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Chinese participation in Ghana's informal gold mining economy: Drivers, implications and clarifications
Abstract This paper brings some clarity to the debate on Chinese participation in Ghana's artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) sector. Over the past decade, tens of thousands of Chinese nationals have migrated to rural Ghana, where they have proceeded to extract gold, for the most part undeterred, illicitly. The perceived impacts of this migration have captured the interest of the global public and attracted considerable media attention. The Government of Ghana has responded, albeit rather pedestrianly, to mounting concerns by assembling a National Task Force to ‘flush out’ illegal miners. It is argued here, however, that this will only provide short-term relief because the issue being tackled – growing Chinese participation in ASM – is the latest ‘expression’ of a much bigger problem: namely the sector's perpetual informality, brought about by an excessively-bureaucratic legalization process and failure, on the part of the government and donors, to deliver adequate and appropriate support to desperate operators. The key to reducing the inflow of Chinese migrants to Ghana's mining regions is adequately addressing the root causes of this informality.
Highlights Thousands of Chinese citizens have migrated to Ghana to engage in artisanal gold mining illegally. Concerns of a Chinese ‘takeover’ of the country's artisanal gold mining economy, however, are greatly exaggerated. The growing Chinese presence at artisanal gold mining sites is rather the latest ‘expression’ of the sector's informality. The key to stemming the inflow of Chinese is to tackle, comprehensively, the root causes of this informality.
Chinese participation in Ghana's informal gold mining economy: Drivers, implications and clarifications
Abstract This paper brings some clarity to the debate on Chinese participation in Ghana's artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) sector. Over the past decade, tens of thousands of Chinese nationals have migrated to rural Ghana, where they have proceeded to extract gold, for the most part undeterred, illicitly. The perceived impacts of this migration have captured the interest of the global public and attracted considerable media attention. The Government of Ghana has responded, albeit rather pedestrianly, to mounting concerns by assembling a National Task Force to ‘flush out’ illegal miners. It is argued here, however, that this will only provide short-term relief because the issue being tackled – growing Chinese participation in ASM – is the latest ‘expression’ of a much bigger problem: namely the sector's perpetual informality, brought about by an excessively-bureaucratic legalization process and failure, on the part of the government and donors, to deliver adequate and appropriate support to desperate operators. The key to reducing the inflow of Chinese migrants to Ghana's mining regions is adequately addressing the root causes of this informality.
Highlights Thousands of Chinese citizens have migrated to Ghana to engage in artisanal gold mining illegally. Concerns of a Chinese ‘takeover’ of the country's artisanal gold mining economy, however, are greatly exaggerated. The growing Chinese presence at artisanal gold mining sites is rather the latest ‘expression’ of the sector's informality. The key to stemming the inflow of Chinese is to tackle, comprehensively, the root causes of this informality.
Chinese participation in Ghana's informal gold mining economy: Drivers, implications and clarifications
Hilson, Gavin (author) / Hilson, Abigail (author) / Adu-Darko, Eunice (author)
Journal of Rural Studies ; 34 ; 292-303
2014-01-01
12 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
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