<http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/31/opinion/31ottaway.html?th=&emc=th&pagewanted=print&position=>

The New York Times

March 31, 2005
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

Tyranny's Full Tank
 By MARINA OTTAWAY


Washington

THE skyrocketing price of oil in the last two years has translated into a
projected 42 percent increase in net oil export revenue for OPEC countries.
While the global economic impact of this jump remains unclear, it also
threatens to have a perverse political impact: even as the Bush
administration pushes the promotion of democracy in the Middle East and
elsewhere, market forces have given oil-rich autocratic regimes new revenue
with which to dispense patronage and buy off popular discontent.

Oil and democracy do not mix easily in countries that depend highly on oil
revenue. Among the 10 top oil exporters, only two (Mexico and Norway) are
truly democratic and only three (Nigeria, Russia and Venezuela), have even
limited elements of democracy. Of course, countries that do not export oil
can also be undemocratic, but evidence shows that oil revenue flowing
freely into government coffers has a particularly pernicious effect,
encouraging corruption and lack of accountability and fostering systems
based on patronage rather than popular representation. For countries that
discover large amounts of oil before their economies become diversified and
their regimes democratic, oil can easily become a curse.

Higher revenue will not eliminate all causes of social discontent in
oil-producing countries or silence all demands for political change. For
the younger generation in Iran chafing under the restrictions imposed by
the clerics, or Saudi reformers seeking modernization, additional
government spending will not decrease discontent. But for the impoverished
populations of Venezuela or Nigeria, and perhaps in the future for the
people of Iraq, increased government spending can foster acquiescence.

 Oil prices will remain high for the foreseeable future, yielding more
revenue to shore up authoritarian regimes and thus making transitions to
democracy more difficult. It is imperative for the international community,
led by the United States, to increase its so far timid efforts to curb the
political and developmental harm that oil revenue causes in poor countries.

 Some potentially far-reaching solutions are already in progress or on the
table. In Chad, the World Bank has insisted that 72 percent of all
dividends and royalties from fields developed with one of its loans be
spent on health, education, rural development and other investments to
fight poverty. It is still unclear whether such domestic and international
supervision of spending will be effective. It is already clear that
supervision will not be extended to the revenue from new fields being
developed without World Bank loans. Less needy now that oil has started to
flow, the Chad government is reasserting its independence.

Other ambitious models, like the "future generations" trust fund set up by
Norway to spread the benefits of oil over time, or the distribution of some
oil revenue directly to citizens, as is done in Alaska, cannot work in
autocratic countries with few other sources of revenue. They require
strong, efficient and honest government, as well as enough tax revenue from
other sources to pay for public services. They are unthinkable in corrupt,
oil-dependent Nigeria, for example, or in an Iraq that needs to rebuild its
shattered economy right now.

 The most promising initiatives so far are those that seek to put in the
hands of citizens more information about how much revenue their governments
receive and how they spend it, so they can demand accountability. The
Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, started in 2002 with the
support of the British government, helps governments, industry
representatives and citizens' organizations collect and reconcile
information on revenue from oil and other minerals.

 But so far only four countries are involved - Azerbaijan, Kyrgyzstan,
Nigeria and Ghana. The initiative, furthermore, does not monitor how the
money is spent. Major international organizations like Global Witness,
Oxfam, Save the Children and Transparency International have begun a
"Publish What You Pay Campaign" to pressure oil companies to disclose the
payments they make to governments in resource-rich countries.

 These initiatives, still too new to assess their degree of success, are
steps in the right direction. But participation is voluntary and backing by
some key players is weak - the United States in particular opposes
compulsory disclosure and has stayed aloof even from voluntary mechanisms.

 The international community needs to push Western oil companies and
recipient governments to disclose information and help citizens to use it
to hold governments accountable. It also needs to secure the cooperation of
state oil companies from countries like China and Malaysia, which have
ignored demands for disclosure. The time to do so is now, when oil prices
are high, and the sharp increase in producing countries' revenue could
translate into real progress for poor countries if well used, or perpetuate
the curse if it serves to shore up corrupt authoritarian governments.

Marina Ottaway is a senior associate in the Democracy and Rule of Law
Project at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.


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