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Minister Amara Konneh, Ministry
of Planning & Economic Affairs |
To Become a Middle Income Country by
2030 Growth Must Have a
Broad Reach - Planning
Minister
Reed Kramer
29 November 2010
interview
Washington, DC — Amara Konneh recently
returned to his post as Liberia's
minister of planning and economic
affairs and a member of President Ellen
Johnson Sirleaf's economic management
team, following a brief interruption in
early November when the president sent
her entire Cabinet on administrative
leave. When Konneh was a young man, he
fled Liberia after much of his family
was killed during the civil war in 1990.
He joined his sister in Guinea, where he
started a school for refugees and
eventually gained asylum to enter the
United States. He earned a bachelor's
degree from Drexel University and a
graduate degree in Management
Information Systems from Penn State
University. He worked for a decade for
the Vanguard investment group before
playing a key role in Johnson Sirleaf's
come-from-behind 2006 campaign.
Konneh served as the president's deputy
chief of staff for public affairs before
taking leave in 2007 to pursue a
master's degree in Public Administration
at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of
Government. He was named to his current
post in August 2008 and was among the
first ministers to be recalled as the
Cabinet was being reformulated. On a
visit to Washington in October, Konneh
outlined how he believes the
government's new development strategy,
Liberia RISING 2030, will transform
Liberia into a middle-income country in
two decades. Here are excerpts from part
one of the two-part interview:
The president has made poverty
reduction a top priority and mandated
you to lead the effort. How are you
tackling the task?
The Poverty Reduction Strategy is our
three-year development agenda running
from 2008 to 2011 before the elections.
The process involved consultations
across the country - in towns and
villages in all 15 counties. We had
close to 600 consultations across the
country - probably one of the most
intense consultative processes in the
history of the nation.
We were able to understand from the
people themselves what they thought the
government needs to focus on in these
three years - roads, schools and
clinics. And that became the Lift
Liberia Poverty Reduction Strategy (PRS).
We are in the final year of
implementation.
What are some of the successes and
what are the disappointments to date?
First, the progress we made on the PRS
is enormous. We have laid the foundation
to enhance our security environment. The
abolishment of the old army and the
creation of the new one was a poverty
reduction intervention. In the
consultation process, the people
expressed clearly their distrust in the
old army that was used to abuse their
rights. And so the policy decision was
made to dissolve the security apparatus,
build a new one, beginning with the
police and then the army. We have
invested in the new police and the new
army to provide security for the
Liberian people - held democratically
accountable to do that.
Our other success is on the economic
front - the second pillar of the PRS,
the economic revitalization pillar. The
key issue in there was to get the huge
debt burden off Liberia's back.
When this administration took office, it
inherited an external debt burden of
U.S.$4.9 billion dollars. Today, that
burden is literally zero. So we embarked
on an intense HIPC process, the Heavily
Indebted Poor Countries Initiative,
putting in place public financial laws
and systems. Revitalizing the General
Auditing Commission to ensure that we
have transparency and accountability in
the areas of public financial
management. We reached the HIPC
completing point in June of this year
and got a debt waiver. We also went to
the Paris Club [made up of the world's
largest economies] and got a debt
waiver.
We have taken measures to ensure that we
were touching the lives of ordinary
people. We are making the right
investments with a very small budget.
On the health side, we have reopened all
of our major referral hospitals. We have
just built one in Tapeta to serve the
population in the north and another in
the southeast of the country. We have
reduced the infant mortality rate, the
malaria rates and the HIV rates in the
country. We are still struggling with
stabilizing the maternal mortality rates
because most of the women are not going
to the clinic and the health centers to
deliver. They are using midwives and
home delivery method which is a cultural
issue.
Also, we are resuscitating agriculture,
particularly the small holders and
small-crop farmers.
The other success is in the area of
infrastructure. All of the roads and the
bridges in the country were out
following the war. Today, we can boast
about rehabilitating the primary roads
in the country, the streets of the
capital and the newly paved highway from
Monrovia to Buchanan, which is a major
economic corridor. We are also working
with our development partners to do the
feeder and secondary roads that lead to
farms and other areas for people to move
their crops.
In the area of basic services, we have
restored some energy to Monrovia and its
environs. We have restored pipe-born
water to about 80 percent of the
population of Monrovia, which is about
1.3 million. We have also restored
running water in the cities of Kakata
and Zwedru. All of this was part of the
PRS program.
As a result of free and compulsory
primary education, we have seen an
upsurge in the education rate. You have
more kids in school today than in 2004.
We are now investing in teacher training
with support from the government and the
international community, so that we can
certify our teachers and bring them up
to West African standards.
What are your biggest challenges?
The biggest challenge is human capital.
We still have not been able to create
sufficient jobs, especially for the
youth. We have about U.S.$18 billion in
foreign direct investments in the
pipeline from Arcelor Mittal, Sime
Darby, Golden Veroleum, China Union, BHP
Billiton and now Chevron is here as
well. (See Government Signs Up Chevron
as Oil Exploration Partner)
But they have not started operations at
the level where they can begin to create
direct jobs for Liberians. That will
take some time. The war created a
situation where there was a brain drain
in Liberia. We don't have the capacity
to implement relative to the potential
that the country should have in terms of
all of the goodwill that's coming from
the international community so that's
hurting us quite a bit.
Another challenge we have in the
implementation of our development agenda
is sector coordination or sector
leadership. We have a situation where
NGOs are implementing most of the
programs with good intent. But some of
them are not really aligned to the
development agenda. The donors, because
of this lack of capacity, are hesitant
to infuse their support in a way that we
will begin to see a dramatic improvement
in implementation. We are going to use
this experience as our lessons learned
and begin to correct them through policy
measures.
How does Liberia RISING 2030 differ
from the PRS?
It's a long-term development agenda. The
PRS was just for three years - a short
term to lay the foundation for this
long-term work - and it's going to focus
on resolving some of the socio-political
anomalies that we have had within our
country. Also, to tackle some of the
economic issues that will now leverage
all of the investments that we have in
the pipeline, the gains we have made. It
puts the country on the trajectory to a
middle-income status by 2030.
How do you make happen such a rapid
rise from impoverished to middle income?
First, we need to step back as a country
to look at our history. In Africa, we
are a unique country by virtue of our
founding. Because of the way we were
founded, we have a huge division in the
country amongst various groups. You have
the issue of inequality, the issue of
marginalization, the founding
constitution.
What do you do about it? We have to
think about where Liberia was in the
early 60s to early 70s. We had about a
decade and half of growth. When we got
to the 1970s, we began to see turbulence
in the economy until the economy
collapsed in 1990. Why? Because the
institutions for resolving conflicts,
the institutions for managing property
right, the institutions for
decentralizing power from the center to
the periphery were weak.
So we are not going to focus only on the
hard economic issues of jobs creation
and wealth creation for our people, but
we will also focus on the
socio-political issues that we did not
take into account when we were in the
60s and 70s registering the growth
numbers.
You want growth to reach a wider
swath of the population?
Precisely. It has to be equitable. And
it has to be distributed. We are
anchoring this new strategy on a growth
corridor concept that we have developed.
Here's the concept: Currently in
Liberia, you have about five economic
corridors and they all originate from
Monrovia. You have a large section of
the country in the southeast that is not
connected to this corridor, so they are
outside of the whole economic spectrum
of the country. We need to focus less on
Monrovia being Liberia and focus more on
the rest of the country being Liberia.
We are going to put a corridor in the
southeast with the Putu Mining Company.
We are going to use our extractive
sector to start this corridor process
and the agro-forestry sector as well. We
have now put a mining concession in the
southeast for the first time. And we
have put a big oil palm concession in
the southeast as well. And then we need
to link them to the corridor that is
originating from Monrovia. That is why
the corridor from Monrovia to Buchanan
is relevant.
And then you have a new corridor from
Buchanan to Yekepa and the Guinea border
through Mittal steel. That is going to
link the south of the country to the
north. The one in the southeast is going
to be linked from Nimba all the way to
River Gee, without going through
Monrovia. What we are going to see over
a 10-year period is the decongestion of
Monrovia because there will be
opportunities in the southeast of the
country. And those opportunities will
attract people to go out there.
We cannot forget the issue of land
distribution - property rights. If we
are going to get to middle-income
country status, we are going to have to
build the institutions that will ensure
property rights are protected and
conflicts are resolved. We don't have
that in Liberia right now, but are
working on it.
Another issue that the corridors bring
into play is regional trade. Liberia has
3.4 million people – a very small
market. But if you were to include Cote
d'Ivoire, Guinea and Sierra Leone,
easily, you have about 30 million people
- a much bigger market.
The challenge for us as a government is
what kinds of strategies we put into
place to tap into the potential wealth
of Guinea, using our infrastructure. The
potential agriculture expertise in Cote
d'Ivoire - even though they have a
governance problem, they are among the
largest cocoa and coffee producers in
the world. And then Sierra Leone as
well. The corridors are lined up to link
to our neighbors, and regional trade is
going to be key.
If you are seeing the development of
resources as a key driver and you have
an inflow of capital coming from
outside, how do you ensure that benefits
spread and that, for example, Liberia's
own business sector is part of this
growth strategy?
First, the way we have done mineral
concessions is to negotiate the terms to
include social benefits for the
communities. We have established a fund
where all of the concessionaires
contribute for the building of schools,
hospitals, clinics, market grounds and
playgrounds for the kids in these
communities.
The other thing included is
infrastructure. When they build a power
plant, we ensure that the excess energy
is distributed amongst the population so
they can tap into the benefits. We have
also included the building of primary
roads and reconditioning of roads. In
terms of employment, we have insisted
that Liberians be given preference. The
companies are going to be creating
15-30,000 direct and indirect jobs, and
this will begin the growth process.
Improving infrastructure, creating jobs
and establishing commercial links are
part of the Liberian government's
strategy to boost the nation's economic
standing.In the PRS period we focused on
attracting foreign direct investment. In
the 2030 strategy, our focus is going to
be on the Liberian private sector side,
which I refer to as 'the missing middle'
- the small and medium-size businesses.
Our policies focus on giving Liberian
businesses access to finance and access
to capacity building in the areas of
proposal writings, accounting, finance
and marketing. They don't have that.
We have to look at financing - interest
rates, payment periods, etc. - to make
it easier for a local Liberia person to
take a loan and do business.
In part two of the interview on
Wednesday, Konneh talks about
reconciliation, the role gender plays in
boosting Liberia's stature and how
Liberia RISING fits in ahead of the 2011
elections.
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