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Three important recent stories on the mining from for KCM, Berkeley and FQM:
Vedanta Resources Plc's Zambian unit plans to cut 24 percent of its workforce after costs rose and the copper price dropped. Konkola Copper Mines Plc will reduce the total number of employees at its operations in Africa's biggest producer of the metal by 2,000 from 8,263, the Chingola, Zambia-based company said in an e-mailed statement.
[view whole blog postZCCM-IH miniority shareholders have made available this open letter to Vice President Guy Scott which raises concerns about "bad governance and ineffective management of the ZCCM-IH". The Open Letter has been submitted via Zambian Embassy in Paris. Their main target is the ZCCM IH Chairman Willa Mungomba and it centres around his alleged unwillingness to nominate a representative of minority shareholders to sit on the Board.
They also allege that : the chairman and directors' remuneration are hidden; there has been no legal procedure brought against looters for fraud e.g. Mopani/Glencore; that the management has not brought sufficient pressure against FQM to pay US$550m of minority interest from Kansanshi; and, questions around how the valuation of ZCCM-IH assets and clouded plans to ...
[view whole blog postThe European Union (EU) recently signed a €44 million agreement with the Zambian Government to support mother and child health issues, as part of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) push. The project, which would run for four years, would be funded through a contribution fund with UNICEF and would be implemented in 10 districts in Lusaka and Copperbelt provinces.
Copyright © Zambian Economist 2013
[view whole blog postA fascinating piece from Mothusi Turner (Think Africa Press) on how the Chinese (from China's Fujian province) succeeded in Lesotho may hold for our own entrepreneurs:
Rather than being in some way tied to Chinese state assistance to Lesotho then, migrants come to Lesotho under their own steam, lured by rumours of easy profits. But they do not arrive as hostages to fortune, without a plan and alone. Rather, given that kinship networks are the main pull factor behind Fujianese migration to Lesotho, new arrivals usually have links to one of the local Fujianese business associations before they even land.
[view whole blog postMartin Feldstein has some interesting reflections on China's new strategic direction under leadership of President Xi Jinping , Premier Li Keqiang and Finance Minister Liu. He observers that recent appointments signals a shift that may be less favourite to slower growth which in turn would reduce demand for commodities :
Taken together, these appointments demonstrate the new Chinese leadership's emphasis on pro-market reforms and a shift from heavy industry to greater reliance on consumption and services. That shift is likely to mean a slower rate of GDP growth than the annual rate of nearly 10% that China achieved during the last three decades. But a slowdown to 7% annual growth would still double China's GDP over the next decade.
[view whole blog postBy Gabriel Pollen
In discussing the question of fuel subsidies, we first need to explicitly define what a subsidy is. A subsidy is an amount paid by government to keep prices below free market. The amount is equal to difference between the consumer pump price of fuel versus the total actual cost of producing or importing.
[view whole blog postFinance Alexander Chikwanda recently announced that the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has pledged to provide assistance to the Zambian government in the health and agricultural sectors. Around US$15 million will support the rehabilitation of the country's main referral hospital. The two countries are also exploring the cooperation in the area of localized fertilizer production, particularly the possible revitalization of the Nitrogen Chemicals of Zambia (NCZ) plant in Kafue.
Copyright © Zambian Economist 2013
[view whole blog postBy Mutota N. Mulumpa
Allow me to quote an excerpt from Amanda Nelson's article on the 'Effects of European Colonialism in Africa' :
[view whole blog postGovernment has now operationalised the Directorate of Public Prosecutions (DPP) into a National Prosecution Authority (NPA). All criminal prosecution functions would now be vested in the NPA as set out in under the National Prosecution Authority Act, 2010.
Justice Minister Wynter Kabimba recently appointed the the NPA Board with an impossible mandate of achieving "90 per cent court success rate". The Board will be chaired by DPP Muntembo Nchito.
[view whole blog postGovernment has rejected calls by Toyota Zambia to limit the age of second hand vehicles entering the country because it may "disadvantage the majority of Zambians who cannot afford to buy brand new ones". Toyota wanted Government to limit the age of second hand vehicles entering the country to four (4) years for cars and pick-ups and five (5) years for trucks in order "to improve safety conditions on roads".
Transport Minster Christopher Yaluma says vehicles are unsafe on roads due to lack of maintenance rather than their age. Also most cars entering the country are in good condition. Limiting the age of motor vehicles will only benefit players in the local industry and not necessarily benefiting the ordinary Zambians because vehicles would be beyond the affordability of most citizens.
[view whole blog post