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WORKING CLASS HERO
BY ANTHONY ROBINSON
The British press has been insular and one-sided
in its portrayal of Lakshmi Mittal. In Kazakhstan, he is
a working class hero
Coverage of The Mittal affair may have raised important
issues of political patronage and party funding, but it
has completely misread the significance of Lakshmi Mittal
himself. It has left the impression that he is a sleazy
Indian carpet bagger who has become one of the richest men
in the world through asset-stripping, bribing politicians
and playing both ends against the middle.
It is true that the US-EU steel war could be embarrassingly
advantageous for Mittal. The Sidex plant in Roamnia, which
he bought with Tony Blair's help, is not subject to as US
import ban. And his US company, Ispat Inland, donated $600,000
to Stand up for Steel, the US steel lobby whose pleas for
protection from imports has fallen on George W Bush's receptive
ears. But Mittal has no choice in supporting Stand up for
steel. Membership is one of the conditions enshrined in
the labour contracts which all employers have to sign with
Steelworkers Union- including foreign companies such as
Ispat and Arcelor, europe's largest light in Eurofer , the
European steelamakers lobby which is mainly dedicated to
opposing US protectionism.
But the bigger picture is that Mittal has become a central
figure in the restructuring of the global steel industry-and
is instrumental in shifting capacity from rich, highly regulated
places like US and the EU to lower cost zones such as Romania.
That is as it should be. He has aved thousands of steel-related
jobs, and entire working-class communities in Romania, Kazakhstan,
Mexico and other faraway places about which the British
press apparently knows little.
In 2000, the Lakshmi N Mittal (LNM) group produced 22m tones
of steel from ten plants around the world. With the takeover
of Sidex he now controls 27m tons of steel capacity and
employs 110,000 people making and selling steel or mining
iron and coal..
Some people in the steel industry say that Mittal is partly
responsible for the over-capacity which has led to heavy
losses and bankruptcy for so many steel companies. But the
US steel industry produces too much of the wrong kinds of
steel in old-fashioned plants, just the kind of the plants
which Mittal has proved very good at turning around in the
developing world.
Mittal was one of the first to spot the advantages of flexible
mini-mills and the technology of using cheaper direct reduced
iron (DRI) instead of scrap. The DRI process turns iron
ore into useable enriched pellets without the need for costly
investment in coking plants and blast furnaces.
The 51-year old London -based entrepreneur's first venture,
27 years ago, was a mini-mill in Indonesia. He then proved
that money could be made restructuring bankrupt nationalized
(and private) steel mills elsewhere. Starting in Mexico,
Mittal went on to buy plants in Trinidad, Canada, Germany
and the US. He also controls Kent Wire, a British steel
mesh producer.
In buying these companies Mittal' strategy has been to acquire
the assets cheaply but leave the past debts with the seller.
All the companies in the above-mentioned countries are now
part of Ispat International NV, a holding company registered
in the Dutch Antilles. Mittal and his family own 80 percent.
But 20 percent was floated on the Amsterdam and New York
stock exchanges after an IPO (initial public offering) in
1997 at $30 per share. It has not proved a good investment
and the shares are languishing at a fraction of the issue
price. This suggests that it is not easy for anyone to make
moneymaking steel in Europe or America, even when, as in
the LNM case, the holding company is registered in an offshore
tax haven.
The harsh truth is that steel is capital and labour intensive
business which is only really profitable if capital and
labour costs can be kept low and productivity increased
by good technology and good management. Mittal has shown
that developing or former communist countries now have a
comparative as steel producers over the US or Europe.
Thus the most interesting aspect of the Mittal empire
is to be found in the companies in his other Antilles registered
holding company, LNM Holdings NV. This is 100 percent owned
by Mittal. By far the most important asset in this company
is the 6m-ton capacity Karmet steel plant at Temirtau in
the Kazakh steppe, and a clutch of mines in the surrounding
Karaganda basin. This was not included in the IPO because
it was considered too risky for outside investors to stomach.
Mittal's record in Kazakhstan explains why South Africa's
Iscor and the Romanian government were keen ti interest
him, why Tony Blair signed a letter supporting privatization
of Sidex by LNM Holdings and why all the 23 directors of
the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD)
voted in favour of a $100m loan to help finance the Sidex
deal (with America abstaining).
Five years ago Karmet was desperate. It had beeb built
on the virgin steppe to supply steel to Soviet defence factories
in Centrel Asia and Siberia. But Soviet markets had dried
up. Nobody knew anything about finance or marketing. To
keep the plant from freezing over in the harsh winter, former
Soviet managers bartered steel slabs for food and clothing
and basic supplies. Opaque barter deals made a few insiders
very rich as cash was siphoned off to friends or family.
But the plant stopped paying its 35,000 workers, its taxes
and its suppliers.
Nursultan Nazarbayev, a former steel worker who has party
boss at Karmet before becoming Kazakhstan's last communist
leader and then the autocratic president of independent
Kazakhstan, tried and failed to attract western companies,
including America's United Steel. At about the same time
LNM's agents were investigating one of the world's richest
deposits of coking coal around Karaganda. Nazarbayev proposed
a deal to mittal- you can buy the coalfields if you take
on Karmet too. After looking around the plant Mittal agreed
to buy it for $380m. He also bought the power plant, which
supplies heat to both plant and city, the tram company,
the local hotel and television station and the coal mines
with their 27,000 miners.
Mittal agreed not to sack any workers, to pay their unpaid
wages and only reduce numbers gradually through attrition.
(The payroll has dropped from 35,000 to 27,000 since the
takeover and wages remain low at around $300 per month).
He also promised to pay suppliers regularly-including the
near bankrupt state railways. He sent in 45 Ispat managers
and specialists, mostly Indians with modest lifestyles,
high skills and strong loyalty, to turn the plant around.
Production specialists removed bottlenecks and cleaned
up the plant. They drew up an investment plan to raise quality
to world standards and shift production to higher value
steels. Marketing experts bought new equipment and set about
finding new markets. Five years later Karmet sells much
of its steel ti Iran plus Russia and China, which are both
neighbors.
Sidex, in Romania, is like Karmet five years ago-corrupt,
hugely over manned and struggling to find a market for a
fraction of its 5m tons output. Before Mittal in, it had
an accumulated loss of $900m and was a big burden on Romania's
satae finances. Usinor the French steel company said Sidex
was not ripe for privatization and instead offered to run
it under contract for three years. The Romanian government,
anxious about privatizing such company, was attracted to
this compromise but the World Bank and the EBRD warned that
stalling on Sidex would derail the whole privatization programme.
This was the significance of Tony Blair's letter. In the
line with Margaret Thatcher's support for privatization
in central and eastern Europe (embodied in Britain's know
how fund), the letter of endorsement for Mittal was designed
to strengthen the hand of the privatizes in Romania.
What will happen to Sidex now? Sidex produces steel plate
to make pipes for the mill, which is under-used. Solution?
Dismantle the Mexican pipe mill and resemble it at Aktau,
the Kazakh port on the Caspian Sea, only 200km south of
the three of the world's biggest new oilfields- Tengiz,
Kashagan and Karachaganak. Here international Oil and gas
companies are investing over $50 billion in new fields and
planning pipelines to Europe and Asia.
This scheme will create a profitable market for Sidex- and
cheaper, domestically made pipes for the oil companies.
It's the kind of deal, which keeps Mittal away from his
London headquarters for the much of the year. So much for
the sleazy Indian asser-stripper.
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