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The economy of the Republic of the Congo
is a mixture of village agriculture and handicrafts,
an industrial sector based largely on petroleum extraction,
support services, and a government characterized by
budget problems and overstaffing. The Congo's growing
petroleum sector is by far the country's major revenue
earner. In the early 1980s, rapidly rising oil revenues
enabled the government to finance large-scale development
projects with GDP growth averaging 5% annually, one
of the highest rates in Africa. However, the government
has mortgaged a substantial portion of its oil earnings,
contributing to the government's shortage of revenues.
The Congolese oil sector is dominated by the French
parastatal oil company Elf Aquitaine, which accounts
for 70% of the country's annual oil production. In second
position is the Italian oil firm Agip. Chevron, independent
CMS Nomeco, and Exxon Mobil are among the American companies
active in petroleum exploration or production. Following
recent discoveries and oil fields currently under development,
Congo's oil production is expected to continue to rise
significantly in the next few years.
The country's abundant rain forests are the source
of timber. Forestry, which led Congolese exports before
the discovery of oil, continues to generate 10% of export
earnings, although high transportation costs, high wages,
and low productivity have hurt the forestry industry
in recent years.
Earlier in the decade, Congo's major employer was the
state bureaucracy, which had a payroll of 80,000, which
is enormous for a country of Congo's size. The World
Bank and other international financial institutions
pressured Congo to institute sweeping civil service
reforms in order to reduce the size of the state bureaucracy
and pare back a civil service payroll that amounted
to more than 20% of GDP in 1993. The effort to cut back
began in 1994 with a 50% devaluation that cut the payroll
in half in dollar terms and by a mid-year reduction
of nearly 8,000 in civil service employment and resulted
in inflation of 61%. Inflation has since subsided.
Between 1994-96, the Congolese economy underwent a
difficult transition. The prospects for building the
foundation of a healthy economy, however, were better
than at any time in the previous 15 years. Congo took
a number of measures to liberalize its economy, including
reforming the tax, investment, labor, and hydrocarbon
codes. Planned privatizations of key parastatals, primarily
telecommunications and transportation monopolies, were
launched to help improve a dilapidated and unreliable
infrastructure. To build on the momentum achieved during
the two-year period, the International Monetary Fund
(IMF) approved a three-year ESAF economic program in
June 1996.
By the end of 1996, Congo had made substantial progress
in various areas targeted for reform. It made significant
strides toward macroeconomic stabilization through improving
public finances and restructuring external debt. This
change was accompanied by improvements in the structure
of expenditures, with a reduction in personnel expenditures.
Further, Congo benefited from debt restructuring from
a Paris Club agreement in July 1996.
This reform program came to a halt, however, in early
June 1997 when war broke out. Denis Sassou-Nguesso,
who returned to power when the war ended in October
1997, publicly expressed interest in moving forward
on economic reforms and privatization and in renewing
cooperation with international financial institutions.
However, economic progress was badly hurt by slumping
oil prices in 1998, which worsened the Republic of the
Congo's budget deficit. A second blow was the resumption
of armed conflict in December 1998.
Congo's economic prospects remain largely dependent
on the country's ability to establish political stability
and democratic rule. The World Bank is considering Congo
for post-conflict assistance. Priorities will be in
reconstruction, basic services, infrastructure, and
utilities. President Sassou has publicly expressed interest
in moving forward on economic reforms and privatization,
as well as in renewing cooperation with international
financial institutions. However, the return of armed
conflict in 1998 hindered economic reform and recovery.
Congo and the United States ratified a bilateral investment
treaty designed to facilitate and protect foreign investment.
The country also adopted a new investment code intended
to attract foreign capital. Despite this, Congo's investment
climate is not considered favorable, offering few meaningful
incentives. High costs for labor, energy, raw materials,
and transportation; a restrictive labor code; low productivity
and high production costs; militant labor unions; and
an inadequate transportation infrastructure are among
the factors discouraging investment. The recent political
instability, war damage, and looting also will undermined
investor confidence. As a result, Congo has little American
investment outside of the oil sector. -
wikipedia.org
We have just started looking
in to the projects. The small and large ideas are coming
and the plan is to be ready in two months.
Congo Electrical Power use is at 125 KWH per person
from a goal of say 5000 KWH per person. This means that
we have to add many projects to increase the level and
hence the projects will provide the right path for socieconomic
sustainability. The catch is to provide correct projects
to make them sustainable and provide decent living for
all. We at Grina have the methodology for such a program.
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