The Fallacy Of Britain Leaving Huge Sums Of
Money For Kwame Nkrumah’s Government
By Kwame Botwe-Asamoah, Dr.
Reprint
Introduction There is a fallacy
being spewed by naïve individuals and functional
illiterates that the British colonial government
left huge sums of money for Kwame Nkrumah, which
he wasted. Often some of these Nkrumah’s haters
cite figures from cynical sources on the
internet as their reference point. Sadly, their
abhorrence of Nkrumah, and by extension the
electorate, makes it impossible for them to
conceive the fact that the African-centered
fiscal policies of the Kwame Nkrumah internal
self-government generated the revenue for the
Gold Coast, part of which was used to finance
the Five-Year Development Plan from 1951 to
1955.
As this discourse will show,
whatever money that was “left” at the time of
Ghana’s independence was, in fact, Nkrumah’s
internal self-government’s creation from 1951 to
1956. But in order to dismiss the notion as
baseless that the British colonial government
left huge sums of money for Kwame Nkrumah, it
will be worth the efforts to briefly interrogate
the rudiments of colonialism.
Colonialism. Colonialism was a racist
as well as evil system by which the metropolis
(such as Britain) bonded its colonies to itself
by political ties with the primary aim of
promoting Britain’s own economic interest. Thus
the dominant reason for the scramble and
partitioning of Africa at the Berlin Conference
in 1884-85 was for economic exploitation. The
three main features for the colonization of
Africa as the then Premier of France, Jules
Ferry, articulated in 1885 were: 1.) to have
free access to raw materials of the colonies; 2)
to have ready made markets for the sale of
manufactured goods of the colonizing countries,
and 3) to use the colonies as fields for
investment of surplus capital. Rooted in
neo-mercantilism, the European monarchies and
their private deputized agents confined
themselves to grabbing territories outside
Europe “on such lines as would attract the most
possible precious metals to” themselves. In so
doing, those agents seized and/or captured lands
rich in minerals resources, from the Americas to
India. In the case of the Gold Coast, the
British passed enactments (e.g., “The Foreign
Jurisdiction Act of 1890) that allowed the Crown
to cease lands through dubious treaties, grants,
usages, and other means. Thus, the Act of 1890
allowed the British monarchy and its agents to
secure “direct or indirect ownership, control
and possession of the land”. In short order,
“The Act” led to extortions and forced
concessions, control, and exploitation of rich
mineral resources. From the Gold Coast, the
British exported the minerals and other
resources to feed British industries (mills and
other industrial plants), then exported back to
the Gold Coast finished goods and products to
sell to the People of the Gold Coast (Kwame
Nkrumah, “Towards Colonial Freedom”). This
method of trade led to a serious “imbalance of
trade,” whereby more monies and resources were
siphoned out of the Gold Coast as long as the
Gold Coast remained a British "colony", than
were invested in the Gold Coast for the benefit
of its Peoples.
Even the limited
infrastructure such as the railway lines in the
Gold Coast (starting from Sekondi in 1898
reaching Tarkwa in 1901, Obuasi in 1902 and
ending in Kumasi in 1903) were laid down to
transport minerals and timber from areas of
production to Takoradi harbour. Social services,
such as the Ridge Hospital was built to cater
for the European expatriates in Accra. And the
scanty health centers in other areas like the
mining communities and Sekondi-Takoradi harbor
vicinity were set up to facilitate exploitation.
In other words, social services were put in
place for Africans whose labor was directly
producing surplus for export to the metropolis.
Even so, a rubber plantation at Fisher (named
after the British settler-owner Holland-Fischer)
in East Akyem Abuakwa, where bundles of
processed raw rubber were sent weekly to
Takoradi for export to England, had no health
center, school, public lavatory and other basic
amenities. (The rubber plantation is about two
miles away from my hometown Ettokrom). The
underlying “exploitation without responsibility”
thrust of the British colonialism can be seen
when, in 1943, forty-one Africans were killed in
the Obuasi gold mine disaster without adequate
compensation; as it happened, “the capitalist
offered only 3 pounds to the dependents of each
of these men as compensation” (Walter Rodney,
“How Europe Underdeveloped Africa”).
In
the Gold Coast, the European trading companies,
notably UAC, Cadbury and Fry, John Holt, CFOA,
SCOA, A.G. Leventis, G.B Ollivant exploited the
Africans by controlling both the price paid for
farmers’ cocoa beans and the price of imported
goods from Europe (Walter Rodney). The price of
imported goods from Europe either doubled or
tripled. Profits accruing from this one-sided
export and import trade were retained by
Britain. It was for this and other reasons that
the British Colonial Government suppressed
and/or criminalized indigenous productions. For
example, the colonial government criminalized
the locally distilled gin (akpeteshi) by
characterizing it “illicit gin.” At Kwabeng in
Akyem Abuakwa, a man in the 1930s, our elders
told us, was arrested by the colonial police and
prosecuted at the colonial court in Koforidua
for making a bicycle with bamboo sticks.
As well, to suggest that the Britain left huge
sums of money for Nkrumah’s government meant
that the British Government contributed to the
expenditure of the British Colonial Government.
This is also a fallacy. In the Gold Coast
colony, as elsewhere, the British colonial
government raised its own money from various
forms of taxes and revenues (such as
house/property tax, poll/head tax and income
tax) imposed on the exploited African workers,
farmers and others for the maintenance of the
colonial administration, (including the
Provincial and District Commissioners and their
civil servants). Otherwise, why would Ofori Atta
I, during the WWI, give “eloquent proof of his
loyalty to the Empire” by “contributing large
sums of money to cover the cost of an aeroplane”
(Jarle Simensen, “Commoners, Chiefs, and
Colonial Government, British Policy, and Local
Policies in Akim Abuakwa, Ghana, Under Colonial
Rule”). In addition to recruiting soldiers, and
as part of its commitment to the British “World
War II Fund,” the Akyem Abuakwa State Council
generated revenue from cocoa export to finance
the Akyem Abuakwa contingent of the British
Volunteer Royal Force put together to repel the
Italian military occupation in East Africa
(Kwame Botwe-Asamoah, “Kwame Nkrumah’s
Politico-Cultural Thought and Policies”). Also,
the Asante “chiefs” made financial contributions
toward three British warplanes. For his part,
“the Chief of Adanse alone gave ₤1,000, 00
toward a third aeroplane that Ashanti
contributed as its gifts for the prosecution of
the war” (K. A. Busia, “The Position of the
Chief in the Modern Political System of
Ashanti”).
The collapse of the
British Economy after Second World War.
In the aftermath of the Second World War,
the British economy collapsed for several
reasons. First, because its industrial plants
were entirely converted to war production, and
partly due to the severe destruction caused by
the war, Britain was unable to produce enough
goods for its citizens. In this case, Britain
imported more goods than they could pay for with
exports. Second, war time needs also led to huge
losses of merchant shipping to submarines.
Third, the destruction created the need to
borrow loans for massive house building after
the war. Fourth, because of the destruction of
factories and machines, Britain lost much of its
productive capacity, which resulted in
accumulation of massive external
debts—particularly to the USA. Fifth, due to the
conscription for the war, massive unemployment
affected socio-economic life in Britain. As
such, recruitment and training of workers were
disrupted, thereby having a long-term adverse
effects on the quality of British workmanship
and management. Finally, war time efforts also
had an adverse effect on Britain’s balance of
trade, leading to inflation. It was because of
these and other devastations of the war in other
European countries that led to the Bretton Woods
Conference in 1944 (see W. K. Hancock, and M. G.
Gowing, “British War Economy” and Michael J.
Hogan, “The Marshal Plan: America, Britain and
the reconstruction of Western Europe
1947-1952”).
Therefore the British
colonial government in the Gold Coast (now the
Republic of Ghana) was not a philanthropic
organization to have invested in the raw
materials (cocoa, gold, diamonds, manganese,
timber and others) and returned the profits to
the Gold Coast, let alone leaving huge surpluses
for Kwame Nkrumah to “waste.”
The
1951-1955 Kwame Nkrumah Fiscal Policies and Five
Year Development Plan.
In his
address on the eve of Ghana’s independence,
Nkrumah pointed out that “when spending ₤124
million during the course of the” Five Year
Development Plan, the CPP internal
self-government “had received ₤1 ½ million in
aid from Colonial Development and Welfare Funds.
It was not a large proposition and we had in
return made our contribution to the gold and
dollar resources of the sterling.” He
illuminated:
“The Gold Coast has
contributed, on an average, 25% of the net
dollar earnings of the British colonial
territories, and, taking into account our
contribution of around ₤9 million a year in
gold, in the five years from 1951 to 1955 in
which
the CPP have been in power, the
Gold Coast contributed a net positive balance of
₤150 million to the gold and dollar reserves of
the sterling area. It will be seen therefore,
that though the Gold Coast is small and, by
Western standards, not a very wealthy country,
it has made a significant contribution to
maintaining the stability of the sterling area.”
(Kwame Nkrumah, “I Speak of Freedom”).
At
the time of Ghana’s independence, “Nkrumah had
left $500 million of reserves, accumulated
during the colonial period (from 1951 to 1956),
in long-term low interest British securities”
(Richard D. Mahoney, “J.F.K. Ordeal in
African”). A major portion of these reserves
resulted from the Kwame Nkrumah internal
self-government’s nationalization of the cocoa
industry in the Gold Coast Cocoa Marketing Board
(GCCMB) Ordinance (Amendment) of 1951, thereby
making “cocoa revenue [a] common national
property.” It should be noted that in reaction
to the 1951 Gold Coast Cocoa Marketing Board
Amendment, Dr. J. B. Danquah vehemently opposed
the nationalization, saying that “funds of the
GCCMB were not ‘profits’ accruing to government”
(Kwame Ninsin, “The Nkrumah Government and the
Opposition on the Nation State: Unity vs.
Fragmentation”). (Interestingly, the British
Labour Governments of 1945–1951 enacted a
political program based on John Keynes’s
economic theory of collectivism, comprising
nationalization of industries and state
direction of the economy). But “this great
source of productive investment ($500 million)
was unavailable (to Nkrumah’s post-independence
government) in 1959” (Mahoney, “J.F.K. Ordeal in
African”).
The above notwithstanding, the
CPP government maintained a budget surplus and a
positive balance of external trade from 1951 to
1955. In 1953-54, for example, 10% of the gross
national product was saved. Thus “the Government
put aside for public development ₤1 out of every
₤10 worth of wealth produced.” During the same
period, “the corresponding figure for public
saving in the United Kingdom was just over 3% of
the gross national product,” while that of “the
United States was just under 2%” (Nkrumah, “I
Speak of Freedom”).
By its judicious
fiscal policies between 1951 and 1955, Nkrumah’s
internal-self government raised the national
income from ₤20 million to ₤65 million per
annum, while expenditure rose from ₤14 million
to ₤52 million. Besides, the government redeemed
its external debts, whilst the country’s assets
from all sources amounted to nearly ₤100 million
by 1955 (Nkrumah, “I Speak of Freedom,”). From
these investments and savings (including
dividends derived from the mining industry
between 1952 to 1955), Nkrumah’s internal
self-government designed its Five Year
Development Plan and embarked on developmental
projects (without outside loans). They included:
compulsory elementary school education,
construction of secondary schools, teacher
training colleges, technical institutes (all
under the Accelerated Development Plan for
Education), hospitals, nursing and midwifery
schools, public health program and centres,
roads and railways, the Adomi Bridge, Tema
Harbour, tarring of Accra to Kumasi and Accra to
Takoradi roads, Kumase College of Technology and
the present University of Ghana campus. For
example, attendance of the teacher training
colleges, nursing and midwifery schools, Kumasi
College of Technology (now KNUST) and the
University of the Gold Coast were free with
stipend.
(As a child in 1952, I saw the
conversion of the feeder road from Accra to
Kumase via Ettokrom to a tarred road covered
with bitumen for the first time; and, my age
group had fun stepping on the freshly sticky
bitumen in the evenings).
Prof. Adu
Boahen authenticated the Nkrumah internal
self-government’s outstanding achievements in
the 1950s in Basil Davidson’s documentary, “The
Rise of African Independence,” when he said:
“The 1950s, to me, were the most important, the
most fascinating period, the period of
independence...... This was a period when far
more was achieved between 1951 and 1954; saw a
pace of development in this country, which has
never [been] seen.”
But the exceptional
pace of development Prof. Adu Boahen spoke about
did not only result from developmental and
planned economy, but it was also due to
Nkrumah’s philosophy of self-determination and
self-reliance (by taking over the country’s
natural resources). As a matter of fact,
Nkrumah’s holistic achievement (in the areas of
educational, socio-economic and industrial
developments) has been recorded as one of the
fastest in a post-colonial history. Sad to say
that these principles of self-determination,
self-reliance and human-centered policies are
what have been lacking in Ghana’s public
policies since the CIA sponsored military coup
of February 24, 1966.
As the foregoing
discourse has elucidated, the $500.00 million or
its equivalent in the British sterling in the
British reserves at the time of Ghana’s
independence was the making of the Kwame Nkrumah
internal self-government from 1951 to 1956.
(We should bear in mind that Kwame Nkrumah
surrounded himself with some of the economic
giants at the time as his advisors; they
included Sir Arthur Lewis, Nobel Memorial Prize
in Economics and the Cambridge economist, Prof.
Nicholas Kaldor.)
In this respect, the
claim of huge sums of money the British left for
Kwame Nkrumah’s post-independence regime is a
fallacy and not supported by historical records
or any economic fact.
June 30, 2015.
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