analysis and Management) at the University of Denver.

He has served as adjunct Assistant Dean and tenured lecturer in Business Administration in the School of Business at the Copperbelt University, and on the MBA Affiliate Faculty at Regis University in Denver, Colorado, USA. He has also served as Instructor in Economics, Marketing and Sta­tistics at the former Zam­bia Institute of Technol­ogy, and as a Guest Lecturer in Supervi­sion, Produc­tion Manage­ment and Manage­ment Devel­op­ment at Mindolo Ecumeni­cal Founda­tion in Zambia.

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