Trading in Water

Apr 20th 2001, Jayati Ghosh
There was a time, not all that long ago, when it was generally understood that certain basic services should be available to all people, as a fundamental human right. The right to food and shelter were typically seen as being on par with other rights such as a minimum right to drinking water. Of course, the realities of our unequal world meant that, even when this was generally accepted, it did not mean that all people actually did have access to these things.
 
However, the role of the state in attempting to provide some of these services, and particularly those which were seen as "natural monopolies", to its citizens was established. Indeed, it would have been hard to find even the most rabid of free-marketeers arguing that these were activities for the private sector.
 
All that has changed, not just rapidly but quite dramatically. There is now virtually no state activity (even defence, in some African states) which is seen as necessarily the sole preserve of the state. And the trend of privatisation of a range of public services has become so pronounced that it no longer raises any eyebrows. Almost all public goods are now seen as freely tradeable commodities, and private ingenuity works out ways to make people pay even when access is hard to limit, and governments fall into step with the dominant ideology.
 
Nevertheless, the news that from April Fools Day this year, the water supply of the city of Johannesburg in South Africa has been privatised and handed over to a single monopolist supplier, still comes as a shock. After all, the South African government is controlled by the African National Congress, which came to power in 1994 promising free public services to those who could not afford them, and in fact promised universal public access to clean drinking water only three years ago.
 
This privatisation of water supply is part of a larger plan, known as Igoli 2002, which aims to turn Johannesburg into a "world-class city". The strategy for this is the dubious one of privatising more than a dozen services, through cleaning hawkers off the streets, paying top executives millions of rands, building thousands of drop toilets with no flush facilities on top of the water table, and through selling off profitable assets.
 
There has been a massive two-year civic campaign against this privatisation led by the South African Municipal Workers' Union (SAMWU). Not only the workers affected, but hundreds of thousands of other citizens took part in this protest movement. Not only did SAMWU point out the numerous cases across the world where privatisation of public services led to higher prices and monopolistic practices, but they also specifically criticised this particular deal. They emphasised that the new supplier, Suez Lyonnaise des Eaux of France, had made no commitment to provide water supply to the poor.
 
Suez Lyonnaise's recent record does not give grounds for great optimism. In Santiago, Chile, the company has insisted on a 33 per cent profit margin in its operations. In the city of Casablanca, within the first year after the company took over the water supply, prices rose three times. Even in France, their record is less than spotless in terms of either consumer satisfaction or low prices.
 
While it remains to be seen what happens in Johannesburg, the writing on the wall is already fairly clear. The absence of adequate regulation in this sector and the fact the company will be effectively a monopoly in the area mean thatpoor people may face a large hurdle : covering both relatively non-subsidised recurrent (operating and maintenance) costs, and paying sufficiently high service charges so as to reward investors with the expected 32 percent rate of return.
 
The current mainstream discussion is replete with pious statements of how people must be prepared to pay for the public services they benefit from. This ignores the basic points that all citizens effectively pay for public service provision through taxation, and that the poor typically pay a much higher proportion of their income in indirect taxes that the rich. Those eager to raise "user charges" for public service provision need to be gently reminded that one major reason why many citizens of developing countries do not pay is because they cannot – they simply do not have the money.
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