A risky business: Mining, rent and the neoliberalization of “risk”

Abstract Natural resource investment in the mining sector is often mediated through conflicts over rent distribution between corporate capital and landowner states. Recent rounds of neoliberal policy promoted by the World Bank have highlighted the need for landowner states to offer incentives in order to attract “high risk” capital investment. In Sub-Saharan Africa, in particular, countries have been pushed to offer attractive fiscal terms to capital, thereby lowering the proportion traditionally called rent. This paper examines how the concept of “risk” has been mobilized to legitimate such skewed distributional arrangements. While certain conceptions of social and ecological “risk” have been prevalent in political and social theoretic discourse on mining, such focus elides the overwhelming contemporary power of our notion of “neoliberal risk” – or the financial/market risks – in actually setting the distributional terms of mineral investment. We illustrate our argument by examining the nexus of World Bank mining policy promotion and Tanzanian policy in the late 1990s meant to attract foreign direct investment in gold production. In closing, we suggest that just as “risk” is used to legitimate attractive fiscal terms for investment, recent events highlight how skewed distribution of benefits may set into motion risks that corporate capital had not bargained for.

[1]  Jamie Peck,et al.  Regulating Japan? Regulation Theory versus the Japanese Experience , 1994 .

[2]  M. Douglas,et al.  Risk and Culture , 1983 .

[3]  B. Jessop Gramsci as a Spatial Theorist , 2005 .

[4]  J. Tilton,et al.  Mining Royalties: A Global Study of Their Impact on Investors, Government, and Civil Society, Appendixes , 2006 .

[5]  T. Moran,et al.  Multinational Corporations and the Politics of Dependence: Copper in Chile , 1975 .

[6]  R. Vernon Sovereignty at bay: The multinational spread of U.S. enterprises , 1971 .

[7]  Paula Butler,et al.  Regulating mining in Africa : for whose benefit? , 2004 .

[8]  P. Bond Looting Africa: The Economics of Exploitation , 2006 .

[9]  Thomas Baunsgaard A Primer on Mineral Taxation , 2001, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[10]  D. S. Moore Suffering for Territory: Race, Place, and Power in Zimbabwe , 2005 .

[11]  J. Ferguson Global Shadows: Africa in the Neoliberal World Order , 2006 .

[12]  G. Macleod,et al.  Space, scale and state strategy: rethinking urban and regional governance , 1999 .

[13]  Lilach Nachum,et al.  UNCTAD's World Investment Report 2002: Transnational Corporations and Export Competitiveness, United Nations, Geneva and New York 2002 , 2003 .

[14]  Georges Dionne,et al.  Risk management determinants affecting firms' values in the gold mining industry: new empirical results , 2003 .

[15]  M. Watts RIGHTEOUS OIL? HUMAN RIGHTS, THE OIL COMPLEX, AND CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY , 2005 .

[16]  R. Vernon In the Hurricane's Eye: The Troubled Prospects of Multinational Enterprises , 1998 .

[17]  C. Slater The investment climate for gold mining , 1996 .

[18]  K. Good Resource dependency and its consequences: The costs of Botswana's shining gems , 2005 .

[19]  P. Billon Angola's political economy of war: The role of oil and diamonds, 1975–2000 , 2001 .

[20]  H Roberts,et al.  Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity , 1994 .

[21]  T. Moran Foreign Direct Investment and Development: The New Policy Agenda for Developing Countries and Economies in Transition , 1998 .

[22]  D. Harvey Neo‐liberalism as creative destruction , 2006 .

[23]  G. Clark Money flows like mercury: the geography of global finance , 2005 .

[24]  J. Mccarthy,et al.  Neoliberal nature and the nature of neoliberalism , 2004 .

[25]  R. Ericson Governing through risk and uncertainty , 2005 .

[26]  D. Harvey,et al.  The Limits to Capital , 1983 .

[27]  Antonio Gramsci Selections from the prison notebooks , 2020, The Applied Theatre Reader.

[28]  P. O’Malley Risk, Uncertainty and Government , 2004 .

[29]  P. Dicken Global Shift: Reshaping the Global Economic Map in the 21st Century , 2003 .

[30]  C. Garsten,et al.  Risky business: Discourses of risk and (ir)responsibility in globalizing markets , 2003 .

[31]  William R. Freudenburg,et al.  Mining the Data: Analyzing the Economic Implications of Mining for Nonmetropolitan Regions , 2002 .

[32]  A. Samatar An African Miracle: State and Class Leadership and Colonial Legacy in Botswana Development , 1999 .

[33]  N. Thrift,et al.  Money/Space: geographies of monetary transformation , 1998 .

[34]  K. Polanyi The Great Transformation , 1944 .

[35]  Olivier Bomsel,et al.  Mining and metallurgy investment in the Third World : the end of large projects? , 1990 .

[36]  Matthew T. Huber,et al.  Fixed Minerals, Scalar Politics: The Weight of Scale in Conflicts over the ‘1872 Mining Law’ in the United States , 2009 .

[37]  Staffan I. Lindberg Changing the Rules: The Politics of Liberalization and the Urban Informal Economy in Tanzania , 1999, African Studies Review.

[38]  D. Harvey A Brief History of Neoliberalism , 2020, The Anti-Capitalist Chronicles.

[39]  J. Otto,et al.  A national mineral policy as a regulatory tool , 1997 .

[40]  Stuart Hall,et al.  Gramsci's Relevance for the Study of Race and Ethnicity , 1986, Selected Writings on Race and Difference.

[41]  D. Ricardo On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation , 1891 .

[42]  O. Schachter,et al.  Sharing the World's Resources , 1977 .

[43]  S. Green Negotiating with the Future: The Culture of Modern Risk in Global Financial Markets , 2000 .

[44]  S. R. Jammalamadaka,et al.  Against the Gods: The Remarkable Story of Risk , 1999 .

[45]  James Goodman,et al.  Moving mountains : communities confront mining and globalisation , 2002 .

[46]  G. Bridge,et al.  CONTESTED TERRAIN: Mining and the Environment , 2004 .

[47]  L. Panitch Coming to terms with nature , 2006 .

[48]  J. Glassman State power beyond the `territorial trap': the internationalization of the state , 1999 .

[49]  I. Taylor As Good as It Gets? Botswana's 'Democratic Development' , 2003 .

[50]  E. Schoenberger Discourse and practice in human geography , 1998 .

[51]  Bob Jessop,et al.  The Future of the Capitalist State , 2002 .

[52]  Karl P. Sauvant UNCTAD, World Investment Report 2004: The Shift Towards Services (Geneva and New York: United Nations, 2004). , 2004 .

[53]  F. Coronil The Magical State: Nature, Money, and Modernity in Venezuela , 1997 .

[54]  Michael Watts,et al.  Liberation Ecologies: Environment, Development, Social Movements , 1997 .

[55]  M. Korstanje The Risk Society: Towards a new modernity , 2009 .

[56]  Erik Swyngedouw,et al.  Globalisation or ‘glocalisation’? Networks, territories and rescaling , 2004 .

[57]  J. Emel An Inquiry into the Green Disciplining of Capital , 2002 .

[58]  R. Kasperson,et al.  The Social Amplification of Risk , 2003 .

[59]  R. Robertson,et al.  Globalisation or glocalisation? , 1994 .

[60]  G. Bridge,et al.  Mapping the Bonanza: Geographies of Mining Investment in an Era of Neoliberal Reform , 2004, The Professional Geographer.

[61]  Akhil Gupta,et al.  Spatializing States: Toward an Ethnography of Neoliberal Governmentality , 2002 .