Iraqi businesses: Another casualty of war

Source IPS

Most Iraqi businesses have collapsed under the weight of US-backed economic laws, the breakdown of security, lack of electricity and fuel, and rising inflation. "Iraq got the foreign investment rules long sought by US corporations," Antonia Juhasz, a visiting scholar at the Institute for Policy Studies in Washington, and author of The Bush Agenda: Invading the World, One Economy at a Time, told IPS. Juhasz said the new laws, which were a part of the 100 "Bremer Orders" instituted by former US administrator Paul Bremer when he headed the Coalition Provisional Authority during the first year of the occupation, provided a flood of benefits for US companies. These included "100 percent repatriation of profits earned in Iraq by foreign companies; 100 percent foreign ownership of Iraqi businesses, including banks; privatization of Iraq's state owned enterprises; 100 percent immunity for US contractors and soldiers from Iraq's laws; and 'national treatment' which allowed for Iraqis to be all but excluded from the reconstruction for years while the US government paid $50 billion to some 150 US corporations for work in Iraq." What followed was "a US corporate invasion of Iraq," Juhasz said. "Many companies had their sights set on privatization in Iraq, also made possible by Bremer, which helps explain their interest in 'major overhauls' rather than getting the systems up and running." In contrast, there was much state support for businesses under the previous regime, which followed a socialist system under which the government allowed Iraqis to establish their own factories and workshops, and supported them in many ways. Businesses were granted low interest loans and permission to transfer foreign currency. They could get state-owned land to build on. Administrative laws facilitated enterprise, and so small industry business bloomed during the 1970s and 1980s. Major industries in Iraq for oil products, phosphates and cement, along with the military industry, were mostly state-run under the previous regime. Foreign companies were allowed, under state supervision, to build factories as Iraq moved towards increasing industrialization. This growth was reversed during the 1990s under the US-backed UN economic sanctions. The sanctions crippled the Iraqi dinar and people's ability to purchase goods and services. The business situation worsened further during the US-led invasion when most factories ceased to function. Many were bombed, and for other factories, employees stayed at home. Following the invasion, several were looted and were never able to start again. Some private businesses held out, but eventually security problems, lack of electricity and fuel, a staggering inflation rate (70 percent) and lack of safe transportation led many of these too to close down. Unemployment now stands at more than 50 percent–but most people believe the real situation is far worse. Thousands of business and factory owners sold what they could and fled to neighboring countries. Those who did not, now wish they had. Local studies have found 85 percent unemployment in the industry sector. Many of the 15 percent who remain employed are registered at a few state factories that pay their employees even if they produce nothing. The business and economic morass Iraq finds itself in today is evident in the market places across the capital city. About 80 percent of domestically manufactured goods were distributed prior to the invasion and occupation through the Shorja market in the center of Baghdad. The wholesale market is a bazaar along narrow roads where hundreds of small shop owners display their merchandise. "There is no Iraqi brand any more," plastic products distributor Johar Aziz told IPS. "Iraqi products flourished during the quarter century before occupation, but now we only sell imported products of the lowest quality, and people have to buy them because there is no alternative." Other markets in Baghdad are suffering a similar crisis, like the Samarraii compound where tires are sold, the Jamila market for fruits and vegetables, and the Sinaa market for computers. The main shopping centers like Saadoon Street and Rasheed Street, and the once upmarket Mansour area and the Karrada district are now like ghosts of what they once were. "We used to open our shops for at least 16 hours a day, but now we only open for a few hours because of the security threats," Duraid Abdullah, an electrical appliances shop owner in Karrada told IPS. "We are facing all kinds of threats starting from being abducted for money or sectarian reasons, as well as being evicted from our shops by gangs supported by government forces." A businessman who once owned a small textile factory that has gone bankrupt said he had not expected the coming in of a US administration to be bad for business. "The picture of Japan after World War II dominated the minds of businessmen in Iraq after occupation," he said. "Most of us thought the American invasion of Iraq was bad for many things, but it must be good for business in general and industry in particular. We were terribly wrong. The Iraqi economy was meant to be destroyed for political reasons."