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It's
the politics, stupid . . . not the economy
Dumisani Muleya,The Zimbabwe Independent
January 27, 2006
http://www.theindependent.co.zw/news/2006/January/Friday27/4079.html
CENTRAL bank
governor Gideon Gono this week presented his fourth quarter monetary
policy review statement full of informative technical detail but
devoid of political context and hence workable solutions.
Gono appears
well-intentioned and determined to pull out all the stops to deliver,
but the trouble is how he seems to situate problems facing the country.
To show his
good faith, Gono makes appeals for unity, for government officials
and everybody to shun corruption, and for the country to avoid racism,
regionalism and tribalism. Although some of these issues were perhaps
raised on the wrong forum at the wrong time, it is nevertheless
necessary to tackle them.
Gono also gave
useful information on the state of the economy. While his policy
does not deserve the harsh epithet of failure, it raised a number
of questions about his ability, in the circumstances, to deliver.
It also raised questions about the capacity - or inclination - of
government to deal with current economic problems.
Gono appears
to lack the courage of his convictions to tackle the political question
head-on. Granted, we understand he does not want to cross the Rubicon
- and become a casualty of the messy political end game - but a
good policy pronouncement without the correct premise and based
on a fundamentally flawed rationale is not likely to be helpful.
It is clear
Gono - in pursuit of political correctness - has resisted the need
to link politics and economics. But claiming that the media and
Western sanctions are responsible for the economic crisis while
letting the bungling political elite off the hook is downright disingenuous
- and Gono knows it.
Equally, flattering
army generals and their political principals by quoting their irrelevant
high sounding nothings in a serious monetary policy statement is
also less than useful.
Gono proceeds
in one of his documents from the sublime to the ridiculous. He says
he has heard some people proposing a "sanctions tax" to punish Western
multinational companies for the sanctions imposed by their governments
on Zimbabwe.
This can't be
a serious suggestion from anybody concerned about investment. At
another level, Gono tried to please international actors by attacking
farm invaders and urging Harare to restore good relations with the
international community. It was a good proposition but undermined
by his underlying political fear of rocking the boat.
It gets worse
when the policy measures become ad hoc and are not based on econometrics.
Issues like promising a new currency and flip-flopping on the exchange
rate, not to mention failures to curb inflation and inject life
into the economy, do not help matters.
How does a new
currency help to resolve such a deep crisis when macro-economic
fundamentals remain skewed?
It is the crumbling
economic base and collapsing superstructure that are at the heart
of the matter, not these peripheral issues.
The situation
is now probably worse than it was when Gono came into office in
2003, but it is unfair and unreasonable to blame him for Zimbabwe's
policy and institutional failures. The presidential incumbent and
his regime are to blame.
But in the meantime,
Gono has left himself rather exposed to criticism which he could
easily forestall by pointing out the obvious: that it's the politics
stupid and not the economy!
The dividing
line between politics and economics is wafer-thin. In fact, they
overlap and usually have a symbiotic relationship. That is why the
strength or weakness of a state depends upon its political infrastructure
and economic capacity. One without the other produces a somewhat
dysfunctional state.
Gono must contextualise
issues. To ignore the environment and its political dynamics is
to miss the whole point!
Zimbabwe is
groaning under the weight of an economic crisis and authoritarianism.
It is burdened by a government which has long lost the capacity
to establish its legitimacy and show a semblance of authority beyond
the use of coercive methods.
The parasitic
power elite at the helm of the Zimbabwean state are now increasingly
relying on repressive apparatuses rather than representative institutions
as instruments of perpetuating their rule.
Mugabe's centralisation
of institutions and personalisation of power are a serious malady
in local politics. That is why democracy, in its basic form, that
is procedural form, is refusing to take root in Zimbabwe which is
now almost a failed state.
This is the
political context where the real problem lies. Printing money on
a massive scale and hyperinflation are a manifestation of policy
and leadership failures. Gono knows that but lacks the courage to
spell it out.
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