MR MUGABE , YOU ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR ZIMBABWE`S ECONOMIC MELT DOWN
First and
foremost, for over three decades, the government strenuously asserted that the
economic ills confronting Zimbabwe were a result of the Machiavellian
stratagems of the former colonial powers to recolonise Zimbabwe. The plan, they
said, was to denude Zimbabwe of its resources and, to all intents and purposes,
to enslave Zimbabweans. Occasionally
they varied their theme song, by also ascribing the ills to negative climatic
circumstances and other “acts of God”.
On rare occasions, the latter contention had some limited credibility,
whilst the primary claims of recolonisation intents were blatantly devoid of
any substance. As the Zimbabwean populace progressively recognised that not
only were the stated causes of Zimbabwean ills wholly without foundation, but
also that the actuality was a combination of intense economic mismanagement and
of even more intense profligacy and actions of self-enrichment and
engrandisement. So the politicians had to find other explanations for the
ills. They needed desperately to prevent
the electorate from recognising the real causes, which would endanger their
retention of power.
Although
with the best of intents and motivations, many of the international community
then played straight into the hands of the Zimbabwean politicians. Having previously imposed selective sanctions
upon named Zimbabwean political leaders, and their families, in 2002 they
extended the sanctions. Initially, the
sanctions precluded those leaders and their families from travel to the
imposing countries, and from investing therein, but in no manner were those
sanctions directed at the economy, or at the populace as a whole. However, the extension of the sanctions
created barriers upon any economic interactions with the Zimbabwean government,
its parastatals and other entities owned or controlled by government. Foremost amongst the instruments of sanctions
imposition was the Zimbabwean Democracy Act of the United States of America,
and very similar measures were pursued by the European Union and various of the
member states of the Commonwealth.
But none of
the increased sanctions were targeted at the Zimbabwean economy per se. Zimbabwean private sector enterprise was not
barred from exporting to the US, to Europe, or elsewhere and similarly remained
enabled to source any goods or services they required from those
countries. Admittedly, the US
legislation prescribed that country from supporting funding to Zimbabwe by the
Bretton Woods’ institutions (the International Monetary Fund and the World
Bank), but this was only notional in
effect, as Zimbabwe’s debt servicing defaults in any event barred it
from accessing such funding.
Furthermore, government and its puppet media vehicles endlessly alleged
(as they still do) that the sanctions were “illegal”. That allegation is spurious and specious in
the extreme, devoid of any credibility, for none of the countries were in
breach of their own laws, or of international law, by constricting economic
interactions with the government and its underlying entities.
It is the
absolute right of any country to determine which countries it will interact
economically with, and the nature and extent of such interactions. Therefore, the never-ending description of
the sanctions as being illegal is only a political stratagem to mislead the
Zimbabwean people. As stated courageously and authoritatively by former
President Joaquim Chissano, the reality of Zimbabwe’s tragic economic
circumstances has been, and is, nothing but politics. No country that pretends
to be a democracy, but in practice is driven by non-democratic, authoritarian
rule, can have a viable economy. A
country that has contemptuous disregard for property and human rights, rule of
law and for Bilateral Investment Promotion and Protection Agreements cannot
have a virile economy. Endless,
oppressive economic regulation rings the death-knell for an economy. Pronounced governmental profligacy, far
beyond national means, not only does not provide a foundation for economic
development and growth, but guarantees an economy’s decline and collapse.
All of
these, and many other, negative political actions and inactions have been the
cause of the cataclysmic contraction of the Zimbabwean economy. They fuelled the greatest hyperinflation ever
experienced anywhere in the world. They
destroyed much of Zimbabwean agricultural productivity, which was the
foundation of the economy. They
grievously eroded business confidence, which is a prerequisite for economic
growth. They deterred much-needed
foreign and domestic investment, essential for the creation of employment, the
generation of foreign exchange, the access to state-of-the-art technologies,
enhancement of inflows to the Fiscus, and much else.
VITALICY
Kramarenko, leader of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) team to Zimbabwe, is reported as stating that fully
unlocking the country’s considerable growth potential would require significant
progress in structural reforms.
Expanding thereon, he said, the priority areas requiring such reforms
include reducing labour market rigidities, establishing security of land
tenure, and clarifying ownership requirements under the indigenisation
legislation, in addition to other necessary economy-related reforms.
Although
undoubtedly some of the hard-core Zimbabwean politicians will vehemently differ
with him, his forthright enunciation of the immense need for constructive
reforms is most commendable. Assuredly, the Zanu PF politburo in general, and
President Robert Mugabe, Didymus Mutasa, Saviour Kasukuwere, and many others
will wholly disagree with him. Instead,
they will seek and strive to espouse the disastrous policies which have not
only horrendously decimated the economy for more than a decade, but will do
their utmost to pursue their fixative policies which cataclysmically retard the
slight economic recovery achieved since 2009.
However, no
matter how vigorous may be resistance to policy change, major reforms in policy
are a prerequisite of a substantive economic recovery, and for realisation of
the very immense economic potential which Zimbabwe has. Only those who are myopic in their perceptions
of the economy’s needs can differ with the IMF assessment of policy change
needs. Kramerenko and his team are deserving of unreserved commendation for
their forthright recognition of the realities.
Regrettably, however, many will not only withhold such commendation, but
will also be scathingly castigatory of the call for those reforms.
While many
different factors will impact upon achieving the economic recovery and
realisation of the gargantuan potential of the economy, those identified by the
IMF team are amongst the foremost. Key
to recovery and growth is that Zimbabwe engender very considerable investment,
both foreign direct investment, and domestic investment, and that it attract
substantial international lines of credit and loans. Investment is needed to
create employment for the hundreds of thousands of employable Zimbabweans presently
devoid of gainful, formal sector employment.
Such employment will very markedly lower the appalling poverty links
characteristic of life for the majority of Zimbabweans. Investment will generate inflows of
critically required capital, and technology-transfer. It will be a major stimulus of exports, which
favourably impact upon the downstream economy of the investment ventures, and
will be a significant source of revenue to the fiscus by way of direct and indirect
taxation.
However,
the extent of investment will continue to fall far short of requirements if the
policy reforms identified by the IMF as being necessary, and allied reforms,
are not determinedly pursued by government.
Investors will not invest (save for a few high-risk-takers) unless they
have confidence that their investments will be secure, and potentially gainful,
and those policy reforms are prerequisites of investors having such confidence.
Almost
without exception, investment ventures are reliant upon employment of labour,
with harmonious employer and labour relationships. Such relationships existed
at one time in Zimbabwe but, as unemployment in the shrinking economy
increased, concurrently with labour’s purchasing power being progressively
eroded by the hyperinflation of yesteryear, that changed. Understandably,
labour demanded substantial wage increases, but invariably meeting those
demands was far beyond the means of employers, whose businesses were grievously
contracting. Labour relations progressively declined, and the confrontation
intensified as various trade union and activist bodies became increasingly
aggressive. Now government is worsening
the situation with intended revisions to labour legislation which are wholly
targetted at labour aspirations and expectations, in contemptuous disregard for
employer needs and economic realities.
The issue
of security of land tenure is most key to realising Zimbabwe’s economic
potential. The foundation of the economy
has always been agriculture, but from 2001 to 2009 it contracted exponentially.
Although there has been some increased productivity since 2009, agriculture
remains a minuscule portion of the tragically contracted economy. New farmers,
precluded from land ownership, have no collateral to access essential funding. Concurrently, having observed government’s
diabolical disregard for property rights and for obligations under bilateral
investment protection and promotion agreements
in respect of rural lands, potential investors fear that in the future
government will unhesitatatingly appropriate urban lands, enterprises, and
other investments. Real security of land
tenure will meet collateral needs for agricultural and other entrepreneurs and
will allay a key fear of potential investors.
Allaying
those fears also requires a comprehensive re-think by government on its
indigenisation and economic empowerment legislation. The legislation should be
facilitative of indigenous entrepreneurship, and should give incentives and
motivate collaboration and mutually beneficial intervention between indigenous
and non-indigenous investors. It should not reduce non-indigenous investors, be
they domestic or foreign, to enforced minority status, devoid of control over
the wellbeing of the enterprises, and equally devoid of security over provided
technologies, market access and funding.
The
legislation should stimulate creation of new indigenous ventures, whilst
motivating indigenous participation with non-indigenous investors, in existing
and new enterprises, on a reciprocally willing, negotiated basis, rather than
by enforcement and imagery of expropriation. Approximately a fortnight ago,
Economic Empowerment minister
Kasukuwere, was reported as stating that revisions to the legislation
will be announced by the end of this month.
Undoubtedly, the revisions contemplated by government, and by him in
particular, are founded-upon the reports of the numerous economic sectoral
boards established by him to consider and review the legislation.
However,
indications over the last few months suggested that some of those boards (or,
in any event, of a majority of the appointees to the boards) had dogmatically
preconceived (and ill-conceived) perceptions, to a very major extent founded
upon representations of extremist activist groups.
Government,
and all the ministers, in revising and modifying the laws, need to have regard
not only to the advice of the boards, but also of the existing business
community at large, of potential foreign investors, of bodies such as IMF,
World Bank, African Development Banks, and the like, and of economic
commentators. They need also to learn
from the successful experiences (such as those of India and Malaysia) and the
unsuccessful experiences of others, instead of inventing a new wheel doomed to
break not only itself, but the economy as a whole.
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