Guinea-Bissau guide
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| © New Internationalist |
Alarm bells are ringing in the highest echelons of the UN to warn that Guinea-Bissau is fast becoming a country with no effective government. The prospect of an anarchic narcotic state threatens the country’s young democracy as well as regional stability. Guinea-Bissau’s chronic poverty has been fermented by a violent past and an extremely limited economy depending substantially on cashew nuts.
updated October 2008
Poverty in Guinea-Bissau
Despite recent improvement in a number of areas, the pace of post-conflict rehabilitation in Guinea-Bissau is acknowledged to be insufficient to achieve any of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by 2015. The country remains close to the very bottom of the UN Human Development Index and the Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) for the period 2007-2010 suggests that the MDGs should be recalibrated so that more realistic targets can be pursued.
The civil war that ended in 1999 caused a 28% drop in GDP in that year alone. Subsequent chronic political instability alongside a fracturing of civil society have severely limited the progress of successive governments in improving citizens' lives. Extreme poverty of over 21% (assessed by the benchmark of $1 per day) has barely changed over the last decade and the original target of 13% remains a distant prospect. Over 65% of the population remains below the national poverty line.
Education goals pose particular difficulty for Guinea-Bissau, owing to a permanent crisis within the public sector. The state is rarely able to pay its public service employees and schools are routinely disrupted or non-operational for months at a time. Whilst primary enrolment has improved in recent years, the rate is still only 55%. Sadly, 10% of rural schools in Guinea-Bissau only have a first grade, and 23% offer only first and second year education. It is not surprising therefore that illiteracy rates in the country are estimated at 47% of men and 76% of women - significantly higher than the regional average.
By and large, poverty is characterised as a predominantly rural phenomenon in Guinea-Bissau, with 85% of those below the poverty line living in the interior. Interestingly, the PRSP identifies female headed households to be less at risk of extreme poverty than households headed by men, owing to the opportunities open to women in the country's vast informal economy, and the widespread practice of polygamy.
Health and HIV/AIDS in Guinea-Bissau
The government spends no more than 4% of its budget on health. Access to health services in Guinea-Bissau is therefore very poor and often unaffordable. With high child and maternal mortality rates rising further rather than falling, the MDG indicators have become an irrelevance. Poor awareness of essential health practices is undermined by the marriage of 27% of girls before the age of 18.
Minimal progress in improving the quality of drinking water and sanitation has led to serious cholera epidemics, first in 2005 and again in 2008. Hundreds of deaths have been recorded, with the capital city, Bissau, especially affected. However, malaria remains the leading cause of death and HIV/AIDS is also a major health problem with very low public understanding of prevention. Guinea-Bissau experiences the relatively rare HIV2 variation of the virus although its incidence has fallen by about a half since 1990. Overall prevalence of just under 4% in 2004 represents a fall from the MDG baseline figure of 5.9% but there is some concern that more recent data may be unfavourable. Access to anti-retroviral (ARV) medicines is limited to about 20% of those in need.
Food Security in Guinea-Bissau
The 64% contribution of agriculture to Guinea-Bissau's economy relies almost solely on a single cash crop - cashew nuts - which are sold to a single country, India, the monopsony buyer. Although the land is generally fertile and rainfall adequate, the lack of irrigation and other technology is such that the country is able to grow only about 60% of its need for staple rice. The centrality of the cashew crop to most Guinean livelihoods makes many people vulnerable to the interplay between the market prices of cashew and rice. Over 2007 and 2008 the price of cashew has softened whilst rice has rocketed. The result is described by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization as “chronic food insecurity”.
The government has reduced tariffs on rice imports, depriving it of income, whilst the World Food Programme supports almost a quarter of the population with food aid. All development plans refer to the need to diversify agricultural produce.
Climate Change in Guinea-Bissau
This mainstream dependency on commodity prices is matched by dependency on weather conditions. Inevitably, the National Programme of Action of Adaptation (NAPA) for Guinea-Bissau warns that the country is “exposed to the negative effects of climate changes in almost all productive sectors of national life”. It is also clear that the combination of poverty and primitive rural infrastructure renders communities vulnerable to very small changes in temperature, rainfall and sea level.
Extreme climatic events such as flooding and salt water inundation appear already to be occurring with greater frequency, with serious implications for food security. Major food shortages resulted in a famine warning for the Tombali region in 2006. Most rice is grown on coastal floodplains which are also home to about 80% of the population. The need to protect rice productivity through sea defences, irrigation, and use of salt-resistant seed varieties emerges as the main target for adaptation. The NAPA requests a modest figure of $6.3 million of aid to carry out the recommended adaptation programmes.
The Economy in Guinea-Bissau
After Nicaragua and São Tomé e Principe, Guinea-Bissau is the world's most aid-dependent country, with over 90% of the public budget being funded by external assistance in 2007. The majority of government spending is exhausted by the public sector payroll which itself is greatly in arrears. This creates little room for poverty reduction programmes as well as tension with donors. Whilst the country was formerly very adept at attracting international aid, donors have in recent years been turning their backs on Guinea-Bissau, citing lack of co-operation and credible governance.
The country was provisionally approved for the HIPC debt relief initiative in 1997, but persistent instability has delayed fulfilment of the corresponding structural adjustment requirements. By early 2008 the resulting “debt distress” persuaded the international institutions to award interim HIPC relief which, together with debt rescheduling, has greatly reduced interest servicing obligations in the short term.
However, austerity measures associated with this international debt have left people with few means to survive other than through informal trade, which has boomed in the last two decades. Guinea-Bissau is extremely isolated from global capital, so that lumos - rotating markets organised by the people - and informal cross border trade are essential to the livelihoods of most Guineans outside the capital.
The OneWorld Guinea-Bissau Guide was first published in March 2007 with a text written by Volunteer Editor Tom Shaw.
Despite recent improvement in a number of areas, the pace of post-conflict rehabilitation in Guinea-Bissau is acknowledged to be insufficient to achieve any of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by 2015. The country remains close to the very bottom of the UN Human Development Index and the Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) for the period 2007-2010 suggests that the MDGs should be recalibrated so that more realistic targets can be pursued.
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| Crumbling infrastructure, Bairro Cintra Nema, Bissau © Tom Shaw |
Education goals pose particular difficulty for Guinea-Bissau, owing to a permanent crisis within the public sector. The state is rarely able to pay its public service employees and schools are routinely disrupted or non-operational for months at a time. Whilst primary enrolment has improved in recent years, the rate is still only 55%. Sadly, 10% of rural schools in Guinea-Bissau only have a first grade, and 23% offer only first and second year education. It is not surprising therefore that illiteracy rates in the country are estimated at 47% of men and 76% of women - significantly higher than the regional average.
By and large, poverty is characterised as a predominantly rural phenomenon in Guinea-Bissau, with 85% of those below the poverty line living in the interior. Interestingly, the PRSP identifies female headed households to be less at risk of extreme poverty than households headed by men, owing to the opportunities open to women in the country's vast informal economy, and the widespread practice of polygamy.
Health and HIV/AIDS in Guinea-Bissau
The government spends no more than 4% of its budget on health. Access to health services in Guinea-Bissau is therefore very poor and often unaffordable. With high child and maternal mortality rates rising further rather than falling, the MDG indicators have become an irrelevance. Poor awareness of essential health practices is undermined by the marriage of 27% of girls before the age of 18.
Minimal progress in improving the quality of drinking water and sanitation has led to serious cholera epidemics, first in 2005 and again in 2008. Hundreds of deaths have been recorded, with the capital city, Bissau, especially affected. However, malaria remains the leading cause of death and HIV/AIDS is also a major health problem with very low public understanding of prevention. Guinea-Bissau experiences the relatively rare HIV2 variation of the virus although its incidence has fallen by about a half since 1990. Overall prevalence of just under 4% in 2004 represents a fall from the MDG baseline figure of 5.9% but there is some concern that more recent data may be unfavourable. Access to anti-retroviral (ARV) medicines is limited to about 20% of those in need.
Food Security in Guinea-Bissau
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| Cashew harvest time in the Bijagos Islands © Tom Shaw |
The government has reduced tariffs on rice imports, depriving it of income, whilst the World Food Programme supports almost a quarter of the population with food aid. All development plans refer to the need to diversify agricultural produce.
Climate Change in Guinea-Bissau
This mainstream dependency on commodity prices is matched by dependency on weather conditions. Inevitably, the National Programme of Action of Adaptation (NAPA) for Guinea-Bissau warns that the country is “exposed to the negative effects of climate changes in almost all productive sectors of national life”. It is also clear that the combination of poverty and primitive rural infrastructure renders communities vulnerable to very small changes in temperature, rainfall and sea level.
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| Vulnerable Guinea-Bissau coastline © Tom Shaw |
The Economy in Guinea-Bissau
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| Guinea-Bissau depends on cashew nuts © IRIN News |
The country was provisionally approved for the HIPC debt relief initiative in 1997, but persistent instability has delayed fulfilment of the corresponding structural adjustment requirements. By early 2008 the resulting “debt distress” persuaded the international institutions to award interim HIPC relief which, together with debt rescheduling, has greatly reduced interest servicing obligations in the short term.
However, austerity measures associated with this international debt have left people with few means to survive other than through informal trade, which has boomed in the last two decades. Guinea-Bissau is extremely isolated from global capital, so that lumos - rotating markets organised by the people - and informal cross border trade are essential to the livelihoods of most Guineans outside the capital.
The OneWorld Guinea-Bissau Guide was first published in March 2007 with a text written by Volunteer Editor Tom Shaw.
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