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Zim
okay . . . for now
Jason Moyo,
Mail & Guardian (SA)
May 09, 2009
http://www.mg.co.za/article/2009-05-09-zim-okay-for-now
The International
Monetary Fund (IMF) believes Zimbabwe's short-term macro-economic
prospects have brightened somewhat, but it warns that the long-term
outlook remains grim in the absence of international support and
the threat of growing infighting in the country's new coalition
government.
The report,
exclusively obtained by the Mail & Guardian, followed the IMF's
first visit to Zimbabwe since the formation of the unity government.
It says the
country needs $200-million in urgent budgetary support and $300-million
for immediate humanitarian assistance in the form of food aid, health
and education.
Caught between
its inability to raise foreign budgetary support and the need to
convince its restive workers to return to work on meagre $100 monthly
allowances, the government faces the threat of civil unrest, says
the IMF.
The fund says
currency reforms have helped stabilise the economy, halting Zimbabwe's
world-record inflation and improving its short-term prospects. But
"despite a brighter short-term macro-economic outlook, Zimbabwe
will not be able to discharge its external debt service obligations
in 2009".
The IMF regards
the most significant risks as:
- The emergence
of more political disagreements among coalition partners, resulting
in policy reversals. Further internal conflict was narrowly averted
this week when police rearrested 18 opposition activists facing
terrorism charges;
- Budget shortfalls
forcing Zimbabwe to cut back on expenditure and triggering social
unrest; and
- Bank failures,
as institutions fail to adjust to the new currency system.
Unions are likely
to oppose strongly an IMF recommendation to cap the state wage bill.
This week the government averted a teachers' strike after donors
promised to step in.
According to
the IMF the government insists that poor wages are sapping morale.
Instead, Zimbabwe "would conduct a government payroll audit
with a view to removing ghost workers", the report says.
The IMF says
Zimbabwe has agreed to further concessions on the currency front,
which will see the budget presented in rands.
"Given
the adoption of the rand as the reference currency the authorities
concurred with the staff's recommendations to present the next budget
in rands, and mandate tax assessments in rands and adopt the rand
as the sole unit of account for the public and private sectors in
the near future."
The IMF also
wants to see the enactment of legislation "ensuring protection
of property rights" -- in effect a demand for an end to continuing
farm seizures.
The fund says
an improvement in Zimbabwe's terms of trade, projected by the IMF's
World Economic Outlook, and an expected increase in foreign credit
lines and private capital inflows would support growth. But an economic
turnaround would not be possible without foreign assistance and
private capital inflows, "even assuming sound policy implementation".
The numbers
show how far Zimbabwe has to go to pull its economy back from the
brink. External debt stands at $5.1-billion (166% of GDP), while
real GDP fell 14% in 2008, on top of the 40% cumulative decline
between 2000 and 2007.
About 70% of
Zimbabweans need food aid.
MDC
calls for respect
The day after
he returned from a tour of the United States, where he desperately
sought financial support, Zimbabwe's frustrated Finance Minister,
Tendai Biti, issued an "ultimatum" over the outstanding
areas of dispute between the partners in the country's coalition
government.
Biti, also MDC
secretary general, also lashed out on Wednesday at powerful dissenting
figures he said refused to respect "the new authority in town".
He did not name them.
Just as Biti
was returning from the US, where he sought aid and the lifting of
Western economic measures against Zimbabwe in exchange for political
and economic reforms, police seized 18 activists who had been freed
after the intervention of a joint committee of the coalition government.
They include
prominent rights campaigner Jestina Mukoko, an 80-year-old MDC member,
the MDC's head of security and a journalist. Accused of plotting
the violent overthrow of Robert Mugabe, they were abducted last
year and kept at secret locations where, they say, they were tortured.
Critics immediately
charged that this highlighted the MDC's junior role in the coalition.
After Zimbabwe's
Prime Minister and MDC president, Morgan Tsvangirai, and leader
of a breakaway faction of the MDC, Deputy Prime Minister Arthur
Mutambara, met Mugabe on Tuesday, the activists were released, prompting
claims by MDC officials that Tsvangirai has influence over the Zimbabwean
president.
Biti told a
media conference that the government has until Monday to resolve
a range of outstanding issues, chief among them the appointment
of key officials such as the attorney general and reserve bank governor
and the allocation of governors of the 10 provinces. If this did
not happen the matter would be referred to the MDC national council,
which meets next Sunday.
Biti charged
that some elements in Zanu-PF, the security forces and state-owned
media pose a grave threat to the coalition, saying: "There
are a number of toxic and poisonous attitudes that some of these
institutions are showing. Their attitude is as if they are in a
war situation."
Zanu-PF spokesperson
Ephraim Masawi denied the existence of a secret security cabal said
to be the real influence behind Mugabe.
"We are
also committed to the rule of law," said Masawi. "If the
courts, or the law, say those people should be arrested, then they
should indeed go behind bars until they are cleared by the same
courts. It is not political."
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