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ZIMBABWE:
'Look East' policy staves off collapse with grants and deals
IRIN
News
July 29, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48359
HARARE - President
Robert Mugabe's 'Look East' policy took him to China this week for further
trade deals to help rescue Zimbabwe's ailing economy, which is suffering
the effects of an aid freeze by Western lenders.
China is at the forefront
of the Look East initiative, which seeks trade and political agreements
with Asian countries considered friendly to Zimbabwe, rather than traditional
western partners, who have been critical of alleged human rights abuses
and electoral fraud.
Zimbabwe has seen
an unprecedented influx of Chinese goods over the past two years, and
now a high-powered delegation, led by Mugabe on a week-long visit, has
reportedly struck a number of commercial and loan agreements in exchange
for trade and mineral concessions.
Innocent Makwiramiti,
chief executive officer of the Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce (ZNCC),
said the government had turned to Asia to save the economy from collapse.
"Given that Zimbabwe's
traditional trading partners in the European Union and the United States
have drastically scaled down on business or stopped completely, it is
natural for the government to look elsewhere in order to save the country
from total collapse, and there is nothing bad about that," Makwiramiti
remarked.
"But there is
no need to be over-enthusiastic about doing business with China, particularly
because the Chinese are here, first and foremost, because of their own
business interests - they have identified Zimbabwe as a viable market
for their mass-produced goods," he told IRIN.
The International
Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank have ceased financial assistance
to Zimbabwe, which has contributed to its foreign currency crisis. Western
investors have also shied away in response to ongoing political and economic
problems.
According to the official
Herald newspaper, the new agreements with China included a grant worth
US $6 million to import maize, finance expansion of the Hwange thermal
power station and some commercial projects, and extend a loan to the Zimbabwe
Electricity Supply Authority (ZESA).
About four million
people need food assistance in the wake of a drought last year, while
ZESA has been failing to meet the country's power demands because it does
not have adequate foreign currency to pay outside suppliers.
Mugabe also met with
the chairman of the ruling Chinese National People's Congress and President
Hu Jintao who, the Herald said, pledged to help protect Zimbabwe's sovereignty
against perceived hostile western countries.
Chinese business people
have established retail shops in the capital, Harare, and other major
towns, mostly selling cheap electrical goods, clothes, blankets, toys
and beauty products.
Retailers are enjoying
brisk business after informal markets offering cheap alternatives were
closed down under Operation Murambatsvina, a government cleanup exercise
launched in mid-May ostensibly to crack down on illicit trade in foreign
currency.
The shops are popular
with people who cannot afford to buy at the upmarket departmental stores
because many items, especially clothing, are often only a quarter of the
price. While a modest television set is sold at around Zim $8m (US $450)
at established shops, Chinese ones cost as little as Zim $1m (US $56).
However, Makwiramiti
warned that the country may soon find itself unable to sustain the business
deals it has struck with China due to ongoing forex shortages.
"The ZNCC is
aware that the Chinese are demanding international commercial rates for
whatever services they would be rendering to Zimbabwe - nothing is coming
for free or at preferential rates, and if we do not find ways of generating
forex we might find ourselves in a worse situation soon," he said.
Harare-based economist
John Robertson has recommended that the government mend its relations
with the IMF, World Bank, USA and European countries in order to revive
the economy.
"China itself
is looking to the West, and there is no way we can sustain our economy
by limiting trade to China, or one or two other Asian countries, because
that will give the country short-lived relief, Robertson told IRIN. "Let's
make sure that we talk to the IMF so that it can resume financial assistance,
for that is how we could once again get steady forex inflows."
He complained that
some Chinese products, such as the buses and planes, were seen as unreliable;
the same complaint has been made against apparel and electrical goods.
The police recently
announced that it will be arresting people for using the term 'zhing zhong',
which derisively refers to the cheap Chinese goods. Several people have
been arrested for using the term and charged under the Miscellaneous Offences
Act for "conduct likely to provoke the breach of peace".
But Portia Chitima,
living in Harare, said people should not complain about the substandard
goods. "No-one is forced to go and buy from the Chinese - those that
have money can go and buy things from expensive shops, but for some of
us who earn poor salaries, we do not have a choice but to go to China
Town (a complex housing Chinese traders).
"It is true that
their clothes or electrical goods do not last long, but those that buy
them should treat them with extra care, so that they can use them for
as long as possible. The government can also make a law that compels the
Chinese to give warranties for the goods they sell," Chitima suggested.
She said there was
nothing new about Chinese products because Zimbabwean cross-border traders
used to go to Botswana and Zambia to buy and then re-sell them at informal
markets before the Chinese came.
The Zimbabwean government
recently approached South Africa for a US $1 billion loan to import food
and fuel; some of it is expected to go towards servicing the IMF debt.
President Thabo Mbeki
said South Africa was considering lending its neighbour a helping hand,
for fear that failure to do so might have a negative impact on his country's
economy.
Zimbabwe has also
approached Iran, which has led to a US $120 million investment by FARB
Co, an Iranian firm, in the expansion of Kariba South Power Station, whose
operations are vital to the electricity supply.
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