Leonard Fong Roka
Bougainville is said to be the largest and
richest island of the Solomon archipelago. In the dream days, oral history
claims that most traditional trade goods from as far as Malaita Island ended up
in Bougainville. In fact, this is still a mutual practice today for the divided
people, where there is always a presence of traders from all over the southern
Solomon in the many popular post conflict Bougainvillean markets.
This is one indicator that, in economic
terms, Bougainville has the potential—without a large scale mining project—to
be an economic power house to its citizens and its sister islands and people
that make up the economically weaker independent state of Solomon Islands.
Divine Word University student, Shallum Tabea at my cocoa dryer in Arawa
In Bougainville’s economic history, the
year 1989, should be noted as the year that the island economy that was driving
the state of Papua New Guinea came to a standstill due to the armed secessionist
conflict. This crisis was the outcome of the systematic denial of Bougainville
freedom to decision making for its betterment; rather, Bougainville was a slave
to aliens that exploited her and gave back nothing tangible in economic terms.
To Bougainville and its people, subsistence
economic activity was the mainstay through the pre-colonial days till today.
Bougainvilleans live by toiling their customary land; growing food crops and
domesticating animals for food are an ongoing art of survival.
However, for the sole benefit of PNG,
colonialism introduced mining into the Bougainville psyche. This had many
Bougainvilleans to see that a massive export oriented resource extraction
industry is the only way for economic progress in most developing countries.
Thus leaders in the ABG and even external
advisors want to see the reopening of the Panguna mine as an impact project to
kick-start the Bougainville economy.
But what most Bougainvilleans should learn
or be taught is the massive scale of resource extraction industries in PNG that
has no physical evidence of positive change in the society and people.
Everywhere, one travels in PNG towns there is urban decay; porthole infested
public roads and streets; fearful squatter settlements and massive unemployment,
crime and an Asian takeover of cottage businesses that the Papuans & New
Guineans ought to be owners of.
But to the Papua New Guineans, this is
positive development or a way to development despite the fact that this is a
globalizing world where natural resource exploitation is at an alarming rate out-matching
the economic growth rate of PNG that is again, outstripped by the population
growth; and not that 17 century when Europe began painstakingly embracing
industrialization through step by step growth taking off from simple
agriculture.
Bougainville’s future economic success, as
every developing state should be, must solely depend on a selfish development
of an agricultural base. This is well documented by W.W Rostow’s 1960’s book, The 5 Stages of Economic Growth that emphasizes
the significance of an agricultural base to kick-start economic growth and
development for developing countries.
That is, the Bougainville government and
people should invest into any cash crop that the land of Bougainville can
support. And two such crops that had long economic impact on Bougainville are
cocoa and copra.
In the 2008 research paper by Ian Scales
and Raoul Craemer, Market Chain
Development in Peace Building, it was noted that the Solomon island of Bougainville
was the major producer of cocoa for the PNG economy.
‘An annual average of about 15 600 tonnes
per year was produced in ten years prior to the crisis (1979-1989)’.
The paper noted that productions ceased in
1990 with the spread of the crisis. But from 1997 as peace began gaining
momentum, cocoa production rose significantly at an annual average of 11 200
tonnes. This growth by 2006 had reached an average pre-crisis mark of 15 000
tonnes per year. But to Bougainville’s disadvantage this cocoa is recorded as
East New Britain cocoa since all buyers of Bougainville cocoa are Rabaul based.
Among the most notable rascals of
Bougainville cocoa and even copra are these non-Bougainvillean companies such
as Outspan, Garamut and Agmark. They also have local Bougainvillean agents that
buy cocoa or copra under their license.
In the same note, also runs Bougainville
copra production industry. Before the 1988-89 crisis, copra production on
Bougainville ran from 1978-89 at rates well above 20 000 tonnes per annum. In
1990 it dropped but began rising from 1992 to a height of 10 000 tonnes per
year with disruptions in 2001-2003 and sadly, all these Bougainville labor and
fruit goes to East New Britain province and other PNG provinces.
This is significant revenue for
Bougainville if Bougainvilleans can establish local Bougainvillean companies
for direct export of their resources to international markets instead of
feeding PNG’s East New Britain province and others.
In the same situation also is the
Bougainville’s alluvial gold small scale mining industry. Bougainville
resources are not benefiting Bougainville but generating income for PNG;
Bougainvilleans just labor to exploit their land as it was with the BCL.
According to Martyn Namorong’s 2011
article, Bougainville’s Weak Government
Unable to Stop Looting, it is noted that Albert Kinani who is the head of
the screening committee of the ABG commerce department as estimating that K300
million worth of gold is leaving Bougainville illicitly.
This figure could be supported by a 2010
story by Satish Chand, Bougainville
Bouncing Back that noted a local essayist as smelting 1.5 to 2 kilograms of
gold per week. At the price of US$43 per gram this converts to US$ 64 500 to
US$ 86 000 valued worth of production per week.
Again this are Bougainville natural
resources that are not being generating drastic socio-economic change for
Bougainvilleans because Bougainvilleans are not working to take full
entrepreneurial ownership of their labor and resources to boost the island’s
internal revenue.
With full control of these few but
currently major resources for the peoples’ cash income, Bougainville can be
sure to develop other still idle agricultural resources that are struggling to
develop because the Bougainville leaders don’t want a self-reliant Bougainville
by protecting local farmers.
All these problems and myopic politics is
the fruit of Bougainville leaders playing Bougainville politics in Papua New
Guinea shoes despite the fact that the island had lost 20 000 people under the
lethal PNG shoes of politics.
Thus, looking at these few agricultural
crops and sustainably exploited non-renewable resources, Bougainville does not
really need a massive impact project to kick-start development on the island.
But all Bougainville needs is responsible management skills to the people and a
visionary political leadership at the government level.