INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC & ENERGY WEEKLY

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Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4
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RIPPUB
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S
Document Page Count: 
44
Document Creation Date: 
December 27, 2016
Document Release Date: 
April 18, 2011
Sequence Number: 
5
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Publication Date: 
January 17, 1986
Content Type: 
REPORT
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Date ROUTING AND TRANSMITTAL SUS M. Name, office symbol, room number, b uilding ost) 1. DDI/CPAS/ILS'.. 7G50 H s. Initials Date 2. DDI/CPAS/IMC/CB (7G07 Hqs.) 3. 4. on File Note and Return proval For Clearance Per Conversation s Requested For Correction Prepare Reply Irculate For Your Information See Me mment Investigate Signature Coordination Justify ** THE ATTACHED IS A;HECORD COPY OF THE IEEW ** This copy has been prepared for CPAS/ILS as a quick reference for their requests-in"regard to the IEEW When CPAS/ILS has no further need for this info, please forward to IMC/CP for permanent file. DO NOT use this form as a RECORD of approvals, concurrences, disposals, clearances, and similar actions FROM: (Name, org. symbol. Agency/Post) OGI/Exec. Staff Room No.-Bldg. 3G00 Hqs. sea-`io: _ OPTIONAL FORM 41 (Rev. 7-76) aa.....rw.A w A!? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 __ll Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Directorate of Intelligence Weekly International Economic & Energy t DI IEEW 86-003 17 January 1986 Copy627 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret International Economic & Energy Weekly 17 January 1986 iii Synopsis 1 Perspective-Western Europe's High-Technology Policy Still Lacks Direction 3 West Germany: Changes in Telecommunications Policy 7 South Africa: Prospects for Debt Negotiations 17 International Gas Markets: A Year of Progress 23 Israeli Exports: The Challenge of EC Expansion 27 Briefs Energy International Finance Global and Regional Developments National Developments Comments and queries regarding this publication are welcome. They may be directed to Directorate of Intelligence, telephone Secret DI IEEW 86-003 17 January 1986 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 ?_ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret International Economic & Energy Weekly 25X1 Synopsis 1 Perspective-Western Europe's High-Technology Policy Still Lacks Direction ness remain a mixture of ambitious goals and modest achievements West European cooperative programs to improve technological competitive- West Germany: Changes in Telecommunications Policy reforms. Bonn has proposed several modest changes to its telecommunications policy following a December US factfinding mission on the West German telecom- munications market. West German telecommunications officials probably hope these incremental concessions will defuse pressure for more fundamental South Africa: Prospects for Debt Negotiations 1 -1 keep debt negotiations going. Proposals by South Africa and bank creditors to reschedule $14 billion in currently frozen debts are far apart, but President Botha's speech opening Parliament later this month probably will contain enough positive elements to hamper development. The conflict between the Tamil minority and a Sinhalese majority in Sri Lanka is becoming increasingly costly to the national economy and the economic well-being of both groups. Although the economic outlook would improve if a peace settlement is reached, structural inefficiencies, external debt, and the dependence on world commodity prices would still severely International Gas Markets: A Year of Progress 1986. The year 1985 saw a major expansion of demand and trade in both West Euro- pean and Asian gas markets. We believe that this improved outlook still could be undercut by declining energy prices, especially if oil prices collapse during Israeli Exports: The Challenge of EC Expansion about one-third of total Israeli exports. The vital EC market accounts for roughly 15 percent of Israel's GDP and for iii Secret DI IEEW 86-003 17 January 1986 25X1 25X1 -i,- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 5X1 International Economic & Energy Weekly 17 January 1986 Perspective Western Europe's High-Technology Policy Still Lacks Direction West European market. West European cooperative programs to improve technological competitive- ness remain a mixture of ambitious goals and modest achievements. Most West European leaders consider European-wide cooperation necessary to bridge the "technology gap" vis-a-vis the United States and Japan. They have had difficulty, however, arranging funding and setting aside short-term national interests. Consequently, many of Western Europe's high-technology research programs-in particular, ESPRIT, RACE, BRITE, and, more recently, EUREKA-take shape, slowly. They lack the specific product goal that was characteristic of Airbus and the European Space Agency's (ESA) Ariane-two projects generally cited as West European successes. Moreover, companies will continue to face problems translating technological advances into commercial products unless further steps are taken to create a unified marginal research they would not do without government support. ESPRIT-the EC program in information technologies-highlights the diffi- culty of getting West European companies to work together. A committee of businessmen and academics recently pointed to progress on several projects and on setting European standards for computer software but could cite no major technological breakthroughs. The program still has not established an overall data transmission system because of disagreement on what equipment to use. Companies, in any case, are reluctant to share technical information with research partners that are competitors outside ESPRIT. Also, firms from the less-advanced EC countries are seeking to upgrade their technology through ESPRIT and are focusing on technology sharing rather than cutting- edge research. Several firms probably are using the program to finance its aims. RACE-an EC initiative to create a unified West European telecommunica- tions network by the end of the century-almost certainly will face severe funding difficulties. The program is in a preliminary phase but spending is slated to rise steeply once it formally begins. With EC officials already struggling to finance the current research budget, the major expenditures envisioned for RACE may be cut back sharply. In addition, RACE faces an uphill battle against traditional procurement practices that heavily favor domestic producers. EC efforts to harmonize technical standards across member countries for telecommunications equipment, for example, have been ineffective. BRITE-the EC program to apply advanced technology to traditional industries-is also unlikely to get the funding needed to carry out 1 Secret DI IEEW 86-003 17 January 1986 __~_ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 III II I . L J I II.. ' 111._1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 For EUREKA-the latest European-wide high-technology initiative-the major West European countries are trying to emulate the ESA approach by keeping it out of the EC framework. They also wish to make it a program for product development rather than fundamental research. Western Europe- including non-EC countries-has approved the general concept of EUREKA and has selected 10 preliminary projects, but its funding, organization, and aim are still being worked out. If EUREKA focuses on a few key areas of dual-use technology, it could bolster West European competitiveness in the civilian and defense sectors. Nonetheless, political differences are likely to slow the program,. and funding problems may transform it into a series of measures designed merely to spur joint ventures among West European firms. The common perception of EUREKA as an alternative to participation in SDI research underscores the ambivalence of West Europeans toward joint projects with their main industrial rivals. West Europeans want the technological spinoffs of such cooperation, but fear that their best scientists will wind up working for non-European competitors. Despite mixed results to date, some progress on West European research cooperation and creation of a more unified West European market seem likely. West European countries already are moving toward the following goals: elimination of intra-European trade barriers by 1992, greater deregulation of capital markets, provision of tax incentives to innovative firms, and the development of European-wide technical standards. The outlook for accom- plishing these aims is brighter now than just a few years ago, but implementa- tion will be a long process. - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret West Germany: Changes in Telecommunications Policy Bonn has proposed several modest changes to its telecommunications policy following a US fact- finding mission in December on the West German telecommunications market. While these changes are an encouraging first step, the United States will pursue further market-opening measures. The United States, as well as France and Japan, has been eager to increase sales to the West German telecommunications market-the largest in West- ern Europe, but one that has remained relatively closed to foreign suppliers. We believe that West German fears of protectionist legislation in the US telecommunications sector prompted their recent concessions. West German telecommunications of- ficials probably hope these incremental concessions will defuse pressure for more fundamental reforms. A closed US market would hurt West German equipment manufacturers, who view the United States as a major export market. The Deutsche Bundespost-Industry Relationship West Germany's postal and telecommunications authority, the Deutsche Bundespost, has come un- der increasing criticism both at home and abroad for its continuing monopolistic hold over telecom- munications. The Bundespost's monopoly is part of the West German constitution and gives the Bundespost exclusive rights to establish and oper- ate public telecommunications systems. A high degree of cooperation exists between the Bundes- post and its four major West German electronics and telecommunications equipment suppliers: Sie- mens, Standard Electrik Lorenz, Telenorma, and Deutsche Telefonwerke. These firms supply rough- ly 90 percent of the Bundespost's annual procure- ment, which in 1984 totaled over $5 billion. In addition, the Bundespost often works out product specifications in advance with these favored suppliers. Bundespost certification procedures have also worked to the advantage of domestic supplier firms. According to Embassy reporting, all vendors to the Bundespost must first have their equipment tested and certified by the Bundespost's Central Telecom- munications Licensing Office to ensure compatibil- ity with the public network. This licensing group only considers certification requests from West German citizens and firms, or a foreign firm with an established subsidiary in West Germany. The working committee that sets the technical stan- dards against which all products are tested is funded by and composed of this same group of supplier firms. The US Embassy confirms that US telecommuni- cations firms have been adversely affected by Bundespost regulations and practices. A large US computer company reports that it could not get sales approval for a digital private branch exchange for two years because the Bundespost had not written a regulation to cover the new technology. In another case, a US data base supplier was not permitted to offer its product to customers of the public switched network because of the Bundespost monopoly on all domestic dial-up networks.F__-] German Responses to US Concerns The West Germans have made it clear that they feel no pressure to follow the US lead in large-scale deregulation of the telephone system. They did offer the following general responses to US ques- tions on existing Bundespost policies: ? Liberalization. There is a significant amount of domestic interest in reexamining the role and structure of the Bundespost. A high-level inde- pendent commission composed of business, indus- try, and political leaders is currently examining the options for a new telecommunications policy, and will report its recommendations to the gov- ernment in 1987. Secret DI IEEW 86-003 17 January 1986 _i1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret ? Trade. West German officials claim they are puzzled by simultaneous US moves toward liber- alization and protectionism. In light of the pend- ing US legislation, such as the Danforth and Wirth-Florio telecommunications bills, the US charge that the West German market is closed does not impress the German telecommunications authorities. In addition, the West Germans point- ed to the US trade surplus in the telecommunica- tions sector as an indicator of West Germany's open markets. ? Prospects for Competition. West Germany justi- fies its monopoly practices on political and legal grounds. Because the Bundespost is charged by law with providing a public service, it must make telecommunications services available at the same price to all users. This results in consider- able interregional subsidies. The Bundespost stat- ed that fulfilling its social mandate is therefore inconsistent with the introduction of competition. ? Standards. A Bundespost representative ex- plained that the West German standards-setting committees mirror the technical committees of the International Standards Organization (ISO). These committees are voluntary organizations funded by the major West German electronics and telecommunications companies. As a mem- ber of the European Community, West Germany is also intent on working toward a common European standard for telecommunications prod- ucts and network interface, which limits their ability to respond directly to US appeals. ? Procurement of telecommunications equipment. A Bundespost spokesman claims that Bundespost procurement is nondiscriminatory, with domestic and foreign firms treated equally. Foreign firms have generally received positive consideration by the Bundespost when they offer a product not usually included in the West German firms' product lines. Liberalizing Measures Despite these differences of opinion, the West Germans offered the US delegation a list of eight liberalizing measures at the conclusion of the Proposed Changes in West German Telecommunications Policy Category US firms will be allowed to participate in Bundespost tenders offered through the EC. The West Germans are opening 10 percent of terminal equip- ment procurement for purchase outside West Germany. The Bundespost will support ef- forts to initiate discussions be- tween the United States and the EC aimed at reaching agree- ments in the new GATT round regarding coverage of telecom- munications equipment under the government procurement code. The approval procedures of the Central Telecommunications Licensing Office will be expedited. The Bundespost will consolidate all of the type approval proce- dures into one regulation. Enhanced services After harmonization of tariffs (in 1988) the Bundespost will liberalize the provision of en- hanced services. Customer premises The technical specifications for equipment private branch exchanges will be revised to permit greater ap- provalfexibility. The manda- tory leasing of the primary tele- phone instrument from the Bundespost will be eliminated in 1988. Technical specifications for modems will be revised and harmonized. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret conference. Among these changes, West Germany now will open 10 percent of government contracts for telecommunications equipment to foreign firms by offering them through EC channels. West Ger- many has also pledged to support US efforts to include telecommunications equipment under the government procurement code of the GATT in the upcoming round. Should the code be revised to include telecommunications equipment, the Bunde- spost would be required to consider foreign and domestic bids equally. In the area of enhanced services, including high-speed data, data base re- trieval services, and information processing, the Bundespost has hinted that in 1988 following tariff harmonization-the standardization of West Ger- man communications charges-it will allow the private sector to compete in the enhanced services market. The Bundespost has also offered two mea- sures to help simplify the type approval process necessary for meeting technical standards. Unanswered Questions These changes to current telecommunications policy represent some progress but still leave sever- al points unclear. On the issue of terminal equip- ment procurement, Bonn has not stated whether the 10-percent share means a guaranteed percent- age of foreign purchases or merely the percentage of tenders that will be published outside West Germany. Moreover, we do not know the range of terminal equipment products to be included under this measure. For 1988, when provision of en- hanced services may be liberalized, it was not stated whether the private-sector firms must be located in West Germany. An important barrier to the liberalization of enhanced services is West Germany's policy of tariff harmonization through volume charging. Volume charging, which prices according to the amount of data transmitted, could make the provision of enhanced services unprofit- able for private firms. Moreover, the timetable for the implementation of the liberalizing measures is uncertain. The government commission investigat- ing telecommunications issues will not report its recommendations on a new policy framework until 1987. By leaving December's proposed changes West Germany: Projected Growth Thousands of units in Terminal Market Telephone 31,000 36,000 Telex 160 170 Teletex 72 72 PCs TVs unscheduled, the Bundespost may be trying to avoid a potential conflict with the commission's report. Good Timing These West German policy changes may be a response to domestic and international pressures for deregulation of the telecommunications industry. Following the AT&T breakup and the privatization of NTT in Japan, many traditional post and tele- communications monopolies in Western Europe are reconsidering their structure. We believe additional pressure to reevaluate Bundespost policies is com- ing from domestic groups and the EC Commission. Strong differences exist between the German Eco- nomics Ministry, which favors free trade, and the Bundespost, which is eager to hold on to its monop- oly. The West German delegation was cochaired by these two ministries. There also is pressure from the EC Commission for West Germany to liberal- ize the provision of customer premises equipment, 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 We believe that further liberalization of the cus- tomer premises equipment market is likely, but we do not expect any significant policy changes before the 1987 report is issued. Other opportunities for US vendors may come in enhanced services such as time sharing, electronic mail, and local area net- works after 1988. Freedom for private firms to offer these services over the public switched net- work, however, depends on a limiting of the Bundespost monopoly. If the monopoly were limit- ed, the Bundespost might offer only the basic telephone service and supply the physical network. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret particularly modems. The customer premises equipment market, which includes telephones, desktop terminals, printers, and other peripherals, is expected to show significant growth in the next few years. West Germany had long defined mo- dems as part of the network and not as customer premises equipment, allowing the Bundespost to tightly control modem sales and specifications. We believe the announcement that the Bundespost "has the intention of liberalizing and harmonizing the requirements for modems" is a response to EC concerns. Nonetheless, the EC, while supporting efforts to establish a unified European telecom- munications market, is critical of US attempts to negotiate bilaterally with member states. ~ The Bundespost is likely to continue to oppose the limitation of its monopoly, because potential lost revenue may diminish subsidization of basic phone service. West Germany's willingness to discuss regulatory and market issues attests to the growing domestic interest in telecommunications reform. Continued reform of the Bundespost's monopoly, however, will depend chiefly on a strong political consensus in West Germany. Whether or not this consensus can be achieved remains to be seen. Nonetheless, be- tween thorough reform of the Bundespost's monop- oly and the present highly restrictive regime, we believe there is room for some accommodation of US concerns. 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret South Africa: Prospects for Debt Negotiations continues. Proposals by South Africa and bank creditors to reschedule $14 billion in currently frozen debts are far apart, but President Botha's speech opening Parliament later this month probably will contain enough positive elements to keep debt negotiations going. In addition, Pretoria's recent decision against widening its debt moratorium and restraint on foreign currency controls suggest a desire to begin the long return to normal international finan- cial relations. Even with progress in debt talks, however, South Africa probably will become in- creasingly economically isolated as long as unrest Status of Negotiations debt standstill until 31 March. After last October's brief and inconclusive first meeting between South Africa and its commercial bank creditors, both sides agreed to meet again in November. South Africa's debt mediator, Swiss banker Fritz Leutwiler, postponed the meeting until early this year, however, probably in the hope that a decline in black unrest or possible progress on reform after the South African Parliament convenes this month would improve Pretoria's standing with the international financial communi- ty. With no possibility of a debt rescheduling accord before South Africa's self-imposed 31 De- cember deadline on its debt repayment moratori- um, Pretoria last month unilaterally lengthened the Despite its lengthening of the moratorium, Pretoria resisted adding other loans to the standstill-which many local observers had expected. With almost half the country's loans being repaid normally, and interest payments continuing on credits included in the standstill, South African officials had indicated the moratorium was yielding little foreign exchange breathing space-fueling concerns that additional debts would be drawn into the moratorium net. Pretoria's decision probably reflected a desire to South Africa is poised for a weak recovery this year with about 3 percent real GDP growth. Sus- taining the upswing beyond 1986, however, proba- bly would require successful negotiations with foreign creditors to reschedule the $14 billion in debts that are now frozen. Failure to do so, or to avert tougher sanctions, will lower growth pros- pects over the next few years, adding to tensions in black townships, where over 1,000 people have died in 16 months of rioting. A strongly negative foreign reaction to Botha's speech could bring on tougher sanctions and move South Africa more rapidly toward a siege econo- my. The exchange value of the South African rand probably would fall sharply, leading Pretoria to move quickly to set a fixed exchange rate, further limit imports and overseas payments, and probably reschedule foreign debt unilaterally. Foreign com- panies would skirt foreign exchange controls, for example, by overcharging South African subsidiar- ies for products. Under these extreme circumstances, the decline in foreign and domestic business confidence probably would kill South Africa's tepid recovery, leaving the economy to plod along for several years, with an increasing number of skilled whites leaving in the face of declining economic opportunities. In turn, declining black living standards would influ- ence many of them to accept the argument of militants that majority rule is needed to secure economic gains. Secret DI IEEW 86-003 17 January 1986 --I,- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret South Africa: Foreign Debt Structure' Principal repayments blocked under moratorium Interbank loans 37 Private-sector debt 9 Public-sector debt II 0 Structure of the estimated $23.7 billion foreign debt as of August 1985. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 0 1983 84 85 role as the marketing agent for South African gold mines, now will retain the foreign currency earned national financial relations. South Africa Reserve Bank obligations; other public- sector debt 18 Public-sector bonds 13 Private- sector trade debt and bonds 12 avoid further piquing creditors, expedite a debt accord, and begin the long return to normal inter- Pretoria also has shown restraint in its approach to tightening foreign currency controls. With the val- ue of the South African rand still under downward pressure-despite central bank intervention, the debt moratorium, and the reintroduction last Sep- tember of a penalty rate for capital outflows- many South African economists expected Pretoria to peg the exchange rate to the dollar. Instead, the government only modestly tightened currency con- trols. Exporters are now obliged to convert foreign currency earnings to rand within seven days of the delivery of goods, while the Central Bank, in its Principal repayments permitted under moratorium South Africa: Exchange Rate Trends, 1983-85 from gold sales, paying the mines in rand. Debt Proposals Far Apart South Africa's first debt rescheduling plan, pre- sented in December, essentially proposes to extend the current debt moratorium until 1990. In an attempt to make this suggestion more palatable to. foreign creditors, Pretoria's plan would allow them to roll over maturing blocked loans to new South African borrowers, or to transfer the frozen funds to South African banks and obtain in return five- year promissory notes, according to government documents. Not surprisingly, bank creditors have dismissed Pretoria's proposal as unrealistic n a ltlon Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 -- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret to the economic considerations, foreign banks also continue to face the dilemma of balancing a solu- tion to South Africa's financial crisis against a desire to avoid being viewed as cooperating with Pretoria. Consequently, 10 key bank creditors have put forth their own debt plan, which calls for South Africa to repay 10 percent of frozen debts by yearend. Bankers would then review the country's financial position before determining a repayment plan for 1987. Creditors probably believe that a single-year rescheduling would have the advantage, of appearing to keep South Africa on a tight leash. The 10 banks also suggested Pretoria consider a Paris Club rescheduling of foreign-government- guaranteed debt-primarily trade credits exempt from the current standstill-but Pretoria so far has been careful to avoid entangling foreign govern- ments in the debt standstill, and in our view would do so only under extreme financial pressure. country can repay. Pretoria's proposed four-year standstill probably is intended partly to signal to bankers that the coun- try will not cave in to foreign pressures, but it may also reflect caution about the rate at which the debt repayment obligations not moratorium fall due this year. covered by the moratorium could place heavy strains on the foreign payments position this year. South Africa probably posted a healthy $2 billion current account surplus for 1985, but, with in- creased imports likely to accompany the modest economic upswing expected this year, the 1986 surplus could be pared to about $1.7 billion. Against this, about $2 billion in trade credits plus another $1.6 billion in other loans outside the Reserve Bank Governor de Kock is optimistic that most expiring trade credits will be renewed, but US Embassy and press reports indicate South African commerce is feeling the pinch of curtailed trade lines. South Africa: Pretoria's Debt Rescheduling Proposal, 1986-94 E:1 Current maturity schedule Maturity schedule under South African rescheduling plan, including $8.3 billion in 1985 maturities Despite the pressure of debt rescheduling talks and threats of stronger Western economic sanctions, President Botha almost certainly will not announce reforms sufficient to placate most foreign critics when he opens Parliament on 31 January. His speech probably will contain enough positive ele- ments, however, to keep debt negotiations going. One area of possible concession is modification of the law that empowers the government to reserve certain residential and business areas for whites, mixed-race Coloreds or Indians, although Botha will not scrap this law altogether. The banks have little to gain by breaking off debt talks as long as 25X1 25X1 _, Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret public pressure is manageable and South Africa remains current on its interest payments. Pretoria, for its part, probably recognizes bankers' political sensitivities and may be willing to negotiate on the basis of last month's bank proposal. Even with progress in the debt negotiations, howev- er, South Africa probably will become more eco- nomically isolated as long as the unrest continues. After a likely one-year debt rescheduling expired, South Africa and its creditors probably would be faced in subsequent negotiations with even greater pressure for major political concessions. Mean- while, continued unrest probably would spark new calls for tougher Western economic sanctions.j /measures to insu- late South Africa from foreign economic pressures include building a natural-gas-to-oil conversion plant, creating phony export and import companies to avoid trade restrictions, and promoting a security-related domestic electronics industry. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret Sri Lanka: Economic Problems and Communal Conflict The conflict between the Tamil minority and a Sinhalese majority in Sri Lanka, rooted in deeply contested political and ethnic issues such as power sharing and the preservation of distinct and sepa- rate cultures, is becoming increasingly costly to the national economy and the economic well-being of both groups. So far, Tamil areas in the north and east have been hit hardest, but the insurgents are threatening tea exports, Sri Lanka's major foreign exchange earner, and other economic targets in the Sinhalese south. Defense spending is cutting into funds available for development and welfare, and investment, tourism, and aid are falling. At the same time, competition between Tamils and Sinha- lese for land, employment, and development is intensifying. Although the economic outlook would improve if a peace settlement is reached, structural inefficiencies, external debt, and the dependence on world commodity prices would still severely hamper development. The Economic Cost of Insurgency The two-and-a-half-year-old insurgency is exacer- bating the problems already facing the Sri Lankan economy. We estimate that the economy grew by less than 4.5 percent last year-the lowest level since 1977-in large part because of stagnant tea production and declining output from public-sector industries. Private domestic and foreign investment has been deterred by a decline in the number of lucrative investment opportunities, an overvalued exchange rate, a deteriorating infrastructure, and government backsliding on liberalization measures. The current account deficit more than doubled in 1985 because of falling tea prices and a growing The insurgency has had its greatest impact in the economically backward Northern and Eastern Provinces, where most of the fighting has taken place and where most Tamils live. Embassy reports indicate that Tamil insurgent attacks on infrastruc- ture targets, such as roadways, railroads, and port facilities; repeated robberies of banks and business- es; and the general collapse of civil order have crippled economic life in Jaffna, the major city in the north. Products normally supplied from Jaffna to the rest of the country-fish, salt, and cement- are in short supply throughout Sri Lanka. Fishing, a major part of the economy in the north, has been hit hard. Sri Lanka's total fish catch dropped by 23 percent in 1984, and the government estimates another 10-percent decline for 1985. Coastal fish catches in the northern and eastern regions have suffered from the increased Sri Lan- kan naval surveillance, Army attacks on fishing 25X1 villages, and the flight of Tamil fishermen to India. Blocked transport links with Colombo and periodic militant attacks on rice farmers have disrupted production, milling, and marketing in the north and east, resulting in near famine conditions in parts of the Eastern Province. The government imported 200,000 metric tons of rice in 1985 to bolster national stocks. Tamil militants have recently begun at least one form of economic warfare against the central gov- ernment. One group in January 1986 claimed to have contaminated an undetermined quantity of Sri Lankan tea with cyanide. Although no poisoned tea has yet been found, the threat prompted a major Secret DI IEEW 86-003 17 January 1986 25X1 25X1 ?- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 - L --_ I__ ___ [IL I I i ' i I , . . I . I I I I - I I - 1 1 1_ I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret India Palk Bay G u l f of Mannar Tamil-inhabited area Sinhalese-inhabited area Limit of Mahaweli Irrigation Program O Tea-growing area 0 50 Kilometers 0 50 Miles Trincomalee Bay (under QQ5 inches of precipitation per year) of Bengal WET ZOAI,~ over 65 inches of precipitation per year) Indian Ocean Northern Province Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Private transfers, net 137 203 265 274 277 280 Overall balance -216 -31 -20 0 304 -20 a Based on CIA estimates and preliminary data from the Government of Sri Lanka. Australian purchaser to cancel imports of Sri Lan- Program has been reduced, and the budget for kan tea; other buyers are also assessing their 1986 indicates additional cuts will be made in purchases. Tea trade accounted for approximately development. 30 percent of Sri Lanka's 1985 export earnings. Growing Spending Strains The cost of the counterinsurgency effort has begun to cut into economic development. Following sever- al supplementary appropriations from Parliament in 1985, total allocations for defense reached about $230 million-85 percent greater than the original budget and almost 170 percent more than in 1984. Foreign Investment, Aid, and Tourism Defense expenditures-more than half of which are earmarked for Army and police pay-are now the Although the militants have not yet launched at- second-largest item in the budget and account for tacks against foreign companies operating in Sri 10 percent of government spending, compared to 3 Lanka, the general instability has taken a toll on percent in 1982. Spending on some rural develop- foreign investment. The government maintains that ment projects, public-sector industries, social wel- fare programs, and the Mahaweli Development Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 L __H l . 11 1 I .I I I 11 . [ 111 1. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798ROO0200210005-4 Sri Lanka: Approved Industrial Investments That Include Foreign Participation Number of Projects Sri Lanka: Tourism, 1978-85 Greater Colombo 40 44 18 16 13 15 Economic Commission Outside Greater Colombo Economic Commission foreign investors continue to show interest in Sri Lanka, but admits their numbers have been re- duced. potential foreign investors in the important textile sector are reluctant to begin new projects, and the US Embas- sy reported that a West German-Swiss partnership withdrew a $10 million commitment to a construc- tion project in Trincomalee in mid-1985 in the wake of growing guerrilla operations in the Eastern Province. The communal conflict has also caused some cuts in foreign aid. Diplomatic reporting indicates Can- ada-a major donor to the Mahaweli Irrigation Program-decided in early 1985 to withhold funds earmarked for the next stage of the irrigation network to protest alleged human rights violations by government security forces. Tourism Receipts Million US $ 0 Tourists Thousands I I I I 0 1978 79 80 81 82 83 84 85, Lobbying efforts by Tamil support organizations in Western Europe threaten to harm Colombo's rela- tions with its principal European donors The tourist industry, held up not long ago as the success story of Asian tourism, has been a major casualty of the insurgency. Earnings have declined from a peak of almost $150 million in 1982- before the conflict worsened-to less than $100 million in 1985. The total number of tourists declined from 407,000 in 1982 to about 320,000 in Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798ROO0200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret 1984, and arrivals from January to November 1985 More Problems Down the Road were about 20 percent lower than the correspond- ing period in 1984. We see two possible scenarios for the Sri Lankan mance lags. The insurgency is fueled in part by Tamil percep- tions of Sinhalese economic discrimination. Tamils claim that, since the early 1970s, successive Sinha- lese governments have denied Tamil areas a fair share of central government development outlays, restricted access to government jobs, and denied Tamils the benefits of newly irrigated lands. In our view, the failure of the Jayewardene government over the last four years to address these economic grievances and to fulfill promises of limited autono- my to Tamil areas has heightened Tamil frustra- tions and strenghthened Tamil civilian support for the insurgency. Prospects for reconciliation of these issues are dimming as overall economic perfor- of the government's Sinhalese constituency. The settlement of newly irrigated lands is the most divisive economic issue. Jayewardene's decision in 1977 to accelerate the Mahaweli Program is part of the government's desire to find new land for Sinha- lese farmers by irrigating sparsely populated areas of Sri Lanka's extensive dry zone. Mahaweli is intended to provide increased domestic food pro- duction and promote production of traditional cash crops for export-both important political demands Tamils. Tamils argue publicly that Colombo's land settle- ment policy perpetuates economic discrimination, leaving Tamil farmers to cultivate the economically less viable lands. Embassy reports indicate that, while new Sinhalese settlements have drawn fre- quent insurgent attacks, the militants have not yet attacked the Mahaweli Program's network of ca- nals and dams, suggesting they are reluctant to sabotage an economic asset that could be vital to economy in 1986. In the first and slightly less likely scenario, Indian mediation efforts could lead to a partial settlement between the government and moderate Tamil groups that would grant some political autonomy to Tamils, but not enough to defuse hardliner demands for a separate state. Such a settlement would have only a limited posi- tive impact on the Sri Lankan economy. In our view, Colombo would be forced to maintain high levels of defense expenditures to protect against militants who rejected the settlement, as well as to rebuild the central government presence in the Northern and Eastern Provinces. As a result, we doubt that investors and tourists would return quickly. The second and more likely scenario entails a collapse of negotiations and a resumption of full- scale fighting. Under these conditions, the econom- ic costs of the insurgency to the government would grow. Damage to Sri Lanka's agricultural output, fish catch, economic infrastructure, tourist indus- try, and foreign investor and donor confidence would become more pronounced. The government would probably continue its military buildup, forc- ing higher budget deficits and further cuts in economic development programs. In either scenario, the most hardline Tamil groups are likely to attack economic centers in the Sinha- lese south in a bid to force further concessions from Colombo. Moreover, sabotage of foreign-owned --?- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret businesses or attacks on hotels in the south could erode Sinhalese confidence in the regime and jeop- ardize the country's efforts to rejuvenate its eco- nomic liberalization and diversification programs. The Tamil militants are also likely to continue to attempt to disrupt Sri Lankan tea exports. Even if a comprehensive peace settlement is reached, overall economic performance is unlikely to improve significantly any time soon. Economic growth will continue to be plagued by insufficient investment. The government has not shown the will to reform and broaden the tax base; it is likely to continue to rely on inefficient export and import taxes. The economy will remain heavily dependent on the world prices of agricultural commodities, which show no sign of a dramatic increase. Govern- ment protection and structural inefficiencies con- tinue to plague public-sector industries and deter new foreign investment. Repaying the large debt will continue to be a burden at least for the remainder of the decade. Continuing violence, whether the result of an unti- dy settlement or widespread new fighting, is likely to cause Sri Lanka to turn more to the United States and other Western nations for foreign aid to offset mounting defense expenditures and a worsen- ing foreign payments position. Even if the insurgen- cy subsides, Colombo will almost certainly request additional development assistance from the United States and other lenders and donors to help fund recovery costs and to meet international debt com- mitments. 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 - - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret A Year of Progress The year 1985 saw a major expansion of demand and trade in both West European and Asian gas markets. Gas deliveries under existing contracts with the USSR rose about 17 percent over year- earlier levels. As a result of substantial progress in the negotiations over the sale of gas from the giant Norwegian Troll field, however, the outlook for indigenous West European gas production-as an alternative to Soviet supplies-is much more opti- mistic now than it was a year ago. We believe, however, that this improved outlook still could be undercut by declining energy prices, especially if oil prices collapse during 1986. In East Asia, on the other hand, several liquefied natural gas projects continue to be promoted as alternatives for satisfy- ing projected demand requirements in Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan. It appears that the Soviet Union will be making a major effort to obtain a commitment from Tokyo this year for the purchase Indigenous Supply. The year opened in an atmo- sphere of growing pessimism as an apparent British Gas Corporation decision to purchase gas from Norway's Sleipner field in the North Sea collapsed as a result of London's objections to the terms of the agreement, its impact on the UK balance of payments, and upward revisions in estimates of UK gas reserves. Development of Sleipner consequently has been deferred. London is expected to reenter the import market for natural gas within a few years, despite the official position that indigenous supplies will be sufficient to meet future demand. These imports could come from Sleipner, but, should a cross- channel pipeline be constructed linking Britain to the continental pipeline system, gas imports from the Soviet Union cannot be ruled out. of gas from Sakhalin Island. The European Gas Market Demand. We estimate consumption in Western Europe during 1985 grew about 7 percent over year-earlier levels, due in large part to continued substitution for oil, the unusually cold European winter, and some modest improvement in the West European economies. For the year, consumption reached a record level of approximately 235 billion cubic meters (bcm), according to our estimates. The greatest increases were recorded in: ? Italy, where consumption is rising to accommo- date the volumes contracted from both the USSR and Algeria. ? Austria, which is taking planned increases in Soviet gas. ? The United Kingdom, where natural gas usage continues to expand in the residential and com- mercial market. ? France, where attractive pricing for industrial uses has permitted consumption of competitively With the collapse of the Sleipner sale, many ob- servers believed that the likelihood of development of the Troll field, far larger and more costly to develop than Sleipner, had been diminished. In May, however, negotiations for the sale of Troll gas to a consortium of continental gas buyers began, and all sources report that they are progressing well, despite the fact that price terms have not been settled. According to Embassy reporting, a contract for as much as 15 bcm of gas annually, beginning in the mid-1990s, may be signed this year. If agreement can be reached, this first phase of Troll production could meet about 7 percent of expected continental gas demand in 2000. While sales at this level would still allow some increase in Soviet contracts by the end of the century, they would also enable the West Europeans to meet their Interna- tional Energy Agency commitment to limit supplies from any non-OECD source to less than 30 percent of consumption. Should negotiations for the sale of priced contracted Soviet, supplies. Secret DI IEEW 86-003 17 January 1986 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 i. I [L - II Y 1 i1 lL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 West European Gas Production, Consumption, and Imports, 1985 a Billion cubic meters (except where noted) Total Source Amount Share of Total Consumption (percent) West Germany 16.5 51.1 34.6 Consumption minus production may not equal imports, because of losses in production and transmission, exports and reexports, and/or storage programs. b Net exporter. 35.3 15 26.2 11 20.1 9 Netherlands 15.0 29 USSR 14.0 27 Norway 5.5 11 Denmark 0.1 NEGL Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 to increase its gas sales substantially. Troll gas founder, Moscow, as the lowest cost supplier with spare export capacity, is well placed when these extended contracts expire In midyear, the Dutch reached agreement with their French, West German, Italian, Belgian, and Swiss customers to extend the current contracts, due to expire in the early 1990s, until after the turn of the century. This revision occurred as part of normal three-year contract renegotiations. The new contracts ensure that Dutch gas will continue to account for about 20 percent of other continental gas users' consumption during the remainder of this century, and preclude the purchase of significant amounts of additional Soviet gas. Unless the Dutch again revise their estimates of remaining gas re- serves, their current policy is to phase out exports tration. Price Developments. Natural gas prices continued to fall in Western Europe as a result of oversupply and the general decline in energy prices. The current Dutch price, for example, fell to about $3.50 per million Btu, compared to a peak of over $4.00 per million Btu in late 1983. Market pres- sures also forced Moscow to lower its gas prices to comparable levels, and both Norway and Algeria are expected to follow suit in ongoing negotiations. West European buyers of Norway's Statfjord gas, which began flowing on 1 October, are pressing Oslo for price cuts when full contract volumes become obligatory on 1 February 1986. The origi- nal price for Statfjord gas when the contract was signed in 1981 was $5.50 per million Btu, but clauses linked to oil prices have since reduced it to about $4.55 per million Btu. In order to move the gas during a four-month testing period, the Norwe- gians discounted the price by 20 percent to a level roughly comparable with prevailing Dutch and Soviet gas prices. Industry sources suggest that, if the Norwegians insist on returning to the $4.55 price on 1 February, the buyers will either invoke hardship clauses in their contracts that allow price renegotiation or submit the matter to binding arbi- Imports. Soviet gas exports to its current West European customers-Austria, Finland, France, Complicating any Norwegian gas assessment is the subsidence problem at the main Ekofisk produc- tion complex. Troll development may hinge on correction of this problem because the Ekofisk complex is a key link in the West European gas distribution system. Subsidence occurs when a petroleum reservoir compacts as a result of the withdrawal of oil and gas from a structure. As the Ekofisk platform sinks, equipment on the lower ,deck is threatened by waves. Following a determi- nation in June that the seabed had already sunk about 2.5 meters, scheduled deliveries were re- duced by 25 percent until October 1987 to allow time to correct the problem. We estimate that the maximum shortfall to the continent will be about 3.5 bcm annually, and the operator is scrambling to obtain additional gas from Statfjord or perhaps Heimdal, either to make up the shortfall or to use for reinjection to stem the subsidence, according to Embassy reporting. Norway's European customers are using reduced Ekofisk deliveries as leverage in Troll negotiations in an attempt to obtain better contractual and security provisions, according to the trade press. Norway, moreover, is concerned that this incident is damaging its image as a reliable supplier, according to industry journal reports. Italy, and West Germany-increased by about 17 percent in 1985 to over 35 bcm and may have earned Moscow roughly $4 billion in hard curren- cy. Soviet gas now covers about 25 percent or more of the consumption requirements of these five countries, but no more than 14 percent of total energy requirements for any of the group. As scheduled under a 1981 contract, Moscow became the sole supplier of natural gas to West Berlin in October. No new gas contracts were signed during -11- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 - IlL ......II A 1 1 .1 1 11 -11 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 West Europe Gas Trade: Selected Export Sources, 1985 Soviet Exports 35.3 billion cubic meters Dutch Exports 32.4 billion cubic meters Austria 13- 39 Italy 15 - France 23 France 17 Algerian Exports 20.1 billion cubic meters Spain 7 Luxembourg 8 France 40 Libyan Exports 0.9 billion cubic meters the year, however, despite frequent discussions with Turkey and talks with Greece: ? Turkey has agreed in principle to buy 1.5 bcm of Soviet gas beginning in 1987, rising to 6 bcm per year by 2000. According to Embassy reporting, Ankara may soon sign a 20-year contract that could earn Moscow up to $750 million annually at current prices if deliveries reach peak levels. ? Negotiations with the Greeks for an initial 2 bcm per year of Soviet gas, rising to 4 bcm per year by 2000, began in late November. France 8 West Germany 21 United Kingdom 52 If Turkey and Greece agree to purchase Soviet gas, each will be nearly 100-percent dependent on Mos- cow for their gas supplies, although gas accounts for only about 5 percent of their total energy requirements. Algerian gas deliveries to Western Europe, on the other hand, rose only 7 percent, with all of the increase the result of a 30-percent rise in deliveries to Italy through the Trans-Med pipeline. Although Algeria and Spain ostensibly settled their liquefied natural gas (LNG) contract disagreement early in Norwegian Exports 26.2 billion cubic meters Belgium/ West Germany Luxembourg 8 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret the year, shipments remained constant at about 1.5 bcm. Madrid had agreed to purchase 3.2 bcm per year at a price of about $3.90 per million Btu. Japanese Gas: Production, Consumption, and Imports, 1985 Algeria also began renegotiating its natural gas contracts with Belgium and Italy at the end of the year, with France to follow during 1986. The process is expected to be difficult and to drag on for at least six months. With gas prices falling in Western Europe, Algeria is under considerable pressure to agree to a more realistic price to retain its European customers =Algerian gas costs European customers as much as $1.00 more per million Btu than gas from alternative suppliers. Brussels is seeking either a cut in price or a stretching-out of contracted vol- umes over additional years, while Rome is asking for a reduction in price, now that the Italian Government subsidy on Algerian gas has been removed. The Asian Market. This market is dominated by Japan. We estimate that Japanese consumption totaled about 40 bcm in 1985, an increase of about 11 percent, largely as a result of new gas-fired electric power generating facilities coming on stream. While Tokyo's anticipated gas needs are covered until the mid-1990s, new projects are under consideration for the years thereafter. At midyear, representatives of eight Japanese utilities initialed a contract with six Australian suppliers to import 8.5 bcm of LNG annually beginning in 1989. This Northwest Shelf project is currently under con- struction. Still under active consideration by the Japanese are future LNG supplies from the United States, west- ern Canada, the Soviet Union, and others.! Recent Japanese press articles allege that Tokyo and Moscow are about to conclude an agreement on the long-delayed Sakhalin gas project. Japan reportedly will import 4.3 bcm of gas a year, Total Share of Total (billion Consumption cubic meters) (percent) Malaysia Abu Dhabi United States 6.4 2.9 1.4 15.4 7.0 3.4 beginning in 1995, and finance 50 percent of the project's construction cost. he US Embassy in Tokyo says that Japan's Trade and Foreign Ministries, the private Japanese consor- tium for the project, and the utilities all have strongly denied the press reports. The utilities probably will not make a final commitment to take the gas until a formal price agreement is reached. Should bilateral relations warm, the Trade and Foreign Ministries may urge the utilities to begin negotiations on price, quantity, and delivery. South Korea has joined the ranks of Asian import- ers of LNG, with first deliveries from Indonesia expected this month. Indonesian supplies are con- tracted to expand to 2.8 bcm annually. According to the trade press, South Korean gas consumption could eventually rise to over 7 bcm per year in the 1990s. Construction of an LNG receiving terminal is under way in Taiwan, with a contract for 2.1 bcm per year of Indonesian LNG expected to be signed 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 __ L I . - I I I . II I I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret soon. Some industry observers see LNG demand in Taiwan rising to as much as 10 bcm per year in the 1990s. Future growth in the Asian market is expected to be readily met by expansion of existing or planned LNG projects. Outlook and Implications While the outlook for West European gas security has improved, we believe that falling energy prices could undercut the gains of the past few years. In the current market, buyers may delay concluding contracts hoping to negotiate better terms at a later date. Furthermore, a significant price decline could make expensive North Sea gas development pro- jects uneconomic, opening the door to greater Soviet imports. If the Troll negotiations are unsuc- cessful, West European gas-consuming countries may face difficulty in living up to their Internation- al Energy Agency commitment not to become unduly dependent on non-OECD producers. In the Asian market, Japan and other LNG importers are well placed to secure additional LNG from a variety of suppliers in the Middle East, Asia, North America, and Australia. Because of the abundance of proposed projects, US firms will face stiff com- petition in their attempts to market Alaskan natu- ral gas. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret Israeli Exports: The Challenge of EC Expansion make their export goods more competitive. Israel's export sector faces new challenges in the wake of the accession of Spain and Portugal to the European Community (EC). The vital EC market accounts for roughly 15 percent of Israel's GDP and for about one-third of total Israeli exports. Recent promises by EC leaders to maintain tradi- tional trade patterns with Israel will only partially allay the concerns of Israeli exporters. To improve the long-term outlook for export growth to the EC, Israeli producers must reduce production costs to Recent Developments maintain Israeli market access. According to press reports, EC foreign ministers formally agreed in late November 1985 to begin negotiating new trade and cooperation agreements with 11 Mediterranean countries, including Israel. The negotiations are scheduled for sometime this spring-with the agreements to be effective over a four-year period-and will focus on lowering tariffs on Israeli agricultural exports to preserve their competitive position in the EC market. At the end of the four years, the EC Commission will decide whether these arrangements need to be modified to reached before accession. The commitment to begin negotiations was a vic- tory for Israeli officials who had lobbied intensively over the past year for protection of their EC market share following the entry of Spain and Portugal. These efforts culminated with Vice Prime Minister Shamir's barnstorming trip to Europe last summer, during which he gained support from some govern- ment officials for trade concessions. According to press reports, the West German and Dutch Govern- ments were particularly adamant in insisting that a trade arrangement between the EC and Israel be The negotiations are vital to Israel, which conducts over one-third of its total trade with the EC. Israel has sharply pared its overall civilian trade deficit Israel: Exports to and Imports From the EC, 1981-85 O Exports during the past two years, but export growth to the EC has been stagnant. Indeed, Israel's trade deficit with the EC remains significant-averaging $1.4 billion between 1980 and 1984. This poor perfor- mance may be attributable in part to the high value of the US dollar, in which many Israeli export goods are quoted. The Agricultural Sector While virtually all of Israel's export sectors depend on EC markets, their dependence is most pro- nounced in farm products-EC members purchase about 75 percent of Israel's agricultural exports. These farm product purchases totaled $488 million Secret DI /EEW 86-003 17 January 1986 _-II- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 III II I 1 i L.1 i I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret Israel: 1984 Agricultural Exports to the ECe United Kingdom 173 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 -- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret in 1984 and accounted for the employment of 15,000 to 20,000 workers-roughly one-fifth of Israel's total agricultural labor force. The Israelis are particularly concerned about com- petition from Spain and Portugal in citrus and vegetable exports. Israel's avocado exports to the EC totaled $46 million in 1984, and orange exports totaled $37 million. Currently, Israel enjoys a cost advantage in avocado production over Spain and Portugal. This advantage, however, may deterio- rate unless Israeli farmers are willing to implement improvements in production technology to maintain their advantage. Israeli farmers are further concerned with the EC's progress toward agricultural self-sufficiency. Spain's winter orange crop, for example, may bring the EC much closer to self-sufficiency in orange production, damaging Israeli prospects for addi- tional growth in orange exports to the Community. On the other hand, cotton exports-whose 1984 value surpassed citrus and vegetable exports-may get a shot in the arm from the entry of Spain and Portugal. These two countries imported about $63 million worth of uncombed cotton from Israel in 1984, with Portugal importing about $58 million. With lower tariffs for shipments to Spain and Portugal, these sales may help offset declines in other agricultural commodity exports. Other Key Industries Israel is also concerned about its textile and cloth- ing industry, although these exports are less threat- ened by Spanish and Portuguese competition. Ex- ports of clothing and other apparel to the EC totaled about $196 million in 1984. These exports are of higher quality and appeal to a more upscale market than Spanish and Portuguese goods. Israel's efforts to increase sales to the EC of lower quality textile goods, however, may be harmed because of Israel's relatively high input costs-especially for labor-which make Israeli export prices less com- petitive than those of Spain and Portugal. Prospects for increased sales to the EC of high- technology items such as laser surgery equipment, diagnostic medical instrumentation, and fiber-optic 25X1 communications equipment-in which Israeli firms are at the forefront of world technology-are favor- able. The entry of Spain and Portugal will give Israeli goods an additional boost as these two countries bring their tariffs in line with Community levels. Exports of resistors to the EC, for example, should greatly increase and in the process provide additional employment opportunities for Israeli workers. Israel also will soon have the capacity to produce computer chips-from initial design through production-which should further bright- en the outlook for high-technology exports to the EC. 25X1 25X1 The proposed current accord with the EC will provide only a temporary reprieve for Israel. For 25X1 many industries it may only help preserve the status quo, which has not been particularly good. To expand export sales to the EC would require several fundamental changes. For agriculture: ? At present, two separate boards handle export merchandising. Merging these boards would help reduce operational costs. ? Accelerating the trend toward greater automa- 25X1 tion would reduce the reliance on labor for gains in production. Since 1970, Israel's net agricultur- al capital stock has increased at an annual rate of 0.9 percent, while labor has decreased 0.4 percent annually. The textile and clothing industries also must move toward capital-intensive operations, reducing de- pendence on labor for additional growth. Ongoing structural changes in the textile industry that are reducing the number of firms but increasing indi- vidual firm size will permit greater economies-of- scale. T Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 I I Ill Il 9 I L11.1 I I. 11 I_ I -111_ I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret Although policies aimed at boosting exports are widely endorsed, political realities are likely to hinder quick movement on this front. The Israeli public has tolerated six months of relatively tough austerity, but patience may be wearing thin. The current difficulty in further cutting next year's budget suggests the government may soon ease up on austerity. In addition, US Embassy reporting indicates that Prime Minister Peres is still search- ing for a way to call for a new national election or form a new, Labor-led government without Likud before he trades places with Likud leader Shamir next October. Because economic policies needed to boost exports would add to Israeli unemployment- already at a record rate of almost 8 percent-Peres is very likely to refrain from pushing for such measures in the near term. - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret Energy Spot Oil Price Spot crude oil prices dropped by over $1 per barrel last week to as low as $24 Developments per barrel, as supplies continued to outstrip demand. Prices for most crudes are now more than $2 per barrel below average 1985 prices and down $5 per barrel from late November levels. Mexico, Venezuela, and Egypt have lowered their prices in response to competitive market pressures-Mexico is considering a more flexible market-related pricing policy, according to press reports. Both OPEC and non-OPEC production soared in the fourth quarter of 1985 and arrival of a significant portion of this oil in the consumer market will put additional downward pressure on prices during the next several weeks. Iranian-Brazilian Iran and Brazil will meet in late January to resolve an oil price dispute that Oil Barter Problems has caused Brazil to restrict liftings of Iranian oil. Under a $425 million barter agreement signed last July, Brazil takes 32,000 b/d at spot prices and 13,000 b/d at official prices. countries are likely to resolve the dispute because both want to expand economic ties; Tehran needs to retain oil buyers and Brazil views Iran as a lu- crative market, particularly for foodstuffs. Development of A recent Gulf-Canada test well in the Beaufort Sea indicated a potential Beaufort Sea Closer capacity of over 35,000 barrels per day, which, in combination with nearby de- posits, brings the Beaufort region to the threshold of development. Production in the Beaufort field, however, requires the construction of a 650-kilometer pipeline to northern Alberta. Because of the pipeline's cost, the harsh climate, and environmental concerns, a significant long-term decline in oil prices probably would threaten development, despite the promising tests. In that case, the major oil firms almost certainly would attempt to persuade Ottawa to subsidize the Beaufort project. Though budgetary constraints would weigh in their decisions, we believe Ottawa would probably provide some funding to further its goal of developing the Arctic. Secret DI IEEW 86-003 17 January 1986 _1[ Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 III I I E I I 1 I L I. I _I _I I._. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret Australian Australian coal exports in 1985 are estimated to have hit a new high of more Coal Exports than 87 million metric tons, up 14 percent over 1984 volumes. At these levels, Continue To Rise Australian coal exports will, for the second consecutive year, top exports by the United States-historically the world's largest coal exporter. Steam coal exports to Japan rose 34 percent compared with year earlier levels while shipments to Western Europe increased by about 5 percent. Coking coal exports also rose-but by only 3 percent. Australian coal producers are expected to benefit from some importers' decisions to stop purchasing South African coal. France Finds Coal Atic, the French coal-buying agency, has signed a three-year contract to To Replace South purchase 1 million metric tons of coal annually from Colombia beginning in African Supplies 1986 as well as a contract to buy 200,000 tons of coal from a Canadian company in the first quarter of 1986. Both suppliers gained entrance to the French market after Paris announced its refusal to renew expiring South African coal contracts for 3.9 million tons a year. At annual rates, these new contracts replace about half of the South African imports. France is not expected to seek additional contracts as nuclear power continues to replace coal in the electricity sector. New Pakistani A large coal deposit recently discovered in Chitral adds to Pakistan's estimated Coal Find coal deposits of more than 1 billion metric tons-102 million tons are proved reserves-according to press reports and official sources. Despite these reserves, Pakistan mined only an estimated 2 million tons in FY 1983/84, and coal accounts for only 7.4 percent of the country's energy supply. Coal development has been slow because of a lack of infrastructure-such as good roads to some remote deposits-poor-quality deposits, and few thermal power plants. Pakistan faces serious and growing energy shortages that are likely to further disrupt both agricultural and industrial production, but lacks the technical and financial resources that would be required to exploit its coal reserves. Secret 17 January 1986 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret UAE Gas Flow Natural gas is due to start flowing this month from fields in Sharjah to to Dubayy Imminent industries and utilities in Dubayy, according to the Sharjah government. Up to 2 million cubic meters per day will be delivered under the terms of a deal signed last May, and volumes could be expanded to nearly 3 million cubic meters daily. According to the trade press, the price is estimated at $1.25 per million Btu. Sharjah is expecting 1986 revenues from the Dubayy purchase to amount to $25 million. Switzerland Signs Swissgas and West Germany's Ruhrgas have agreed on a new long-term Natural Gas Contract natural gas supply contract to the year 2005. Deliveries of North Sea gas from Ruhrgas will run at an annual volume of about 600 million cubic meters per year, with an option to increase to 1 billion cubic meters annually. The present Swissgas-Ruhrgas contract, signed in 1977, expires in 1988. As of that date, Ruhrgas will also begin deliveries of 360 million cubic meters per year of Soviet gas, or about 18 percent of Switzerland's gas needs. West German and Dutch natural gas currently meet about 8 percent of Switzerland's total energy consumption and gas requirements are expected to be fully covered to the end of the century and partially thereafter. subject to tough price and quantity negotiations. bother utilities continue to balk at taking Sakhalin gas or are willing to import a token amount. If Moscow has officially pushed the initial delivery date back from 1990 or 1991 to 1995 or beyond, however, we believe the utilities may be more agreeable, but any prospective settlement still would be strongly denied the press reports. kyo, however, says that Japan's Trade and Foreign Ministries, SODECO (the semiprivate Japanese consortium for the project), Kansai, and Chubu all have Shifting Japanese Recent Japanese press articles alleging that Tokyo and Moscow are about to Interest in conclude an agreement for developing the long-delayed Sakhalin gas project Sakhalin Gas Project may be overly optimistic. Japan reportedly will import 3 million tons of LNG a year, beginning in 1995, and finance 50 percent of the project's construction cost. The press reports also name the Kansai and Chubu Electric Power Companies as having agreed to take some of the gas. The US Embassy in To- Iraqi Debt The weak oil market probably will cause Iraq to seek another debt reschedul- Rescheduling Likely ing in 1986 to help avoid cuts in military and civilian imports. According to the US Embassy, Iraq has roughly $1.5 billion in debt payments due to Western creditors this year. Most is owed to France, West Germany, and Japan, and much of this was originally rescheduled in 1984. Several of Iraq's Western creditors met last month to discuss a unified approach, but failed to reach agreement, according to the US Embassy in Paris. As a result, Baghdad is likely to be successful in rescheduling its 1986 debt bilaterally; both France and Japan reportedly believe they can get a better deal by negotiating with Iraq individually rather than through the "Paris Club." 29 Secret 17 January 1986 -II- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 - .. L ... I 9 i .i .1 . 1 -1..1. I _I1 I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret Moroccan Problems Morocco failed last week to meet the second deadline of commercial creditors With Creditors on a downpayment of $83 million, the initial sum due under a rescheduling agreement signed last October. The US Embassy says Morocco hopes to pay within a week and has requested a meeting to discuss the program. Rabat claims the problem is the result of unexpectedly low remittances from Moroccans working overseas. Collapse of the rescheduling agreement would jeopardize Rabat's $200 million IMF standby loan. According to the Embassy, Morocco is already in trouble over its failure to meet IMF targets on spending. Even if Rabat is able to honor agreements with the banks and the IMF, its economic options will remain severely constricted without a marked improvement in its management of the economy and in the world market for phosphates. Sudanese Sudan's failure to repay by 1 January $1.9 million in US debt obligations now Financial Problems more than 12 months in arrears has triggered a Brooke Amendment cutoff of all new US economic and military assistance. Meanwhile the IMF will postpone, at least until 3 February, a decision to declare Sudan ineligible for further Fund assistance. To avoid the IMF cutoff Khartoum reportedly will have to make partial payment on its arrears of over $200 million to the Fund and must also implement some of the policies favored by the IMF. Scraping to- gether a partial payment to the Fund may, in part, explain Khartoum's delay in meeting the minor Brooke Amendment payment. Fulfilling the requirement for policy reforms will be difficult given the recent change in Finance Ministers and the political turmoil and indecision existing within the transi- tional government as elections approach in April. Global and Regional Developments Secret 17 January 1986 25X1 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret India-Pakistan India and Pakistan agreed last week to establish the groundwork for improved Economic Agreement economic ties. The agreement seeks to more than double government- controlled commodity trade, renew the limited private trade Pakistan suspend- ed in 1978, increase cross-border communications, and start joint industrial ventures in each country. Bilateral trade peaked near $100 million in 1981 but has since dropped to an estimated $50 million for the year ending in June and now accounts for less than 1 percent of each country's annual trade. both countries are considering ways to collaborate in international economic forums and to avoid double taxation in order to encourage cross-border investment. Many Pakistani officials and businessmen fear India's competitive trade advantage, however, and, without sustained high-level political pressure, overall growth in trade will probably be slow. Eastern and Southern According to US Embassy reporting, the mid-December Summit meeting of Africa Preferential the Preferential Trade Agreement for Eastern and Southern African states Trade Area (PTA) in Lusaka, Zambia, was poorly attended by heads of government and yielded few results. Only four leaders of the 15 PTA member countries- Burundi, Tanzania, Zambia, and Zimbabwe-participated. As a result, no decisions were taken on outstanding major issues such as a proposed reduction in the minimum level of local ownership for firms benefitting from preferential tariffs and the development of a framework for the reduction of nontariff barriers. Members did agree, however, to establish a PTA Trade and Development Bank, effective this month. We believe only slow progress toward economic integration is likely, because the political links between PTA members are fragile at best) National Developments Developed Countries Secret 17 January /986 fl[- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 - I I I I I I I .i I I I I I . 1 _ L -1 -1 1 _I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret Japanese-US During talks on 8 and 9 January, Washington's proposal to ban Japanese Fishery Talks fishing of Alaskan-spawned salmon in the Northern Pacific met stiff resistance Stalled from the Agriculture Ministry. Tokyo disputes the US claim that annual Japanese catches of 30 million salmon include 1 million spawned in Alaskan rivers, countering that the figure is only 400,000. Japan also objects to linking the salmon issue to Japanese fish allocations within the US 200-mile economic zone. A quick settlement does not appear likely and the US Embassy warns that the issue may blossom into a major political quarrel. Japanese fishery organizations are considering suspending imports of US fishery products in retaliation-Japan bought about $680 million, or 57 percent, of US fish exports in 1984. Tokyo may try to placate the politically powerful industry with limited measures if a settlement is not reached. Canadian Dollar Continues Downward Drift Secret 17 January 1986 interest rates will slow growth and boost unemployment. Attempts by Canada's central bank to alleviate downward pressure on the Canadian dollar by raising interest rates are apparently failing. In recent weeks the Bank of Canada has intervened in exchange markets-estimated intervention was US $800 million in December-and last week raised the discount rate more than one-half percentage point to 10.21 percent. In addition, the major banks have raised the prime rate twice in the past week to 11 percent. Nonetheless, despite a temporary strengthening, the Canadian dollar on Tuesday hit a new low against the US dollar. Economists are citing Ottawa's inability to substantially cut its budget deficit, a discriminatory foreign investment policy, and the likelihood of another large current account deficit in the fourth quarter, to explain the recent pressure on the Canadian dollar. If downward pressures continue, Ottawa may soon be forced to abandon its attempts to prop up its currency because of fears that higher Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 - - I Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret Less Developed Countries Brazil Maintaining The director of a major Brazilian center for nuclear research has announced a Unsafeguarded 10-percent federal reduction in personnel funding for 1986 Nuclear Research The Nuclear and Energy Research Institute-IPEN-is responsible for unsafeguarded, indigenous re- search projects in uranium enrichment, laboratory-scale fuel reprocessing, and design of a planned submarine propulsion reactor. The IPEN director very likely will continue to use his influence to protect these research efforts. Despite the personnel funding cut at IPEN-a result of broader Brazilian fiscal austerity-Brasilia maintains a strong commitment to indigenous nuclear research. Mexico's Honda Mexico's recent decision authorizing a 100-percent Honda-owned motorcycle Decision plant is the first indication that the de la Madrid administration intends to keep its latest promise to open the economy to direct foreign investment. In re- turn for waiver of the usual 49-percent foreign ownership limit, Honda is expected to create some 1,700 jobs and generate exports of $100 million by 1992. In addition to the jobs and foreign exchange, Mexico City probably hopes to acquire advanced technology and satisfy international creditor calls for needed structural adjustments. For its part, Honda will be able to take ad- vantage of relatively cheap Mexican labor and probably hopes to improve its position in the US market. Nicaraguan Currency The Sandinistas have further tightened their grip on domestic currency flows Mismanagement with new regulations that attempt to force private companies to use govern- ment-controlled bank accounts-instead of petty cash-for government- approved transactions. Managua has justified the move by citing growing black-market activity, soaring inflation, and excess currency in circulation. The new policy is also designed to boost deposit levels-banks occasionally have shut down for lack of currency-and to facilitiate tax collection. As a re- sult, many private farmers and small businesses plan to close their accounts to avoid the tax auditors, according to US Embassy reporting. The new regulations will probably backfire. Any increases in bank deposits from larger companies will likely be offset by individuals and small businesses closing their accounts. Businesses unable to obtain materials via the black market may close, adding to a drop in exports and further undermining private-sector activity. Moreover, any strengthening of the cordoba due to reduced supply will be countered by a probable rise in capital flight. Secret 17 January 1986 --?- Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 III II ll i I I I I I II 11__1. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret 17 January 1986 Key Debtor LDCs: Real Exchange Rates Index: 1980=100 Argentina 100 67 72 68 76 79 71 70 67 60 Brazil 100 107 116 111 110 117 123 128 112 109 Chile 100 93 96 93 95 100 95 97 90 79 Colombia 100 121 115 115 114 116 115 119 109 99 Indonesia 100 100 100 99 99 101 102 103 101 98 Malaysia 100 113 118 116 116 120 118 117 115 111 Mexico 100 75 92 85 90 93 98 104 109 92 Nigeria 100 130 178 154 178 196 185 184 172 168 Peru 100 105 104 109 105 105 101 93 87 73 Philippines 100 103 116 112 113 117 120 133 129 123 South Korea 100 101 99 97 97 100 101 102 97 92 Venezuela 100 133 96 110 85 94 101 108 109 109 Key Debtor LDCs: Average Real Exchange Rates, 1982-85 I I I I I I 1 I I I I I 1 1 95 1982 83 84 85 - Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret Sharp Real Key debtor real exchange rates have depreciated sharply from their peak in the Depreciations in Key first quarter of 1985. This has resulted primarily from the rapid depreciation Debtor Exchange Rates of the US dollar, to which most of their currencies are tied. For many of these countries, this has reversed the real appreciations recorded in 1984 and helped to restore trade competitiveness. We expect a continued real depreciation of debtor exchange rates this year, although at a slower pace than last year. In combination with an expected bottoming-out of export prices, this should help boost the export earnings of these countries in 1986. Oman Moving Recent personnel changes suggest that Sultan Qaboos is cracking down on Against Corruption flagrant corruption amid growing concern over lavish government expenditures and falling oil prices. He unceremoniously sacked the powerful head of the Royal Court Qaboos also re- cently remove Minister of Communications Al Busaidi. US officials in Muscat say Al Busaidi was allegedly awarding contracts to firms in which he had financial interests. The changes will hearten Omani nationalists, who have bridled at Qaboos's tolerance of corruption, but it will do little to curb government spending. Muscat has already withdrawn about $900 million from its general reserve fund to cover spending on the Gulf Cooperation Council summit and National Day celebrations last November and may be forced to borrow to finance current expenditures. Indonesian Budget In anticipation of an additional 14-percent decline in oil and gas revenues for Slashed fiscal year 1986, which begins on 1 April, President Soeharto last week announced sharp cuts in the federal budget. At $19.4 billion, the new budget represents an 11-percent decrease over the previous fiscal year-the most austere budget since the early 1970s. It includes a cut of 22 percent in development spending, the first such cut since 1969. The new budget represents intensified efforts to rein in the estimated $3 billion current account deficit and keep the country's $37 billion foreign debt in check. According to US Embassy reporting, however, Jakarta's revenue projections may be optimistic because its forecasts are predicated on $25 per barrel oil. The severity of the budget cuts in any case raises serious doubts as to Indonesia's ability to achieve 5-percent real growth over the next three years-a rate just sufficient to stem the rising tide of unemployment. Malaysian Financial Prime Minister Mahathir continues to delay release of the politically sensitive Scandal May final report on the Bank Bumiputra financial scandal. According to a reliable Afect Elections source of the US Embassy, who has read the report, it may cause serious damage to Mahathir's government. Mahathir probably will be Secret 17 January 1986 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 III II G I I I, .I I. I I_wl. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret forced to call elections within the next three months in the face of increasing public pressure on him to disclose the report. In addition, information potentially damaging to his administration may emerge when a key figure in the case goes on trial in Hong Kong in March. Good Year for the According to official statistics, national income growth in 1985 remained East German Economy strong although the 4.8-percent increase fell short of 1984's unusually large 5.5-percent rise. Industrial production climbed 4.5 percent. The government credited most of the gains to improved efficiency: labor productivity climbed 8.4 percent by East German measures while unit costs fell 2.5 percent. We es- timate that East Germany's hard currency trade surplus reached $600-800 million and that hard currency debt again declined. The improved external position probably contributed to the regime's decision to boost investment by 23 percent. Limited information suggests that real personal consumption probably rose modestly. The acceleration of growth in the second half of the year-national income through June was only 4.1 percent above the previous year's level-suggests that East Berlin can achieve its 1986 growth target of 4.4 percent. Surge in China's Chinese sales of bonds on the Tokyo market jumped from approximately Bond Sales $10 million in 1984 to nearly $1 billion in 1985, making China the largest for- eign borrower in the Japanese market. Offerings in yen-denominated bonds were made by the Bank of China, China International Trade and Investment Corporation (CITIC), and several provincial-level groups. CITIC also floated over $100 million in US-dollar-denominated bonds in Tokyo and sold nearly $50 million worth of deutsche-mark-denominated bonds on the West European market. The issues generally received excellent ratings and were discounted slightly or not at all. China Rescues Failing China has agreed in principle to take over a financially troubled Hong Kong Hong Kong Bank bank-the first such takeover since signing the accord to regain the territory. According to press reports, Beijing agreed to buy majority ownership in the Ka Wah Bank for an estimated $125 million only after attempts to find other buy- ers fell through. China also recently offered publicly to help other Hong Kong banks with liquidity problems. Beijing previously invested in several other troubled Hong Kong firms but relied on the Hong Kong Government to take over failing banks in 1983 and again last June. Beijing is anxious to promote confidence and stability in Hong Kong's financial system. With the transition under way, Beijing probably will find it increasingly necessary to back up with cash its words of support for Hong Kong's economy Secret 17 January 1986 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret alternates by lies ese cotton exporters have forced look contract Chinese Export Delays Shipment delays and Worry Cotton Buyers their c Shipment delays of up to four months are being attributed to Chinese port con- gestion and dependence on a single rail line linking the western high-quality cotton growing area to the east coast ports. Undesirable bale size and high moisture content are additional negative factors. Japanese and Canadian cotton spinners, previously attracted by the low Chinese prices, are worried about dwindling stocks. China Forms Venture China last week unveiled its first venture capital corporation, Ventureteconics, Capital Company formed to concentrate investment on information technology, biotechnology, new materials, and other high-technology areas. Two individ- 25X1 uals founded Venturetech after studying venture capital in the United States and selling the idea to the State Council last year. Venturetech will underwrite projects likely to result in marketable technologies. This is another step in Beijing's ongoing efforts to introduce market mechanisms to its industrial sector. Beijing has been studying how Australia, Canada, and the United States use venture capital to finance high-technology, high-risk projects. China To Reform Beijing has formed a leading group for job title reform to coordinate Personnel Management implementation of a new personnel management system for China's profes- sional and scientific talent. The group will be under the direction of Song Jian, Minister in Charge of the State Science and Technology Commission (SSTC), and will include representatives from the Ministry of Labor and Personnel, the State Education Commission, and the SSTC. The planned reforms will increase the mobility of skilled personnel, link pay to performance, and eliminate lifelong tenure and seniority. Although the reforms would improve the work environment and speed promotion for competent workers, past attempts to change personnel management have met resistance. Enterprises would probably reject any attempts to deprive them of skilled workers, and individuals would likewise protest efforts to relocate them to the rural areas that are chronically short of talent. 37 Secret 17 January 1986 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret Vietnamese Approach Hanoi is seeking ways to bypass COCOM restrictions and Tokyo's Policy of Japan for Oil withholding official financial aid from Vietnam in order to obtain private Development Expertise foreign participation in offshore oil exploration, according to a Japanese press report. Hanoi is proposing that a Japanese oil company develop Vietnam's offshore fields on a commission basis and, the press report speculates, the Vietnamese will try to use Soviet aid funds for Japanese and Western technology to speed up development of Vietnam's oil resources in the Vung Tau region as well as in waters from Cam Ranh Bay to the Tonkin Gulf. The press report adds that the Japanese firm is checking with US oil companies to determine if the plan would violate COCOM restrictions. Officials of the Japanese firm told US Embassy officials they are considering the Vietnamese proposal but de th , ny ey are seeking cooperation from US oil companies. Secret 17 January 1986 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 i ii d.; I-.. i i . i. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4 Secret Secret Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/08: CIA-RDP88-00798R000200210005-4