Algeria
GOVERNMENT ROLE
Hydrocarbons plant at Alrar, in eastern Algeria near the
Libyan border, produces liquefied petroleum gas, butane, propane,
and condensates.
Courtesy Embassy of Algeria, Washington
Laying pipeline for moving hydrocarbons across the Sahara
Courtesy Sonatrach
The spirit of jealously guarded independence was the driving
force behind the new republic's economic plans. The government's
policies, in turn, were initially dictated by the political philosophy
of a group of freedom fighters with varying degrees of commitment
to a socialist ideology. Such an ideology favored a self-sufficient
economy that would satisfy the basic needs of the masses. But
these same economic policies also evolved in response to a combination
of other factors. These factors included the legacy of an untrained
labor force left by the colons and an early obsession with intensive
projects for national development even at the expense of imposing
severe hardships on consumers. Other elements influencing economic
policies were soaring prices, spiraling unemployment, runaway
population explosion, and popular discontent. Ultimately, later
and more pragmatic leaders realized that liberalization of the
economy, political life, and social infrastructure was inevitable.
In the immediate postindependence period, the government concentrated
on investment in large-scale heavy industry turnkey projects,
such as steel mills and oil refineries. The early 1980s saw a
reversal of this policy. Large enterprises were broken into smaller,
more efficient units, and larger amounts of the investment budget
were shifted to light industries, such as textiles, food processing,
and housing construction. The government retained a preponderant
economic role, however, in large strategic state companies, such
as the National Company for Research, Production, Transportation,
Processing, and Commercialization of Hydrocarbons (Société Nationale
pour la Recherche, la Production, le Transport, la Transformation
et la Commercialisation des Hydrocarbures--Sonatrach). Sonatrach
was established in 1963 but was divided in 1980 into thirteen
more autonomous and specialized units. The government's austerity
program, which directed hydrocarbon revenues toward national development,
and the continued aversion of the authorities to labor-intensive
sectors such as agriculture and manufacturing created more acute
unemployment problems and unprecedented food shortages. The 1986
oil price crash forced the government to rethink its petroleum-dependence
policies and pay more attention to agriculture and other sectors.
The October 1988 bread riots, however, were probably the precipitating
event that caused Benjedid to embark on a serious program of political
and economic liberalization. Some of the more significant economic
reforms came in the form of legislation promulgated in 1990 and
1991. The new laws defined specific regulations governing such
critical issues as foreign investment and trade, joint ventures,
repatriation of capital and profits, and recourse to international
arbitration of disputes. The extent of progress made in implementing
these new laws in the 1990s will be a major factor in determining
Algeria's economic outlook. Another important determinant is the
future course of hydrocarbon prices. This factor, although beyond
the government's control, has prompted it to initiate a policy
of diversifying hydrocarbon earnings by increasing both natural
gas and liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports, as well as condensates
and petrochemicals.
The World
Bank (see Glossary) World Development Report, 1989
gave Algeria high marks for its efforts to move its economy from
a directed system based on central planning to a more decentralized,
market-oriented system. The results of this change included returning
to individual farmers land collectivized in the 1970s, privatizing
low-productivity state farms, establishing autonomous public enterprises,
and giving the Central Bank of Algeria (Banque Centrale d'Algérie;
hereafter Central Bank) the authority to control credit and money
supply. Since the establishment in January 1963 of the Central
Bank to replace the French Colonial Bank of Algeria and act as
the government's financial agent, the banking system has been
under state control. New legislation on banking and credit introduced
in 1986 and 1987 defined relationships between the Central Bank
and commercial banks and allowed the latter to provide credit
to state enterprises and private companies alike.
Data as of December 1993
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