Author's note: This piece was written on 29/3/2013. It is being posted today because I was unable to do so on the day. Please read on:
Ghana's Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, Dr. Seth Terkper,
is recently reported to have called for finance ministers in Africa to
come together to fight exploitative multinational companies in the
continent's extractive industries.
If Ghana's finance minister and his African colleagues want to stand up
to the something-for-nothing gold mining and oil companies ruthlessly
exploiting nations like Ghana through inimical agreements, they would
be wise to make Ms. Michelle Edkins, the global head of corporate
governance at BlackRock, a key ally.
Many players in the City of London, the financial capitals of Europe and
Wall Street insiders regard BlackRock as the world's most
influential financial institution. Ms. Michelle Edkins has led its
tougher stance on corporate governance.
BlackRock holds large stakes in many of the world's leading companies -
and is the world's biggest money manager with $3.6 trillion of assets
as at September 2012.
In that same year, the online financial publication Street Authority
said of it: "If the company were a country, then its assets under
management would put it at the fourth largest in terms of gross domestic
product, higher than Germany or France."
The question is: Has the time not come for Africa's finance ministers
to be more subtle in their demand for fairness from gold mining and oil
companies, as they seek more revenue for expanding the continent's
infrastructure?
If they engage influential individuals like BlackRock's Ms. Michelle
Edkins, Africa's finance ministers will be pleasantly surprised to
discover that through her, they will find powerful new allies in Wall
Street, the City of London and the other financial capitals of Europe,
who will enable them win their fight to have a fair share of the
proceeds from the exploitation and sale of the continent's natural
resources by multinational companies.
Since no one who visits our dynamic country can fail to be impressed by
what they see, and those they interact with whiles here, my humble
suggestion is that Ghana's finance minister invites BlackRock's Ms.
Michelle Edkins to Ghana as soon as practicable.
She will make a powerful ally for Ghana (and the rest of Africa) in Wall
Street, and the other financial capitals of the West, as our country
fights for fairness in the exploitation and sale of Ghana's gold and
oil deposits.
Whiles the multinational firms operating here can ignore the demands of
our leaders for fairness in their dealings with our nation, they dare
not ignore the views of BlackRock's Ms. Michelle Edkins - on their
obligation to be fair to Ghanaian society at a time of record gold and
oil prices. A word to the wise...
Tel: 027 745 3109.
Monday, 8 April 2013
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