A 4-Point Policy Proposal to East Africa on the discovery of oil and gas
in the region
This is an excerpt of a blog I wrote for Development Initiatives
following up on the round table forum on the discovery of oil and gas in East
Africa's and what it means for the region's poor held at the Hilton, Nairobi on
Tuesday 3rd July 2012. This was a multi-stakeholder forum that converged key
policy makers from government, civil society, the media, academia and other
citizen representatives in Kenya. The Panel comprised: Tech Blogger, Robert
Alai–Techmtaa; Maragua MP
and Chair House Committee on Budget, Hon Elias Mbau MP–Kenya Parliament; Director Economic Affairs,
Henry Rotich, Ministry of Finance–Kenya; Charles Abugre–UNDP; Kwame Owino, CEO-
Institute of Economic Affairs – Kenyaand Social
Justice Activist Okiah Okoiti Omtatah. Moderated by Charles Onyango-Obbo –Executive
Editor for Africa and Digital Media Division, NMG
"If we are walking on gold, then why are we so poor” – sentiments
of a Ghanaian Elder
Development Initiatives’ Africa hub hosted its first Africacounts
round table forum on 3 July 2012. The purpose of the forum was to stimulate
honest and constructive dialogue about the potential role natural resource
revenues can play in addressing poverty, deprivation and inequality in the East
African region. The outcome was the production of evidenced-based and inclusive
policy messages to influence the use of East Africa’s newfound natural resource
wealth for eradicating extreme and chronic poverty. It was a multi-stakeholder
forum that converged key policy makers from government, civil society, the
media, academia and other citizen representatives in Kenya. The forum situated
the discovery of natural resources such as oil in Kenya and Uganda and natural
gas in Tanzania within a poverty context, highlighting the potential impact
that these resources and revenues could have on development in the region.
Participants discussed the history of natural resource extraction on the
continent and the prospects for East Africa.
Four key issues emerged from the discussions to inform policy decisions in the region:
“The answer to effective utilization of East Africa’s natural resource
find to address poverty and the pressing developmental challenges lies in
treating the discovery of oil and gas as a public finance management issue.”
Henry Rotich, Ministry of Finance, Kenya
There
needs to be reform within budget structures to allow flexibility in revenue
allocation and in order to prioritise key development issues within pro-poor
sectors. Suggested ways forward:
· expand the oil
footprint in the economy instead of focusing on oil revenues as the driver of
growth and for delivering public goods
· design and
execute effective tax regimes that maximise on revenues from investors but also
maintain a reasonable tax package to enhance the citizen stake in governance
· challenge the
state’s role in the management of emerging resources and develop alternative
modalities for managing and sharing the proceeds from natural resource
discoveries
· increase
citizens’ stake in oil production through the institutionalisation of
mechanisms for key stakeholders, such as citizens and the government, to invest
in the whole value chain in oil production.
"Why must the state dominate the management of emerging natural
resources? Could we think outside the box?”
Kwame Owino, CEO, Institute of Economic Affairs
“Put information about the actual oil find, terms entered into,
agreements with multinationals and modalities for monitoring flow of revenue to
the public… [...] Oil needs very careful control, open consensus with the
public. [...] It is cash, a key foreign policy commodity.”
Charles Abugre, UNDP
III: Develop and maintain laws, effective institutions and policies
capable of managing resources, regulating exploitation and ensuring maximum
benefit for citizens. The function of a legislative and institutional framework
should be to regulate revenue-sharing formulae, tax regimes, policy and
legislative space for civil society organisations (CSOs) and citizens’
representatives. Without such regulation, profits from natural resource
discovery can often lead to poor governance and corruption.
“Petro-dictatorship: Oil and gas find might herald an era of strong
dictatorship in East Africa…”
Kwame Owino, CEO, Institute of Economic Affairs
IV: Increase citizen engagement in CSO and media space. There has been
significant expansion in public engagement and participation in recent years.
This emerging space provides an opportunity for CSOs and the media (especially
new media) to play a critical role as citizen representatives to ensure that
policy makers prioritise their needs when overseeing the management of East
Africa’s natural resource wealth.
“Civil society, social justice activists and the media (including social
media) shouldn’t wait for government to pass laws then complain.”
Robert Alai, Blogger Techmtaa, Kenya
The media
and CSOs need to ensure that governments are held to account and are
transparent about natural resource revenues. They must be proactive in
influencing government action such as challenging malpractice, pushing through
policy suggestions, proposing new or revised legislation in order to maximise
the benefits of natural resources in addressing chronic poverty.
“We have been unable to effectively utilise what we have: that’s why we
are poor.”
Okoiti Okiah Omtatah, Social Justice Activist
Follow this link for detailed
information about the Africacouts round table forum