The
flea market here is as dark and hazy as an opium den,
its flimsy tin roof turning back the midday sun as
Edward Mansa robotically unbundles the shipment of
secondhand clothes that has just arrived.
The dull, red DKNY T-shirt catches his eye. "This,"
he says admiringly as he holds the shirt up to the
dim light, "is not bad." He says he can
probably get a dollar for it.
The shapeless plaid skirt is another matter, however,
as is the dowdy, ruffled blouse and the banana-yellow
sport coat that causes Mansa to shudder. He'll be
lucky to get anything for them, and chances are Mansa
will trade them with other vendors for some cooking
oil or dried fish. "You can't afford to let anything
go to waste," he says.
Mansa provides for his wife, mother and baby daughter
with the little money he earns selling hand-me-downs,
the old and unwanted clothes that Canadians, Europeans
and Americans donate to groups such as the Salvation
Army or Goodwill. With more donations than they can
use, the charities unload their surplus on wholesalers
who buy the clothing in the West for a few pennies
a pound, then ship it here and sell bales of it to
Mansa and other street retailers at a markup of 300
percent to 400 percent.
As Mansa peels an oversize Orlando Magic basketball
jersey from one such bale, his eyes brighten. Even
with its curious red smudges and loose threads, the
jersey can go for as much as $3.
"This is a gem," he says. "The young
people really love the clothes they see the American
rappers and the athletes wearing, but everyone --
young and old -- buys their clothes secondhand in
Zambia. It is better-made than what our own clothing
industry used to make before they all closed down,
and it's certainly cheaper since it's used clothing.
But is this the way to develop your economy? I don't
think so."
This southern African country once had a thriving
clothing industry. But when government officials began
opening Zambia's economy to foreign trade 10 years
ago in exchange for loans from international donors,
tons of cheap, secondhand clothing began to pour into
the country, virtually duty free.
Not especially efficient, Zambia's textile factories
were overmatched by the wholesalers, who could deliver
affordable, passable clothing without paying production
or labor costs or the tariffs that once protected
local manufacturers from foreign competition.
So, Zambia's clothing industry all but vanished.
Within eight years, about 30,000 jobs disappeared,
replaced by a loose but crowded network of roadside
and flea-market vendors beckoning shoppers to "rummage
through the pile," or salaula in the language
of Zambia's Bemba tribe.
The expansion of global trade following the end of
the Cold War has transformed Africa into a dumping
ground for what the industrialized world no longer
needs or wants, a deluge of secondhand clothes, used
cars, old furniture and tools and weapons.
The used clothing shipped to sub-Saharan Africa by
the United States accounts for nearly $60 million
in sales annually. The bales of old clothing that
appear on Africa's doorstep are now so familiar entirely
new idioms have been developed. Partly in derision,
and partly because many Africans once assumed the
clothing belonged to the recently deceased, Ghanaians
refer to the imports as "dead white man's clothing."
Tanzanians dubbed the garments "dyed in America,"
and in Zambia the used-clothing stands are called
"bend-down boutiques."
"You can walk for miles at a time here and not
see anyone wearing anything remotely resembling African
clothing," said Howard Gatchell, chairman of
the Chamber of Commerce in Zambia's second city, Ndola.
Hoping to undo the damage from decades of colonial
rule, and the ruinous civil wars and socialist economies
that often followed, nearly 40 countries south of
the Sahara have over the past two decades adopted
the free-market reforms -- "structural adjustment
programs" in development jargon -- prescribed
by such lenders as the World Bank and International
Monetary Fund. But in the generation since independence,
sub-Saharan Africa has never been so poor.
The region accounts for only 2 percent of all international
trade, a share no greater than it was 20 years ago.
New international trade rules developed in the 1990s
have since increased world income by nearly $510 billion,
according to the World Trade Organization; the World
Bank reports that per capita income in sub-Saharan
Africa has continued to fall over the same period.
Why does the poorest continent continue to get poorer,
even as the rest of the developing world shows at
least tentative signs of economic expansion?
The disintegration of Zambia's textiles industry provides
some answers.
Since Zambia's leaders embraced free-market policies
in the 1990s, the country's manufacturing base has
been eviscerated, leaving the government buried in
more debt than it can repay and gradually replacing
a full-time workforce with a growing informal economy
that offers low wages, no benefits and no job security.
World Bank officials acknowledge that the collapse
of Zambia's textile industry is an unintended and
regrettable consequence of the free-market policies
promoted by the organization. And since 1999, the
bank has been working with Zambia and other countries
to integrate "poverty reduction strategies"
with their traditional approach.
"International trade is always evolving,"
said a World Bank spokesman, Raymond Toye. "And
there are all kinds of constraints to doing business
in Africa that maybe we haven't always accounted for.
We want freer and more open trade in Zambia, but the
question is: How do we do that in a way that recognizes
and accommodates Zambia's -- Africa's -- unique history
and situation?"
To be sure, war and graft play a role in the inability
of Zambia, a landlocked country of 10 million people,
and many of its neighbors to capitalize on the trade-offs
implicit in global trade. But much of the problem
lies in the economies of sub-Saharan Africa. Relative
to those of the developed world, they are still in
their infancy, too fragile to withstand foreign competition
for their own turf, too underdeveloped to produce
much of anything the West values, beyond the raw materials
that attracted colonial powers but are worth increasingly
less on the world market today.
"We've made the mistake of confusing the free
market with development," said Fred M'membe,
executive editor of the Post, Zambia's only independent
daily newspaper.
"I'm not saying we should isolate ourselves from
the world the way we once did, but we are not looking
at how to develop our country. We are looking at how
we can market our country to outsiders so they can
come develop it for us. We are getting back to the
same colonial equation where, in the land of our birth,
Africans own nothing, control nothing, run nothing.
We are soon to be aliens in our own country."
Zambia surfaced from 75 years of British commercial
and colonial rule in 1964, inheriting a workforce
with fewer than 110 college graduates and an economy
dependent almost solely on mining. Copper, cobalt
and zinc accounted for more than a third of the country's
gross domestic product at independence and 80 percent
of its export earnings. The mines employed -- in one
capacity or another -- almost half the workforce.
At the same time, there were no large-scale textile
producers in the country.
Using the state as the economy's engine, the "humanist"
government of Kenneth Kaunda, then Zambia's president,
nationalized the mines, expanded the economy's manufacturing
and agricultural sectors and walled them off from
foreign competition with import tariffs. To improve
the productivity and skill level of its workforce,
the government provided free health care and primary
education.
Literacy levels rose. The economy grew. Within six
years of Zambia's independence, nearly 85 textile
manufacturers employed more than 10,000 workers.
Then the bottom fell out. Copper prices plummeted
just as world oil prices climbed, and Kaunda turned
to the donor community in 1973.
"We had refused to borrow, but now we had no
choice," Kaunda said in an interview. "I
approached both the IMF and the World Bank and said:
Look, we are in this precarious situation. Can we
borrow? Their reply was, well, we think that copper
prices will soon rise again, so please feel free to
borrow."
He did, but copper prices continued to plunge.
Weary of the skyrocketing inflation and chronic food
and fuel shortages caused largely by Kaunda's big-government
approach, voters in 1991 replaced him with Frederick
Chiluba, a union leader whose Movement for Multiparty
Democracy promised political and macroeconomic reform.
What followed was the continent's -- perhaps the world's
-- most dramatic and speedy transition from a command
economy to the free market. Virtually overnight, the
Chiluba government eliminated subsidies to farmers,
slashed tariffs on imports, loosened the state's grip
on monetary policy and began to charge "user
fees" for public schools and clinics.
By 2000, Zambia had sold more than 300 state-owned
enterprises to private investors, including virtually
all of the state-owned mines. The restructuring reduced
inflation, stabilized spending and increased cash
reserves. But illiteracy and school dropout rates
increased. Zambia's debt has reached $6.6 billion,
and the annual payment on the debt is three times
what the government spends on primary education.
Zambia's factories have shed roughly 325,000 of 800,000
manufacturing jobs since 1990, according to government
figures. Chiluba inherited an economy that included
more than 140 textile manufacturing firms when he
took office in 1991. When he left office in January
after his second term, the industry had been whittled
to fewer than eight. About 30,000 of the industry's
34,000 jobs disappeared, according to the Zambia Association
of Manufacturers.
"The pay was not much," said Millie Mansa,
Edward's mother. A 56-year-old widow, she worked at
several textile factories in Ndola and Lusaka until
she lost her job five years ago. "But even after
my husband died, I could put food on the table. We
were not rich, but we did not suffer."
Now, she said, "it pains me to see my son go
to work every morning selling these secondhand clothes
for sometimes [a few pennies] a day. Zambia has given
up so much to globalization."
Used clothing began to arrive here almost immediately
after the government repealed import taxes in 1992.
With no duties charged for used clothes -- customs
officials listed their value at zero -- wholesalers
realized they could create a new market without paying
much more than freight costs.
"We started buying secondhand clothes by the
truckloads from America and Canada and Europe,"
said Jim Ebrahim, managing director of Central African
Traders Ltd. Working with a Canadian cousin, he ships
a truckload of secondhand apparel into Zambia, Congo
and Tanzania at least once a week.
"We pay $35,000 for each container," he
said. "When we first started six years ago, we
would clear about $6,000 profit for each shipment.
But now there is so much competition that we only
clear about $2,000 profit on each container."
Zambia's textile producers simply could not compete
with the influx of Western clothes. Even used, most
of the clothes were made with superior machinery and
cheap cotton subsidized by Western governments.
"It was stylish. It was cheap. It was better-made,"
said Mark O'Donnel, chairman of the Zambia Association
of Manufacturers. "Our industry didn't have a
chance. We would have preferred for the changes to
be phased in to allow our textile industry a chance
to catch up to the rest of the world and really compete."
"It's not just clothing," said Ramesh Patel,
director of SWAPP Ltd. Clothing in Ndola, the heart
of Zambia's struggling Copperbelt region. "We
used to have factories everywhere, but Ndola is a
ghost town now. We are one of the lucky ones who have
managed to survive, but there's no comparison. We
used to supply retailers with 3.5 thousand tons of
clothing annually; we're down to less than 500 tons
now. We had 250 employees eight years ago; we're down
to 25 now."
Millie Mansa was one of the workers to lose her job
at SWAPP. Unable to support herself, she moved in
with her son and his young family.
Like eight of every 10 Zambians, the family survives
on less than $1 a day. Roughly once every six weeks,
Edward Mansa and his business partner, John Sakala,
buy a bale of used clothing for $180. With a good
bale, they earn about $240, splitting the profits
evenly and reinvesting the remainder in another bale.
"The key is to get a good bale," Mansa
said. "Some wholesalers will let you inspect
the bale first; others won't. We have found that inspecting
beforehand to make sure that you have quality clothes
is the most important aspect in this business."
Millie Mansa has no romantic illusions about Zambia's
socialist past, but the distinction she makes between
the past and present is one repeated across the continent
by those old enough to remember.
"Back in the Kaunda era, there was nothing on
the shelves but everybody had a little money in their
pocket," she said as she sat cross-legged in
the family's darkened hut on the outskirts of Lusaka.
"Now the shelves are always full and we have
things that we never before had in Zambia. But no
one has any money to buy anything."
Many liberal economists and development experts point
to the shrinkage of Zambia's textile industry as evidence
of the failure of the "Washington Consensus,"
the U.S.-driven policy to spur economic growth in
the developing world through exports. Development
leads to expanded trade, not the other way around,
they say.
"Zambia probably has the most liberalized economy
in the world," said Lebogang Motlana, the U.N.
Development Project's deputy representative here.
"But 30 years into our liberation, we don't have
the variety of industries to penetrate other markets,
and we were ill-equipped for such a competitive mode.
Maybe the government should have done more to care
for the people and develop industries other than mining,
rather than devoting so much of its resources and
energy to free trade."
President Levy Mwanawasa, Chiluba's successor, has
pledged to adjust Zambia's one-size-fits-all macroeconomic
approach. His party -- the same Movement for
Multiparty Democracy that turned to free trade a decade
ago -- has introduced legislation to eliminate user
fees, lower costs for government medical care, restore
agricultural subsidies and nourish industries that
have the potential for growth.
Mwanawasa has named his administration's economic
program "The New Deal."
April 25, 2002.
[Source: Washington Post Foreign Service, April 22,
2002] |