Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-22dnz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T19:01:48.608Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Nationalization and the Displacement of Development Policy in Zambia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Extract

In this article it shall be argued that the Zambian government's decision to nationalize its only major industry—large international copper companies—undermined the government's major development objectives toward the mining industry. By taking majority ownership of the copper corporations, the government inadvertently modified its original policy objectives and shifted toward the policy objectives of the copper companies. The force behind the government's impetus for change in its policy orientation did not come from Zambian administrators who supposedly became bourgeois, nor did it develop as a result of an increase in the power of the mining companies. Rather the government's participation in the companies institutionally linked governmental policy criteria with the criteria in use by the mining corporations, measured more by profit margins and less by the social criteria of development and public welfare.

Political leaders apparently thought that they could achieve their developmental goals through their control of the copper companies and could thus avoid making major public investments to achieve those goals. Leaders appeared to see the government's ownership of the copper companies as being a relatively cost free way to develop the country. Not only did this prove impossible, however, but when the copper industry experienced a financial crisis after 1975, the government as the major owner had to bear the financial burden of supporting the multinational corporations. One consequence of Zambia's nationalization of the copper industry, therefore, was to place the country deeply into debt simply to sustain the operations of a financially troubled international industry. This had the effect of forcing the government to suspend all major new development projects and to postpone its development plans for the country.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1980

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bostock, Mark and Harvey, Charles (eds.). (1972) Economic Independence and Zambian Copper. New York: Praeger.Google Scholar
Botswana RST Limited. (1976) 10th Annual Report.Google Scholar
Chinkuli, G. K. (1977) Address to the AGID Geochemical Workshop at the University of Zambia, Lusaka, Zambia.Google Scholar
Copper Industry Service Bureau. (1977) Zambia Mining Year Book.Google Scholar
Freeman, P. V. (1977) “Post-War Trends of Mineral Exploration in Zambia.” An unpublished paper presented at a symposium on the Present State of Mineral Exploration in Zambia sponsored by the Geological Society of Zambia.Google Scholar
Kaunda, Kenneth. (1968) Address to the UNIP National Council held at Mulungushi, Zambia.Google Scholar
Kaunda, Kenneth.(1969) Address to the UNIP National Council held at Matero Hall, Lusaka, Zambia.Google Scholar
Kaunda, Kenneth. (1973) Address at a press conference on the Redemption of Zimco Bonds, State House, Background No. 98.Google Scholar
Kaunda, Kenneth. (1974) Humanism in Zambia, Part II. Lusaka: Government of Zambia.Google Scholar
Mindeco, . (1972) “Guidelines for Future Zambian Mining Policy–Investment, Legislation and Participation.” Prepared as an internal memorandum for use by Mindeco.Google Scholar
Moran, Theodore H. (1973) “Transnational Strategies of Protection and Defense by Multinational Corporations: Spreading the Risk and Raising the Cost for Nationalization in Natural Resources,” International Organization 27 (Spring): 273–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moran, Theodore H.. (1974) Multinational Corporations and the Politics of Dependence: Copper in Chile. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Nchanga Consolidated Copper Mines Limited. (19711978) Annual Reports.Google Scholar
Roan Consolidated Mines Limited. (19741978) Annual Reports.Google Scholar
Sklar, Richard L. (1975) Corporate Power in an African State. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Times of Zambia. (1971) 1 September issue.Google Scholar
Times of Zambia. (1977) 29 November issue.Google Scholar
United National Independence Party. (1973) National Policies for the Next Decade 1974-1984. Lusaka: Zambia Information Services.Google Scholar
Zambia, Republic of. (1966) First National Development Plan, 1966-1970. Lusaka: Office of National Development Planning.Google Scholar
Zambia, Republic of. (1970) Annual Report of the Geological Survey Department for the Year 1970. Lusaka: Ministry of Mines and Mining Development.Google Scholar
Zambia, Republic of. (1971) Second National Development Plan. Lusaka: Ministry of Development Planning and National Guidance.Google Scholar
Zambia, Republic of. (1973a) Annual Report of the Mines Development Department for the Year 1973. Lusaka: Ministry of Mines and Industry.Google Scholar
Zambia, Republic of. (1973b) Annual Report of the Geological Survey Department for the Year 1973. Lusaka: Ministry of Mines and Industry.Google Scholar
Zambia, Republic of. (1974) Annual Report of the Geological Survey Department for the Year 1974. Lusaka: Ministry of Mines and Industry.Google Scholar
Zambia, Republic of. (19741978) General Summary of Mineral Production, Government Gazette. Lusaka: Government Printing Office.Google Scholar