Market forces rule, OK.
Presenting the 1989/90 budget to Parliament last June, the
Gambian Minister of Finance and Trade, Mr Saihou Sulayman Sabally painted the
picture of a robust economy. The Gambian economy , he said,
is now in its third year of growth, exceeding 5% per annum. This has resulted in
the first sustained increase in overall real incomes for more than a decade...
The private sector activity has increased sharply and business confidence is
high. The countrys current foreign obligations are being met, foreign
arrears are being reduced and The Gambias international financial standing
has improved dramatically .
Mr Saballys transparent elation was reflected so much
among officials in Banjul that news of the sudden collapse of the Senegambian
Confederation-a structure upon which observers have for years placed
considerable hope for the future of The Gambia-was received not only with the
characteristic calm of The Gambia but with a certain air of confidence in the
resilience of the Gambian economy to such an external shock.
For a country of only 11 000 sq km, almost surrounded by Senegal
and heavily dependent on one crop, groundnuts, this was surprising, particularly
when nothing on the ground bears out the official optimism (the continuing low
standard of living and widespread unemployment, for example) and when only weeks
after Senegal tightened border controls, hotels in The Gambia were rapidly
running out of cooking gas, sowing panic among hoteliers at the beginning of the
tourist season.
The Gambian reaction may be based on a feeling that the economy
has taken a course which has builtin self-defence mechanisms that
will ultimately defeat the kind of measures being taken by Senegal. The fact is
that The Gambia, which has always had a liberal economy by African standards,
has adopted in recent years a new non-interventionist policy which most
economists have described as ultra-liberal.
Mr Sabally ascribes the new policy to the lessons that have been
learned in the past four years or so of IMF-inspired structural adjustment which
were, among other things, that in tandem with political freedoms,
economic operations at all levels must be given the freedom to take economic
decisions , and that the pace of economic growth cannot be forced
through Government intervention that results in budget deficits, excessive
credit creation or rapid increase in foreign debt. It is the duty of the
Government, he said, to create a consistent set of incentives to
encourage the optimal utilisation of all productive resources in the
economy.
There is no doubt that this policy, coupled with such factors as
foreign goodwill and patronage have produced, within a short time, spectacular
results in stabilising an economy that was deeply in trouble in 1985 with
roaring inflation, irregular supplies of essential commodities such as rice and
fuel, arrears in the service of external debt, huge budget deficits, a weak
reserve position, an acute shortage of foreign exchange and widespread loss of
confidence and lack of new investment in the country.
A combination of internal and external factors led to the crisis
which actually began as far back as 1980.
They include notably, the fall in the output and world prices of
groundnuts, increased costs of food and fuel imports and increased public
expenditure. Indeed the situation became so bad that The Gambia had to abandon
its Second Development Plan to adopt a Public Investment Plan (PIP) for which
funds were sought from donors at a conference in London in 1985. The PIP was
soon, though, to be integrated into a Structural Adjustment Programme when the
IMF and the World Bank came in demanding changes.
The Government adopted a recovery programme which, first,
concentrated mainly on the removal of the disparities in exchange rates and
prices, the stabilisation of the balance of payments and the reforming of the
public sector. A floating regime for the Dalasi, the national currency, was
introduced and the foreign exchange market was liberalised ending the Central
Banks monopoly. In September 1986 the IMF provided The Gambia with an
approximately SDR 10.9 million adjustment facility.
Inflation was brought down from 70% in 1985 to 10.9% in 1987
through the removal of subsidies in such areas as health and transport and
through the judicious issue of treasury bills and strict limits to bank credits
by the Central Bank. Between 1988 and 1989 alone, banks sold some 804 million
Dalasi worth of foreign exchange to the public, a 55 % rise on the period
1987-88. Although the value of the Dalasi has fallen significantly, the gap
between the official and parallel markets has almost disappeared. The civil
service was pruned and brought down to a manageable size and a number of
parastatals have been slated for sale.
By the end of 1987 The Gambia had registered sufficient positive
results for the authorities to be convinced that the way ahead resided in a
market-oriented economy-where the growth of the productive sectors, agriculture,
manufacturing, fisheries and tourism-are determined by the level of private
initiatives and investment.
Impressed by the results and The Gambias economic
orientation, the IMF, late in 1988, provided a three-year credit equivalent to
SDR 20.5 million under what it called Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility
(ESAF). The World Bank, the African Development Bank and The Netherlands
government, on the other hand, also agreed to provide a loan totalling US$ 34
million towards the programme. The IDA has indeed already provided SDR 17m to
The Gambia. This was ratified by Parliament last June. Understandably, the loan
will be used mainly for balance of payments support.
These developments no doubt provide the basis for official
optimism for the 1990s but they mask the factors that could negate all the
efforts: the mixed fortunes of the various sectors of The Gambian economy-their
strengths and weaknesses, the fact that The Gambia remains heavily dependent on
foreign aid, most of which is in the form of outright grants for capital
projects and, to some extent, budgetary support, and the debt burden which
currently amounts to $ 355 million.
With no mineral resources, and only its people, the River
Gambia, its limited land space, beaches and coastal waters as assets, the task
of development would appear daunting. Openness and friendliness towards
foreigners, it is true, have so far paid The Gambia rich dividends in foreign
assistance, and in tourism. This may or may not continue. The River
Gambias vital role in agriculture in a naturally dry country is limited by
saline intrusion. The countrys forest resources have been depleted. There
is therefore not much for a country to sing and dance about.
Agriculture: emphasis on food production
Agriculture, accounts for about 55% of GDP. It has, since the
birth of The Gambia as a nation, been dominated by one crop, groundnuts. In the
early 60s groundnuts played a pivotal role in the development of the
country: production rose steadily from an average 94 000 metric tonnes between
1961 and 65 to a high 131 000 mt in 1966, earning a reasonable income for
The Gambia. The industry was, and still is, managed by the Gambian Produce
Marketing board (GPMB), a non-profit organisation which was set up not only to
maximise farm-gate prices for farmers but to ensure adequate revenue from
groundouts for the government- responsibilities the Board discharged fairly
adequately.
The GPMB, however, was to spread its tentacles into the Gambian
economy, becoming involved in everything closely or remotely connected with
groundnuts, from transportation through storage and processing to export. It was
to take responsibility for cotton when the latter became the focus of efforts at
diversification of exports.

Production of pricipal crops in the
Gambia 1978-1988
Sixty percent of groundnut sales to the Board is accounted
for by the Gambia Cooperative Union and the remainder by operators licensed to
buy from the farmers. Alternatively the farmers sold groundnuts directly to
dealers across the border in Senegal, attracted not only by the convertible CFA
franc, which for many years was more stable than the Dalasi, but also by the
ease with which they disposed of them (transportation across the border was
sometimes easier than across The Gambia). This trade which elsewhere is known as
smuggling is described in The Gambia as the centuries-old practice of
cross-border trade . Figures on The Gambias annual groundnut
production are therefore unreliable. The FAO estimates show output of 126 000 mt
in the 1967/68 season, 130 000 mt in the 1977/78, 150 000 mt in 1982/83 and 110
000 mt in 1986/87. Sales to the GPMB, however, do provide some bases upon which
the strength of the groundnut industry has been measured over the years.
Purchases by the Board between 1973 and 1977 averaged 132 000 metric tons. They
plunged dramatically to 78 000 mt between 1978 and 1982 due mainly to bad
weather and pest invasion. The GPMB purchase figures as disclosed to The Courier
reveal not enough quantities reaching the Board in recent years. In the 1987/88
season, for example, the GPMB purchased 63 000 mt and only 24 000 mt by
September 1989 (see table below).
The slump in the tonnage purchased by the GPMB in a decade when
world prices of groundnuts have fallen badly meant huge reductions in foreign
exchange earnings from the product. This partly explains the profound crisis
that has shaken the GPMB and the groundnut industry as a whole: the Board,
anxious to encourage farmers. has had to buy groundnuts at prices far above the
world market prices and the Government has had for several years now to
subsidise the parastatal, including paying off its debts with the Central Bank.
The GPMB which had been a source of income for the Government thus became a
drain on its resources, making the Board an inevitable target in the
Governments overall structural adjustment exercise. It will no longer
receive subsidies from the Government. Its ancillary activities, particularly in
transport, are to be privatised, and it has to compete henceforth, at the buying
level from farmers, with operators who no longer require to be licensed.
Although there is widespread fear that the GPMB will sink under
competition, at the Boards headquarters in Banjul the future is viewed
with that same air of confidence that is noticeable among officials about the
direction of the economy as a whole. The entire Board, which The Courier had the
good fortune to interview at one of its regular sessions, feels there has been
too much unnecessary worry about the GPMBs survival. They point to their
impressive achievement of the 1988/89 performance contract which
saw the GPMB reduce its operating loss from 28 200 000 dalasi in 1987/88 to 5
300 000 dalasi. But this was due almost entirely to tighter control over
operating costs and lower interest charges on loans paid to the Central
Bank. The Board has still to prove its commercial viability. A factor in its
favour is that it remains the only export outlet for all groundnuts and
groundnut products. What the reforms have done in essence is to relieve the GPMB
of the responsibility of guaranteeing prices to the farmers. The extent to which
competition at the buying level will rationalise the groundnut industry, improve
output and farmers income is yet to be seen. What is clear is that the
GPMB is banking on farmers continuing to sell their groundnuts to their
cooperative unions or societies which are under contract to sell to the Board
and on their preference for the cash on the spot policy which
operates in The Gambia to the chit system in Senegal where operators
buy now and pay later. The price has to be substantially attractive for
any farmer to sell across the border, says the Permanent Secretary in the
Ministry of Agriculture, Mr Amadou Taal, who estimates that in the short run
there are bound to be price differentials but in the long run both
countries will have to be influenced by world market forces. The virtue of
the exercise, in the opinion of the Permanent Secretary, is that from now
on farmers will not be expecting a fixed price for the year. They could
sell to the GPMB or to the private operator depending on the highest bidder.
Meanwhile, GPMBs Managing Director Mr Saihou Drammeh and his Board are
figuring out how to operate in this slightly modified environment,
feeling they would take adequate measures to operate on a
commercial basis.

All figures in metric tons
If the GPMB found groundnuts tough to crack in recent years it
has found it easy going with cotton. Introduced as far back as 1965 as part of
The Gambias diversification attempts with a project financed by the
African Development Bank in the Upper River Division (URD), production rose to 1
175 tonnes in 1978 fell to 99 t in 1979 before rising steadily and reaching 2
500 t in 1985. Although output has fluctuated ever since because of adverse
weather conditions, it has nevertheless remained close the 2 000 tonnes mark (1
847 t in fact in 1988/89 with the area under cotton cultivation rising from 1
166 hectares in the 1987/88 season to 2 698 ha in 1988/89). All cotton
production is exported.
The Gambias diversification thrust, however, has been not
so much toward cash crops as towards the production of foodcrops given the
escalating costs of food imports-a major factor that contributed to the
countrys recent economic difficulties. It remains a heavy burden. In 1988,
for example, food accounted for nearly 30% of total imports. Emphasis has been
on the production of coarse grains-maize, millet and sorghum-and production
increased consistently until in the 1988/89 season when it fell from 72 000
tonnes in 1987/88 to 70 680 t. In support of this grain policy, a number of OECD
countries have donated milling machines which have been installed in the rural
areas to lighten the task of women who traditionally grew and processed these
crops.
It should be noted that the policy of improving the condition of
women and making their contributions to development more effective is being
taken seriously in The Gambia. A large number of agricultural projects
specifically directed at them are being set up all over the country by donors,
including the European Economic Community. The EEC has, among others, a
womens vegetable gardens project in Pirang and an integrated rural
agricultural development project in the Upper River Division involving women. Mr
Taal, the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Agriculture expects the EEC to
concentrate on the production of coarse grain in the URD, for while it is true
that there have been increases in foodgrain production in recent years, he says,
it is important that the rate of increase in output should outstrip the
population growth rate, which is estimated to be 3.4% annually, if The Gambia is
to achieve self-sufficiency in food and bring an end to the scourge of heavy
food import bills.
Women, on the other hand, are organising themselves into potent
forces for development. With the establishment recently of their political
forum, the National Womens Council and Bureau, things are moving fast. A
Womens Development
Project has been launched. This aims at improving literacy among
rural women, teaching them basic skills and helping them engage in
income-generating activities, particularly in handicrafts and agriculture. To
this end, the Gambian Womens Finance Company has been set up with a loan
from the World Bank to provide credits, not normally obtained through the formal
banking system, to rural women.
Overall, farmers have the opportunity of meeting face-to-face
with President Jawara annually. The latter, has, over the past five years,
established the practice of touring the country every year to discuss the
farmers problems with them.
If there is an area in which The Gambias drive at
self-sufficiency is producing handsome results it is in the production of rice.
Both swamp and irrigated rice are being developed. Output has been rising since
the early 1980s. Last season, for example, paddy rice production increased from
20340 tonnes in the 1987/88 season to 23 520 tonnes.
Considerable hope is being placed on the Jahally Patcharr scheme
which involves a large number of smallholders using imported rice strains on an
irrigated area of 1 500 hectares.
Reportedly producing the highest rice yields per hectare of any
farm in the world, the scheme accounted in 1984 for at least one-quarter of The
Gambias total production. It has continued to perform well. Plans are now
afoot to complement it with another scheme - a tidal irrigation rice project at
the MacCarthy Island Division which will bring 5 000 hectares under cultivation
and involve 10000 farmers.
Simple farming tools are now being produced locally thanks to
the SEGAMCO factory, a Gambian/Senegalese joint venture which was set up
recently. With a soil conservation programme at Demba Kunda and the Good Seed
Programme multiplication scheme at Marembe, The Gambian government obviously
takes agriculture very seriously. The results are not only seen in the output of
coarse grains and rice but in the production of fruits and vegetables as well.
Output of those are up, with export earnings in 1988 reaching 543 000 dalasi,
60% up on the 1987 figure.
Although the smallness of The Gambian economy and low world
market prices affect agriculture, there is no doubt that pests and diseases and
the weather are the greatest constraints. Ricefields and farms are often invaded
by weaver birds and locusts. With the international help, The Gambia has been
able to contain the threats though not without considerable losses.
Geographically, The Gambia is located in the Sahel where rainfall is scanty and
droughts are regular occurrences. This makes irrigated farming extremely
important. This, however, is realistically possible only up to a point along the
River Gambia because of saline intrusion from the sea. Pump irrigation is widely
practiced in the country but its impact is limited. For years a project to build
a barrage/bridge at Balingho on the River Gambia to control saline intrusion and
thus protect investment in the existing and future irrigation projects has been
planned. Nothing has come of it. According to the Minister of Economic Planning
and Industrial Development, Mr Demba Jatta, there have been various studies on
the project. Some of them were favourable, others were negative because of
environmental concerns.
But the project has not been abandoned as some officials in
Banjul seem to suggest. What is being done presently, he says,
is mobilising the resources for its realisation. The project is not
only important for agriculture, it is vital to The Gambias future energy
needs, heavily dependent, as it is, on fuel imports and no prospects of oil
discovery in the country. Informed sources indicate that the issue is not so
much the absence of resources (a number of donors have indicated their
willingness to participate in the financing of the project) as the caution that
Senegambian politics demand (see the article on The demise of the
Senegambian Confederation ).
As far as the livestock industry is concerned, The Gambia is
making good progress. Except for the year, 1984, when drought affected herds,
the production of meat, eggs, chicken, milk, etc. has increased substantially
and so also have the allied products of hides and skins. These performances are
largely due to good and efficient veterinary services and the use of improved
strains. For example, the use of the trypano-resistant NDama breed in
cattle rearing.
The fisheries sector has also come on strong in the past three
years. As well as growing private interest in industrial fishing, two artisanal
fisheries projects have resulted in an increasing number of Gambians and
foreigners (mostly Senegalese and Ghanaans) taking up fishing as a full time
occupation and in the doubling of the catch. One of the projects, funded by the
Italians, involved the provision of facilities to fishermen in the Kiang West
area. Completed in January 1989, the catch rate per fishing unit of the project
has already attained the 98.9 kilos per day deemed necessary to make the scheme
viable, so much so that the authorities now want to extend it to five villages
in the North Bank and Lower River Divisions. The second project, which is being
funded by the EEC, is focussing on six villages along the South Atlantic coast.
The project started in 1988. It involves the training of fishermen and the
provision of fishing equipment and essential infrastructure for storage, drying,
smoking and marketing. With the Gambian coast believed to be rich, particularly
in such high-value varieties as shrimps and lobsters, the future of the fishing
industry looks bright. A visit to any of the coastal villages involved in the
EEC project at the landing hours of the fishermen is enough to convince one of
that bright future at the sight not only of the quantity of fish being brought
ashore, but the large number of people involved in the industry.
Expanding manufacturing and the private sector
Because of the very narrow agricultural base and limited
domestic market, The Gambias manufacturing sector is very small,
accounting for 8.9 % of GDP. There are set-ups in beverages, palm oil, and
salted, dried and smoked fish. (Investments are being sought in fruit and
vegetable processing, exploration of tataniferous sands, the manufacture of
glass products and biscuits, pharmaceuticals, groundnut butter and
confectionery). Otherwise the industrial and commercial sectors are dominated by
parastatals: the GPMB (groundnuts and groundnut products), the Gambian Utilities
Corporation (electricity and water supply mainly), the Gambia Commercial and
Development Bank (finance), GAMTEL (The Gambia telecommunications company), the
Gambia National Insurance Corporation and the Livestock Marketing Board. But the
Government is set to change that with its divestment policy. Already it had sold
the Nyambu timber sawmill and is offering for sale a number of public
enterprises, including the National: Trading Corporation (which was converted
into a limited liability company in June 1988), Seagull Coldstores, the Banjul
Breweries and Africa Hotels Ltd. Others like Ferry Services, the Dockyard and
the Gambia River Transport
Company are slated for divestment. If successful, it will
broaden the commercial sector.
The Gambias overall industrial policy, as seen, aims at
the transformation of what resources are available locally. It also aims at the
assembly of goods for which The Gambia has comparative advantage in the
sub-region, as Mr Alieu NGum, Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of
Economic Planning and Industrial Development told The Courier. But it raises not
only the question of the attractiveness of The Gambia to foreign investors but
also the issue of foreign control of the economy. Although there are schemes
like the Private Enterprise Development Project and investment promotion bodies
like the National Investment Board, which aim at encouraging Gambians to go into
business by providing advice and credits, it is clear that whether in pursuing
the privatisation policy or in setting up manufacturing units, The Gambia needs
foreign investors and foreign skills. On the latter, although Gambias
education policy is geared towards the development of indigenous skills, the
country relies a good deal on other West African countries for its vital
personnel needs. They tend, in this regard, to see a West Africa without
frontiers, once more, an illustration of Gambian open-mindedness. Furthermore,
there are a large number of technical assistants from a variety of other
sources. As far as foreign investments are concerned, they see the fact that
there are no constraints whatsoever on foreign investors, which is in tune with
their liberal policy, as a big incentive. The Development Act was revised
recently to make it possible for an investor to have all the approval he needs
to go into business within 90 days of application and provide him with all
necessary information.
A booming re-export trade
If the smallness of the manufacturing sector has not been felt
in recent years, it is because of the rapid growth of the re-export trade. The
Gambias traditional exports are, of course, groundnuts and groundnut
products, fish and fish products and fruits and vegetables. The last two have
become? particularly in the past few years, important sources of foreign
exchange: Gambian horticultural produce as well as shrimps and lobsters are
increasingly being exported to neighbouring countries and Europe. But it is the
re-export trade that has seen a spectacular growth. Commodities such as rice,
flour, sugar, tea and textiles are imported for re-export to Senegal, Guinea
Bissau, the Republic of Guinea, Mauritania, Burkina Faso, Mali and even as far
as to Sierra Leone. Inevitably the computing of The Gambias balance of
trade is a, complicated affair. What is certain, however, is that the
countrys trade deficits are minimised by the strength of the re-export
trade which has become the second fastest growing sector of the economy after
tourism.
The boom in this trade is due mainly to The Gambias low
import duties and liberal import policy, made even more liberal since the start
of the structural adjustment programme. As the Comptroller of Customs, Mr Sarian
Ceesay told The Courier: There is no restriction on imports and exports,
no restriction on the movement of capital, no price approvals. Unlike in some
neighbouring countries where customs formalities are cumbersome, where importers
have to deal with agents who deal with customs officials, here in The Gambia,
importers have direct access to customs officials. They can sort out their
problems with the customs within a short time.
The collapse of the Senegambian Confederation has resulted in
Senegal tightening controls on exports and on transit goods from The Gambia at
all border crossings with the latter. Not surprisingly there were fears that
this move would strangle the re-export trade and create enormous problems for
the Gambian economy.
While The Gambia reacted calmly to the situation and adopted a
wait and see attitude, Mr Ceesay believes in what he calls the
invisible hands of the laws of economics, that is, that if one tries
to use artificial means to restrict certain things the law of economics
will take its own course .
The truth is that the Gambian reexport trade is based on demand
by importers in the neighbouring countries and not necessarily on The
Gambias drive to sell imported goods to them. The problem of transit is
therefore much more the affair of the importers than of The Gambia. Experts
estimate that even with all the problems that will arise from the new situation
(delays and higher costs) importers would still find it cheaper to import
through The Gambia than through elsewhere.
This aside, The Gambians see the re-export trade as having
become so much of mutual benefit to them and to some powerful communities in
Senegal that the latter are expected to exert pressure on their government for a
relaxation of the controls. A new regulatory bilateral agreement on goods in
transit or on exports from The Gambia to Senegal cannot be ruled out. It should
be noted that it is in the area of customs cooperation that the Gambians
estimate that much progress had been made under the Senegambian Confederation.
Tourism: the sky is the limit
The extent to which the collapse of the Confederation will
affect tourism is yet to be seen. Some of the facilities used by hotels in The
Gambia are imported from Senegal. In August/September when relations worsened
between the two countries hotels began rapidly to run out of cooking gas as
Senegal tightened controls, creating panic among hoteliers, and forcing some to
look frantically for alternative sources of supply. Tourism has become the
fastest-growing sector of The Gambia economy. It contributes as much as 10% of
the GDP and now employs some 7000 people directly and indirectly. Tourist
arrivals have increased from 86 000 in 1986/87 to 112 800 in 1988/89. This
figure is set to rise further in the 1989/90 season. A number of factors explain
the increasing attractiveness of The Gambia as a favoured destination. Apart
from the friendliness of the people, the country is peaceful and stable. It is
only 5½ hours flight from Europe and provides almost all the facilities
that other, further-off, destinations can boast of: fine unspoilt
beaches as the Gambians like to describe their coastline, good sunshine and warm
temperature. For lovers of nature, there are over 4 000 species of birds to
watch and there is the Abuko nature reserve where the Gambian authorities have
created a mini-park for some lions, crocodiles and other familiar African
wildlife.
Fifty-five percent of visitors to The Gambia are British, 15%
Scandinavian mostly Swedish, 14% French, and 4% Germans. Promotional campaigns
are continuing throughout Europe and the Gambians are so impressed by the
response of visitors that they plan to make tourism an all-year-industry and not
just a seasonal one that takes place between the months of October and April.
They also plan to extend the Tourist Development Area (TDA), which currently
covers the area between the Atlantic Hotel in Banjul along the coast to the
newly-established Senegambia Hotel, to Brufut. There are at the moment about 14
tourist hotels providing altogether 4 000 beds. More hotels are being planned,
for as far as the Gambians are concerned the sky is the limit in tourism. They
do not see a point where the number of arrivals will become unacceptable.
As long as The Gambia is a favoured destination we will accommodate
tourists, says the Minister of Information and Tourism, Dr Lamin Saho.
The extent to which The Gambia is benefitting from tourism,
however, remains the subject of criticisms by development experts. True enough,
they say, the industry earns foreign exchange, provides employment and has
down-stream effects on agriculture and the handicraft industry. But the majority
of tourists, they point out, come with package tours which have been paid for
abroad, leaving the country with little gain. The Gambia loses out in another
way. Dr Saho admits that there are very few Gambians actively involved in the
industry, in terms of investment. There are one or two who own hotels or cafes,
the rest are just employees. The industry is overwhelmingly in the hands of
foreigners.
Low standard of living
In a way this discrepancy in tourism (an industry that is
booming with very little benefit for the people) reflects more or less the
dichotomy in the economy as a whole: macroeconomic indicators showing rapid
economic recovery but no visible improvement in the standard of living of the
Gambians. The structural adjustment exercise meant the removal of subsidies and
retrenchment of public employees. Although President Al-Haji Sir Dawda Jawara
indicates in his interview with The Courier, that measures have been taken and
will be taken to alleviate the effects, unemployment is still widespread,
purchasing power is still very low despite the fall in inflation. There have
been price increases in such basic items as sugar (36%), rice (16%), groundnut
oil (15%), fruits and vegetables, meat, fish and eggs. Not only have subsidies
been removed on transport, there are not enough buses for city commuters. Indeed
transport in Banjul is a nightmare; irrespective of the payment of transport
allowances to workers, the roads are almost impracticable with nearly all the
streets dug up in projects that are advancing at a snails pace to provide
the capital with a sewerage system and improved telephone, water and electricity
services. Even works on the approaches to Banjul (the Second Highway Maintenance
Project and the Banjul/Serrekunda Highway Project, which once came to a
standstill after the original contractor ran off with nearly 80 % of the funds
allocated to it) are proceeding painfully slowly. These and many other projects
throughout The Gambia depend on foreign finance.
Considering its size and population, its dependence on one crop,
groundnuts and on a narrow range of other activities, its heavy dependence on
external finance for capital projects and it heavy debt burden (indeed for the
foreseeable future the country will continue to face heavy debt-servicing
despite generous rescheduling and some write-offs) the Gambian governments
ability to influence the pace of the countrys economic development in the
coming years is obviously limited. Its option for a market-oriented economy-to
rely on market forces to determine exchange rates, the interest rates as well as
the allocation of resources to the productive sectors of the economy-would
therefore appear logical. It would be interesting to watch whether The Gambia
which has been in the forefront of democratic practices in West Africa is
blazing the trail in economic liberalism.
Augustine OYOWE
Yundum: no economic spin offs from the shuttle
When the National Aeronautic Space Agency (NASA)
indicated early in 1989 that the Gambian international airport, Yundum, would be
its first choice in an emergency landing, of its shuttle spacecraft, there were
hopes that the decision would bring considerable economic spin-offs for the
Gambia. It was assumed that it would mean the upgrading of Yundum to meet the
shuttle requirements: lengthening the 4000-metre runway, for example, by an
extra 300 meters at either end and having some 60 or so staff on the ground.
US sources in Banjul, while confirming NASAs choice have
revealed to The Courier that nothing practically is planned for Yundum. The
airport, as it is, they say can receive the shuttle which will I automatically
deploy its safety catchnets on hitting; the tarmac.
It should be noted that the choice of Yundum by NASA was based
purely on technical grounds. NASA has already alternative emergency landing
sites in Morocco and Spain, but Yundum, unlike those two sites, lies directly
below the shuttles southern trajectory, which will make it easy for the
spacecraft, in the event of engine failure on take-off, to simply glide down
onto the Gambian airport. The Moroccan and Spanish bases suffer from not being
on the path of the shuttle which, in an emergency, would require at least that
some of its engines are working for the spacecraft to be manoeuvered for a
landing.
A.O.