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Resources: Cursed or Blessed Political Economies? - 'Progress' in Zimbabwe Conference
Amanda Atwood, Kubatana.net
November 08, 2010

'Progress' in Zimbabwe Conference index page

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Speakers: Showers Mawowa and Richard Saunders
Discussant: Sobona Mtisi

This session focused on Zimbabwe's mineral wealth, including gold, platinum and diamonds. But it also discussed other natural resources such as land and water. Opening the session, Showers Mawowa observed that often the most resourced countries are also the most unequal. In Zimbabwe, he observed, at face value accumulation looks bottom up. But when you look closely, you there are serious networks that involve senior members of the ruling elite. Listen

Mawowa commented that part of the reason why Zimbabwe survived the economic crisis of the 2000s, is because of the accumulation networks, where you have informalisation of production that links to the ruling elite and law enforcement structures. For example, you find a police officer continues to go to work even though it does not make any economic sense for him to continue to go to work. But he goes to work because his job enables to continue to get bribes. Listen

When you look at Zimbabwe's development process, Mawowa asked, what potential is there for these accumulation process to yield to a more progressive mining regime.

In his presentation, Richard Saunders observed that the development of Zimbabwe's mineral sector has gone through three phases. The 1980s marked a period of state-led regulation and accumulation, the 90s a time of standard neo-liberalism and calls for foreign direct investment, and then the collapse of the sector and securotisation in the 2000s.

He observed that in the literature, trade magazines and businesses papers on the sector there is a harmonious and disturbing line about what should be done about the mining Zimbabwe in light of the GPA. It draws attention back to the 1990s and suggests that the boom of the 90s can and should be replicated if Zimbabwe returns to a more systematic and self-disciplined regime around mining. But, Saunders finds this position problematic. Whilst, he acknowledged, there was a large boom in the 1990s after liberalisation, the economic and regulatory conditions that allowed for mining's expansion in the 1990s also set the political conditions for mining's collapse in the 2000s.
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