(introduction...)
Who has not seen or heard of well-documented analyses of the
non-viability of African countries, the precariousness of their economies
propped up by one or two raw materials, their tiny, split-up markets and the
very poor standard of their labour forces? Sao Tomamp; Principe, a former
Portuguese colony off the Gulf of Guinea, which has every one of those
handicaps, is virtually a caricature of these pictures.
This little country - 964 km² in area, with a population of
120 000 - gets 90% of its revenue from just one export product, cocoa, which
brought in $5.5 million last year to set off against imports of $24.5 million.
So its increasingly heavy debt, relatively speaking one of the heaviest in the
world, comes as no surprise. By the end of 1991, it owed $215 million, $83
million of it in arrears, which was four times its gross national product and
more than 20 times the value of its exports. Without any writing-off or
rescheduling, the servicing of this debt alone will account for 90% of export
revenue this year. Economists, as we all know, tend to cry disaster when
repayments reach 20% of exports, so what would they say to this? And Sao Tomamp; Principe has been running a structural adjustment programme since 1987!
After the main funders' mid-July Geneva meeting, the third of
its kind, the country now has to negotiate the easing of its debt and new
financing with each of its creditors. Even if a miracle happened and the clock
was wound back to zero (and there will be no miracle, because the bulk of the
money is owed to multilateral organisations which can neither reschedule nor
write off), the country would not be out of the wood, for it is heavily
dependent on imports of food and energy which a budget shortfall equal to half
its GNP prevents it from financing.
With indicators of this sort, it would take boundless optimism
indeed to dare predict economic recovery in the foreseeable future. One expert
told me pointedly that the international community, which poured in something
like $68 million in aid in 1990, would do better to put the money in the bank
and pay every Sao Tom an annual allowance with the interest instead - a jest,
no doubt (or was it?), but indicative of the state of mind which such apparently
inextricable problems can produce.
Yet despite the disastrous economic record, what faces the
foreign visitor to these islands is more paradise than apocalypse. There is
wonderful scenery, incredible luxuriance rising to the highlands from which
countless falls and mountain torrents flow down to never ending sandy beaches
fringed with coconut palms and the infinite shades of blue of the crystal sea.
Sao Tomnd Principe are two of the most beautiful islands in the tropics, of
that there is no doubt, and relative isolation has enabled them to save most of
their primitive vegetation. Some parts of Sao Tomre unexplored, even today,
although the island was discovered more than five centuries ago.
It was on 21 December 1470, St Thomas' day (hence the name),
that Portuguese mariners saw the island for the first time, but it was another
15 years before Captain Jose Paiva set up camp on the Ana de Chaves bay, on
the site of the present capital, and opened the way for colonisation by
Portuguese lords. They introduced sugar cane, to be grown by a servile labour
force, and, for a few short years in the 16th century, Sao Tomven became the
world's biggest sugar producer. The King of Portugal also used this distant land
as a kind of penal colony and exiled prisoners to it. In 1493, he sent 2000
Jewish 2-10 year olds, only a few hundred of whom survived the tropical diseases
and were still alive by the early 16th century.
But sugar output waned. In 1544, slaves escaping from Angola
were shipwrecked off the Rolas Channel. Once ashore, they gathered in the hills
of Sao Tomjoining up with more slaves in flight to launch murderous attacks
on the plantations. Everything in their path was laid to waste including, in
1574, the capital. Terrified, most of the Portuguese colonials emigrated to
Brazil, leaving the plantations in the hands of their mulatto children.
Anarchy reigned for two centuries, with internal fighting,
Angolan slave attacks and visits from pillaging French and Dutch pirates, who
occupied the island more than once. All this time, the colony was a crossroads
for the slave trade and Principe especially became a gathering and victualling
point for negro slave ships, so the capital was moved there for a century
(1753-1852), only to return after the official ban on slave trading in 1836, by
which time Sao Tomad become a prosperous centre for the coffee and cocoa
trade.
It was the Governor of the time who brought coffee to Sao Tomn 1800, while cocoa was introduced, initially as a decorative plan, in 1822.
For decades, the two crops were grown side by side, although coffee dominated
until slavery was abolished in 1875. The slaves were freed and they left the
plantations before the harvest, thus completing the planters' ruin. Following
advice from the Portuguese bank which invested in the plantations, emphasis was
now placed on cocoa and the Government authorised employers to go to Angola to
recruit workers on terms very similar to those of the slaves, for they could not
go home until their contracts expired. According to the May 1946 issue of the
National Geographic Magazine, cocoa planters in Trinidad & Tobago were still
being offered Sao Tomlantations complete with buildings and slaves at the
beginning of the 20th century.
In 1889, cocoa outstripped coffee for the first time and, in
1913, Sao Tomas the world's biggest producer, with 36 500 t of high quality
cocoa much sought after on the London market, the main outlet.
The country, its plantation economy on the wane, ticked over
gently between the two World Wars and went slowly on until 1953, when bloody
repression of a popular uprising triggered the nationalist awakening, as the
Portuguese army massacred a thousand Sao Toms demonstrating against attempts
to force them to work on the plantations. The Sao Tomamp; Principe Liberation
Movement (MLSTP), the direct result of this, was set up in Libreville and it
worked mainly through diplomatic channels. In 1973, internal discussions led its
historic leader Miguel Trovoada to make way for Manuel Pinto de Costa, who
became President when the country, along with other Portuguese territories,
became independent two years later, in the wake of Portugal's spring revolution.
The new President went for a Marxist-Leninist rme, brought
the whole of the islands under State ownership, with compensation-free
nationalisation of all plantations of more than 200 ha and all businesses, and
opened a series of 'people's stores'. But the decline in cocoa output combined
with poor management of State firms rapidly created economic crisis, forcing the
Government to switch directions. The economic liberalisation of 1985 went hand
in hand with a more open political climate, leading to the adoption of a
multi-party system in 1989, a decision ratified by referendum in August 1990. In
January 1991, the former single party, despite a face-lift by Carlos Gra the
former opposition leader-in-exile (in Gabon) and now leader, was defeated at the
legislative elections by the Party of Democratic Convergence-Think Tank (PDC-GR)
and Daniel Daio, its leader, became Prime Minister. This lasted until a
difference of opinion over the presidential powers brought him into conflict
with Miguel Trovoada (elected to the Presidency, unopposed, in March 1991) and
the former was replaced by his Finance Minister, Norberto da Costa Alegre.
Land of ro
Ro the Portuguese word for 'plantation', is soon familiar to
the visitor and reasonably enough too, for the whole country's history hinges on
them, sugar first, coffee next and cocoa after that. Some even talk about the
whole country as a plantation, because the ro occupy 90% of the arable land,
almost all that can be used. During the colonial period, there were 45
medium-sised and large plantations, which the Government has since combined to
make 15 State plantations. The biggest of all is the impressive Empresa Agricola
Agostinho Neto, 6000 ha of northern Sao Tomnd once known as Rio do Ouro after
the river which runs through it. There is lovely Agua Iz5000 ha of cocoa
bushes on the west coast, and there is Monte Cafthose 1800 ha of highlands in
the interior, which, despite a serious decline in output over the past 20 years
(150 t down to only 15 t), can still produce some of the finest coffee in the
world.
The rosystem is far more than a way of growing things. It is
a whole way of life and work which has long shaped the society and the landscape
of these islands. The ro, which were designed for the production and export
of cocoa, provided the workers with all they needed to live, in exchange for
their work. There were houses for them and their families, usually also employed
somewhere on the plantation. There was (mostly imported) food such as rice and
meat. There was a school for the children and there was medical treatment, for
every big plantation had a decently-equipped hospital to cater for the main
diseases - in some cases, a highly impressive edifice such as in Agostinho Neto,
where there are wide verandas and red tile roofs. The best buildings, of course,
richly furnished houses in impeccably-tended gardens, were for the bosses and
some of their furniture and paintings from the 1920s, perfectly preserved, can
still be seen at Agua Iz
When William Smyser wrote about life on the plantations and the
delightfully welcoming hospitality of the planters in the May 1946 National
Geographic, he said he felt he had been back in time to the charm and romance of
the American deep south.
In America and Sao Tomlike, this way of life was closely
linked to the exploitation of a labour force made up of slaves or - not much
different - the contract workers whom employers 'forgot' to repatriate when
their time was up. In America, it failed to survive the abolition of slavery and
the war of secession and, in Sao Tomit went with the end of colonisation and
the breakdown of special relations with the former metropolis.
Independence did not just trigger the mass departure of
thousands of planters and their staff. It was also the end of safe outlets at
guaranteed prices in Portugal. Overnight, everything became more complicated,
starting with transport. The Portuguese ships which had stopped so often at Sao
Tomo pick up the cocoa harvest on their way to and from Angola now rarely
came. The country's output, down to 4640 t p.a. after independence from the 11
586 t of 1973, was of no interest to the big ship-owners (whose vessels could
not in any case put into Sao Tomecause there was no deep-water port), when,
Cd'Ivoire, say, produced an average of 600 000 t p.a. And, with high
humidity, any delay in shifting production lowered both the quality of the cocoa
and the income to be derived from it.
Norberto da Costa Alegre put his finger on the problem when he
spoke to the third funders' conference in Geneva in mid-July. 'We thought', he
said, 'that we could take over our cocoa heritage from the colonial era and that
it would bring us in all the foreign exchange we needed. We were wrong on two
counts. First of all, with supply increasing and demand falling off,
agricultural commodities are fetching less and less on the world market. Second,
the cocoa on our plantations was produced under duress. The labour relations
brought in after independence, combined with a critical financial situation in
the cocoa sector which precluded proper worker motivation, led to
demobilisation, followed by a decline in both the productive and the social
infrastructure'.
Production today is stagnant at around 4000-5000 t. Yields, at
0.32 t per ha, are very low in comparison with the 2 t per ha of modern
plantations in other countries and the bushes themselves are old, 30 years on
average, which bodes ill for the future.
Restore the plantations
What can a small, poor, isolated place like Sao Tomamp;
Principe do when it loses its only source of income? If the answer is not
'deciding that the country is not economically viable and shutting up shop just
as if you were in business', an idea rejected out of hand by the leaders,
particularly Arlindo Afonso Carvalho, the Minister of Economic and Financial
Affairs, then it has to be trying to save what can be saved and looking for
other resources - which is exactly what the Government has been doing since
1987. In that year, it took the country into a structural adjustment programme
backed by two loans from the IBRD and three-year financing from the IMF's
structural adjustment facility. With help from various funders, including the
World Bank, the Caisse Centrale de Cooption, the African Development
Bank and others, it is launching a plan to upgrade six of the 15
State ro, totalling 10000ha, or 40% of the land under cocoa. Management and
rehabilitation contracts are being signed with foreign (Portuguese, Belgian and
French) firms, but the Government does not seem satisfied with the results so
far, because the plantations are still running at a loss - which it has to
cover. So it is trying to renegotiate the present contracts. Under the new
leases, the management companies will have to finance their investments with
their own funds, maintain the value of State assets and pay a rent reflecting
the production potential. Alongside this, it is hoping to sign management
contracts for the State's other nine plantations and distribute the rest of the
land to small producers. But, with prices dwindling on a world cocoa market
oversupplied for years, will it find any takers on these new terms? Possibly
not...
The other big event in the country's agricultural policy is
diversification. On independence, let us not forget, Sao Tomamp; Principe
inherited structures dedicated to cocoa production, in which the workers had
neither the right nor therefore the means of growing anything else, and the
country was and still is heavily dependent on imported food. The only exceptions
are bananas, which are everywhere, quite literally, and tubers such as taro,
which is common and traded on a small scale with Gabon. Market gardening began
in 1985 and there is now a drive to sell cabbages, carrots, tomatoes and beans
to Gabon, although Agriculture and Rural Development Minister Josuis Mendes
says that this is only an experiment to get to grips with the Gabonese market.
As he sees it, the only way out is regional integration. That is what will
enable the islands to sell more abroad. Meanwhile, he is hoping to strike a
balance between food production and food aid by encouraging the development of
such crops as beans and maize.
Another attempt at diversification is the EEC-financed 600 ha
Ribeira Peixe oil palm plantation and the palm oil processing plant floated with
an EIB loan. This could meet local demand, thus saving on the precious foreign
exchange currently spent on imported table oil. That, at least, was the
intention, but the oil from Ribeira Peixe is unprocessed, whereas the locals are
used to having theirs refined, so there is competition from the imported product
and a problem of making extra investments in refining. The plant has already
been forced to slow down its machinery because of existing stocks and, on top of
that, with the main generator broken down since February 1991, it is now relying
on a single back-up generator and mortgaging its future in the process. A
technician who actually went out to Sao Tomamp; Principe in December 1991
could not work out what was wrong and the parts he took back with him to Europe
still have not been returned.
Diversifying also means developing fisheries. There are
currently 3000 artisanal fishermen, but numbers are declining because structural
adjustment has pushed up fuel costs. Demand is an estimated 5000 t p.a., but the
fishermen are increasingly unable to meet this. In fact, the annual catch has
fallen from 3500 t to 2000 t following the fuel price increase, according to
Trade, Industry, Tourism and Fisheries Minister Arsemiro Ribeira da Costa dos
Prazeres. There is some semi-industrial fishing too, landing 900 t p.a. Two of
the six vessels involved here are trawlers belonging to the State, which is
anxious to sell them to private owners, but, for the moment, they represent its
part in joint ventures with French companies. The other big scheme in this field
is the Bight of Benin marine resources assessment operation, an EDF-financed
regional project which should, the Minister maintains, lay scientific
foundations on which to renegotiate the fisheries agreement with the EEC and
improve on the previous terms.
However, the big ambition of the country's leaders on the
economic diversification front is to make it a major tourist attraction. They
see Seychelles, with $4000 per capita p.a. from the tourist trade, as the
shining example and are forever singing the praises of their own country's
potential, with its rare flora and fauna, its views and its beaches. And they
feel they are right, because investors are already talking about developing the
tourist trade on the islands. One French group hopes to open a holiday centre of
15 or so bungalows soon, the main target being a wealthy clientele in the oil
companies in Gabon and Congo. Then there is Christian Herringer, the enigmatic
businessman of German and South African origins, whose Filippino employees are
putting the finishing touches to a top-flight complex for very wealthy
holidaymakers on Principe. Her ringer has many interests in Sao Tomamp;
Principe. Not only is there his imposing sea-front property. He was also
associated with the State in Equatorial, the airline which flew between Gabon
and Sao Tomamp; Principe several times a week. With Equatorial in
liquidation, the country will have an acute communications problem once more,
particularly as the regular line to the outside world, the weekly TAP flight to
Lisbon, is nearly empty and likely to be withdrawn if the plan to privatise this
Portuguese airline is carried out.
Yet the country has just built a new airport at vast expense -
it came to nearly $20 million in the end, three times the original quotation -
and the new terminal is one of the cornerstones of the Government's tourist
strategy. Another essential is the campaign to control malaria, the country's
biggest cause of death, for there is no point in developing tourist activity if
the disease cannot be eradicated. With this in mind, a fact-finding mission is
due to visit Seychelles in a couple of months to see how far Sao Tomamp;
Principe can do what Seychelles did.
Will the cocoa country be the next place the international jet
set turns to in its quest for exclusiveness? That is what the leaders seem to be
counting on in hoping that the tourist trade will create enough jobs for the
islands' increasing numbers of young people. In Sao Tomamp; Principe, the
average woman has seven children, Health Mini Minister Dulce Gomes told me. The
population is expanding at the rate of 2.9 % p.a. and, outside the country's
natural beauty, as the Tourist Minister so baldly puts it, the only real
employment alternative is emigration. There are already 10 000 nationals living
abroad in Angola and regularisation of the situation would be a relief. But is
this a matter for State policy?
One thing is certain. Everyone in Sao Tomamp; Principe,
majority and opposition alike, is convinced that there is no future in cocoa.
All they need is a viable
alternative...