As
the Bush Administration and Iraqi opposition groups plan the future
of a post-Saddam Hussein Iraq without its menacing arsenal of
weapons of mass destruction (WMD), economic issues loom large.
Iraq's economy has been grossly mismanaged, and its people largely
repressed, for 40 years. Iraq desperately needs an alternative to
the failed policies of its dictator. Sound economics are needed to
help the Iraqi people rebuild their lives and their country after
two decades of wars and four decades of repression under the
current regime.
Saddam's regime has succeeded in
bankrupting the country even though it boasts the world's second
largest oil reserves after Saudi Arabia. The oil sector provides
more than 60 percent of the country's gross domestic product (GDP)
and 95 percent of its hard currency earnings. Yet GDP for 2001, at
the market exchange rate, is estimated to be only about one-third
its level in 1989. Iraq also is hobbled by its $140 billion foreign
debt. This devastation was wrought by such policies as the
nationalization of the country's chief export commodity, oil;
extensive central planning of industry and trade; the 1982-1988 war
against Iran; and the invasion of Kuwait, which precipitated the
1991 Gulf War.
According to the U.S. General Accounting
Office, oil smuggling and illegal surcharges of 25 cents to 50
cents on a barrel of legal oil are providing the funds to bolster
Saddam's regime. Saddam's unaccounted revenues are at least $6.6
billion--money that he has been free to spend to develop WMD and
support terrorism in spite of economic sanctions imposed by the
United Nations on Iraq after the Persian Gulf War to force him to
give up his WMD. And Saddam still stubbornly refuses to meet the
terms for lifting the economic sanctions that the United Nations
has imposed on his regime.
The
road to economic prosperity in Iraq will not be easily paved, but
the Bush Administration can help the new Iraqi government achieve
fundamental structural reform with massive, orderly, and
transparent privatization of various sectors of the economy,
including the oil industry. The United States should offer its
guidance on establishing sound economic and trade policies to
stimulate growth and recovery.
Economic Reforms
for a Post-Saddam Iraq
After Saddam's brutal and repressive regime is ended, the
new government established by the people of Iraq should represent
all the major sub-national groups--the Shiite Arabs, the Sunni
Arabs, and the Kurds. The best model is a federal system that
includes the various factions. To succeed, Iraqi opposition leaders
will need a political commitment from the United States and other
international organizations that they will furnish the necessary
expertise and technical assistance. To gain that commitment, Iraq
will need to abandon statist policies of the past and become fully
committed to the principles of a market economy.
Privatization efforts in other countries
demonstrate that privately held infrastructure, oil, and oil
service companies generate greater efficiencies, improved
production, and higher revenues than do centrally planned and
state-owned industries. The same can be achieved in Iraq, whose oil
industry cannot thrive without access to global capital
markets.
In
particular, the Administration should work with opposition leaders
in Iraq to convince them now that a future Iraqi federal government
must develop mechanisms for privatizing these industries and taxing
oil sales, and for sharing the proceeds equitably with the three
major ethnic regions--the Shiite Arabs in the South, the Kurds in
the North, and the Sunni Arabs in the central region.
The
Bush Administration, its allies, and international organizations
should prepare, encourage, and support the future leaders of a
post-Saddam Iraqi government to develop a comprehensive economic
reform package. Specifically, a new federal Iraqi government must
take steps to:
- Create
a modern legal environment that recognizes property rights and is
conducive to privatization;
- Educate
and prepare the people of Iraq
for structural economic reform and privatization through a public
information campaign;
- Hire
Iraqi expatriates as well as other Western-educated Arabic speakers
with financial, legal, and business backgrounds to fill key
government positions on economic reform and privatization;
- Deregulate prices internally, including
in the utilities and energy sector;
- Prepare
state assets, including industries, utilities, transportation,
ports and airports, pipelines, and the energy sector, for
privatization;
- Keep
the budget balanced and inflation, taxes, and tariffs low; and
- Liberalize and expand trade, and launch an effort for
Iraq to join the World Trade Organization.
Conclusion
Economic growth will be an important contribution to the
stabilization of Iraq, allowing the United States and other forces
stationed there to depart after assuring that Iraq's WMD threat and
repressive regime have ended. Structural reform and comprehensive
privatization is a winning strategy for the people of Iraq, its
future government, the region, and the United States.
Such
a strategy will prove beneficial for the industrial world, the
countries of the Middle East, and the developing world. Iraq's
return to the global markets would allow a more abundant and stable
energy supply and a greater revenue flow for the Iraqi economy,
foster a higher living standard for the Iraqi people, and provide
numerous business opportunities for the region and the world. If
successful, Iraq's privatizations of its oil sector, refining
capacity, and pipeline infrastructure could serve as a model for
privatizations by other OPEC members, thereby weakening the
cartel's domination of the energy markets.
Dr.
Ariel Cohenis Research Fellow in Russian
and Eurasian Studies in the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis
Institute for International Studies, and Dr. Gerald P.
O'Driscoll, Jr., is Director of the Center for International
Trade and Economics, at The Heritage Foundation.