Anti-corruption war: When too many
‘cooks’ spoil the meal
Despite
Prime Minister Yang’s “contingency plan for fast-tracking economic growth in
Cameroon”, one stop office at the port to speed up the clearance of goods
and registration of business in less than a week, the World Bank has still
failed the Biya regime in its latest Doing Business Report.
The
report indicates that Cameroon has regressed from its previous ranking
coming 161st position, the same score three years ago. The
authors took ten key areas such as construction permits,
electricity, registering property, getting credit, protecting investors,
paying taxes, trading across borders, enforcing contracts and resolving
insolvency into consideration
It
is having an impressive record in doing business in a country that a government
can afford to attract foreign investment and provide jobs to the millions of
unemployed and under employed Cameroonians. The business sector, not the
government that employs just one percent of the population, is the principal
engine that can offer the solution to such debilitating problems of poverty
alleviation through the provision of jobs.
Cameroon’s
much trumpeted plan to attract investment is aligned to the Growth and
Employment Strategy Paper (GESP) and prepared in a participatory manner with
the support of organisations representing the private sector. The private
sector is the main locomotive of growth. Consequently, the actions and measures
adopted aim inter alia at improving the business climate, modernising the
production machinery, strengthening access and availability of factors of
production, fostering access to financing and accelerating industrialisation.
The plan also offers “the search for robust growth and
job creation with the pillars of the national development strategy being
implemented by public authorities. A substantially higher Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) will not only take the country closer to emergence but also
positively affect the country’s performance and hence foreign direct and
national investments and fiscal revenue, the plan points out.
Prime Minister Yang’s contingency plan for fast-tracking
economic growth in Cameroon also aims to achieve a growth rate of at least 6%
in 2014 and to reap other substantial spinoffs in coming years, in terms of
higher production and increased national wealth to stimulate investments
especially for small and medium size enterprises.
On
paper and in speeches, the government is providing a lot of incentives for
local and foreign investors such as tax exemptions for business start-ups,
registration of businesses within three days, and provision of land in
industrial zones for relatively cheap rates. There is also abandoned work force
with a liberal labour code that significantly favours investors more than
employees since wages are negotiable.
Faced
with the rising cost of unemployment, unscrupulous investors use it to under
pay employees to reap windfall profits.
Why
then with those enticing advantages is the Cameroon business environment not
rated among the very best, at least in Africa? Why has the Doing Business
Report like previous others by the International Monetary Fund not given
Cameroon a pass mark?
The IMF earlier pointed out that
Cameroon's economic growth rate which was predicted to rise by 5 percent in
2013 and 6 percent this year is performing even below the average in the
Sub-Saharan African region.
The
IMF report indicates that Cameroon's present economic performance would lead to
a 5.4 percent growth rate in 2020, far below government’s forecast of 10.2
percent when the country had initially prepared to achieve a 6.1 per cent
economic growth rate in 2013 but later scaled it down to 4.8 per cent. The
Central African sub-regional average for the same period was 5 per cent, said
the IMF adding that it was “not good enough to meet the development objectives
of the State."
Apart
from disappointing economic indicators, the balance of trade continues to
nose-dive in its aggravated perennial deficit of 1054 billion francs in 2013.
The latest statistics provided by the National Institute of Statistics shows an
average of 242.96 billion francs from 2001 to 2013, reaching an all time
high of 304.50 billion francs in 2006 and a record low of -1142.70 billion
francs in 2012.
For
an economy planning to emerge, it is no sign of progress . The country
needs to have a positive balance of payment by exporting more especially
processed agricultural products and timer. As
observed in Doing Business Report, investors will not put their money where the
risk is high. Cameroon’s outstanding economic policies will be empty of any
good if not translated into practice through good governance. Corruption still
remains the bane in registering business, taxation, imports, payment for work
done and in the award of contracts.
At
The Guardians Post, we are aware of the measures the government has
embarked upon to fight corruption. There are anti-corruption units in each
ministry and parastatal, there is the national anti- corruption commission,
(CONAC), the supreme state audit, the financial bench of the supreme court and
an audit department at the ministry of territorial administration and
decentralization to scrutinize councils.
Too
many cooks, it is said, spoil the meal. Does the government not think
these organs are too many to overlap each other and in the process make the
“war” against corruption ineffective? It is open knowledge that despite the
so-called tender boards strewn left right and centre, be they answerable to the
ministry of public contracts or councils and corporations, corruption still
continues to rear its ugly head.
And
those who are beneficiaries: customs officials, taxation, treasury, the police,
gendarmes et all do not even conceal their elicit wealth. They flaunt it so
arrogantly in the luxury jeeps they ride and kingly mansions they own despite
their very moderate salaries.
Corruption
continues to be an impediment in the country’s economic growth and as long as
the fight against it cannot be intensified from the top down, it will continue
to dampen the prospects of doing business in Cameroon.
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