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''Look
east'' policy yet to bear fruit
Ignatius Banda, Inter Press Service (IPS)
April 27, 2007
http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/nota.asp?idnews=37523
BULAWAYO - Zimbabwe's
isolation by its traditional international trading partners after
2000 has hit the country hard amid failure to strike up new bilateral
trade deals as part of its ''look east'' trade strategy.
The southern
African nation is battling a crippling economic crisis with record
inflation of over 1,000 percent. The situation has prompted politicians
to look to Asian countries for economic relief.
President Robert
Mugabe, in power since 1980, is seeking new trading partners as
relations falter with the major importers of Zimbabwean goods, the
EU and the US. The ''look east'' policy has been touted as a step
that will resuscitate the economy. This campaign to export to Asian
markets is aimed at raising foreign exchange.
Since the government's
land reform programme started in 2000, US business interests left
in droves to relocate to neighbouring South Africa, depriving Zimbabwe
of millions in potential foreign exchange earnings.
European countries
have expressed concerns over the Zanu-PF regime's increasing human
rights abuses in response to political opponents' popularity in
elections over the past seven years.
China and Iran
have committed themselves to bilateral trade agreements with Zimbabwe
without attaching any conditions in the manner of Zimbabwe's trading
partners in the west.
In 2004, the
ministry of industry and international trade produced an industrial
development policy document on attracting investment from domestic
and foreign investors. A deadline of 2010 was set when progress
with the plan has to be assessed.
The policy proposed
to encourage exports and mineral processing. These measures have
largely seen China and Iran being given mining concessions in exchange
for relief loans.
Zimtrade, the
country's export promotion agency, has no recent figures on trade
with the east. However, it has not reported any significant increase
in mineral, agricultural or other exports to Asia in the last two
years despite the various memoranda of understanding that Zimbabwe
has signed.
Although the
''look east'' policy has been a major talking point for a few years,
government officials have hinted that it has not performed to expectations.
Zimbabwean ambassador
to China, Christopher Mutsvangwa, recently told the government media
that while local products had ''potential to penetrate the Chinese
market'' and China had ''shown'' interest in investing in Zimbabwe,
''local business was reluctant to partner'' Chinese business.
Zimbabwe has
raw materials such as tobacco and cotton that the Chinese are in
dire need of, the ambassador added.
Economists and
opposition political parties here have criticised the concessions
for failing to bring any relief to the ailing economy. The country's
foreign exchange earnings continue to decline amid reports that
Zimbabwe's Central Bank has on numerous occasions turned to the
parallel market to buy hard currency to settle national bills.
These bills
include electricity and fuel.
The Confederation
of Zimbabwean Industries, a body representing local business leaders,
says the bilateral agreements have not improved the country's ability
to settle its debt with international lenders including the International
Monetary Fund (IMF).
The government
offered Iranians a stake in the iron and steel industry. However,
says Thomas Sagomba, an economics lecturer at the National University
of Science and Technology in Bulawayo, this agreement is yet to
help Zimbabwe move toward meeting its payment obligations.
''The trade
concessions ought to show in real terms how Zimbabwe is benefiting.
So far, there has been a tendency to celebrate the country's bilateral
agreements with Asian countries without much on the ground,'' Sagomba
told IPS.
''The reason
for looking east is that Zimbabwe has been isolated by its traditional
lending and trading partners. It is difficult to judge how business
with the east will return the country to its former state of prosperity,''
Sagomba points out.
''There are
yet to be visible gains from these bilateral engagements since the
IMF closed Zimbabwe's credit lines,'' according to Sagomba.
Iran has an
eye on farming in return for technical and other skills cooperation.
The Central Bank has voiced concern that the continued interruption
of farming activities by pro-government activists has slowed down
production.
Analysts are
also wary that the ''look east'' policy is unlikely to match the
earnings the country derived from trade with the west. The EU was
once the largest consumer of Zimbabwean beef, with more than 9,000
tons per year being exported at the peak of the bilateral trade
relations.
It has since
set stringent conditions for the importation of Zimbabwean beef
products. Last month, the ministry of lands and agriculture suspended
all efforts to resume trade with the European beef market, citing
EU conditions.
''The EU wants
all the cattle in the country to be linked to the farm and dipping
tank of origin through a process called ear-tagging,'' an official
with the state veterinary services told IPS. ''We do not have that
kind of money, considering our foreign exchange situation.''
The ministry
said it was redirecting its efforts to some Asian countries as the
''look east'' policy still holds promise with few bilateral agreements
having been entered into. The government stopped beef exports to
Asia in 2001 after the outbreak of foot and mouth disease. Authorities
are keen to re-open the trade links.
Charles Shunje
of the University of Zimbabwe's Business School says Zimbabwe will
have a tough time raising its tobacco or beef exports destined for
Asia to the level of exports to the EU.
''Zimbabwe's
national herd has dwindled from about 2 million at its peak to just
over 250,000. Satisfying the Asian market will take a lot more than
that,'' says Shunje.
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