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Zimbabwe
and the IMF - Time for shifting from neo-liberal paradigm to people
centered development alternatives
Rangarirai
Machemedze, Southern and Eastern African Trade, Information Negotiations
Initiative (SEATINI)
2004
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sec/pr/2004/pr0467.htm
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Zimbabwe today
faces political and economic crises as a result of multifaceted
chain of events ignited by the early 1990s structural adjustment
programmes that were forced on the country by the International
Monetary Fund and the World Bank. To say the IMF and the WB are
solely responsible for these crises would be a misrepresentation
of facts but their policies have played a huge part in triggering
the problems the country is facing.
When Zimbabwe started implementing the Economic Structural Adjustment
Programme (ESAP), a number of sectors of the economy were affected
and this led to ordinary people suffering the consequences. In implementing
ESAP, the government adopted the so-called Washington Consensus
(WC) principles, which in effect reversed the otherwise steady growth
of the economy that Zimbabwe was experiencing. The principles included:
- Cost recovery
for social services
- Minimal role
for the state
- Financial
liberalisation
- Competitive
exchange rates
- Trade liberalisation
- Openness
to foreign direct investments
- Privatisation
- Deregulation
The augmented
WC includes the above plus many others like legal and political
reform and the World Trade Organisation Agreements.
In the midst of implementing some of these principles, the government
encountered multiple problems from different fronts, including from
its own people, labour unions, the private sector, civil society
from multilateral and bilateral donors, including the IMF and the
WB. Donors squeezed the country to enforce further changes to the
economy that was rather protected from foreign manipulation before
the 1990s.
In mid 1990 Zimbabwe agreed with the WB to implement a home-grown
five year phased programme towards a freer market. During the first
year, Zimbabwe was to lift many restrictions on imports, meaning
drastically reducing tariffs on products coming into the country.
At a donors' conference in Paris in March 1991, the WB and western
countries promised US$690 million to fund the first year of the
programme.
The donors however backtracked, demanding much more rapid changes
than originally agreed. Little of the promised funds have been given,
and donors said they would not come into the country until the government
negotiated a much freer market deal with the IMF and the WB. But
of course the reasons that are being given today by the donors are
that Zimbabwe has a very bad human rights and governance record.
In our own interpretation these rapid changes that the donors wanted
entailed free fall financial, capital and trade liberalisation.
The free fall liberalisation exposed the country to foreign products
and control thus mortgaging the nation to the dictates of foreign
commercial interests at the expense of their social and moral well-being.
The re-orientation on public spending meant that the government
had to remove subsidies on socially important sectors like health,
education and agriculture. Today the cost of health care is beyond
the reach of many because the IMF required the government to cut
expenditure and stop subsidising health care provision. People,
including the poor were supposed to pay for their own health in
the form of user fees or cost recovery.
Zimbabwe's food security has been compromised because the IMF and
WB required farmers to switch from traditionally food crops to cash
crops to supply the export market. After independence in 1980, the
government provided infrastructural facilities, inputs and credit
to encourage communal areas to produce maize for the market.
These were, however, drastically curtailed during the 1990s. There
was substantial reduction in the subsidies on farm inputs. The centralised
crop purchasing system of the early eighties was gradually abandoned,
and the farmers were left to locate their own markets. Because of
communal farmers' immediate need for cash, they thus became hostage
to middlemen, and were forced to sell at market-dictated low prices
which, in turn, reduced their incomes and purchasing power. On the
other hand, mostly white commercial farmers gradually shifted away
from maize production for domestic consumption to export crops,
especially horticulture.
When Zimbabwe liberalised its trade to the "opportunities" of Globalization
in the early 1990s, it was acting under the advice of IMF "experts"
whose general mandate is to open up developing countries' economies
to the global market. Also a section of the private sector in Zimbabwe
put pressure for trade liberalisation. Some of them are now complaining
about premature liberalisation, or badly sequenced liberalisation.
They are now calling for protection against the entry of "foreigners"
(especially those from South Africa) taking over the domestic market.
After ESAP came the Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs) as
the new pre-conditions for loans and debt relief. PRSPs were supposed
to mark a major shift from the previous SAPs that have impoverished
millions of people throughout the world. Borrowing countries were
to design their own development strategies through a participatory
process that was expected to include civil society, and these, above
all, were to be more focussed on poverty reduction.
The rhetoric in the strategies is poverty-focussed. However, the
actual policies do not have clear poverty reducing consequences.
Although Zimbabwe does not qualify to access these as they are aimed
at Highly Indebted Poor Countries, the strategies focus on economic
growth without addressing how this growth is to be redistributed
to the poor. The core macro-economic elements have changed little
from the old SAPs with a continued adherence to privatisation, liberalisation
and a reduced role of the state, still the aftermaths of the Washington
Consensus.
The 1999 United Nations Development Programme Human Development
Report for Zimbabwe notes that:
"The adoption
of an orthodox structural adjustment programme (ESAP) in 1991 entailed
a fundamental shift from the state intervention system to one largely
driven by market forces. (Sachikonye, 1997; Kanyenze, 1999; Loewenson,
1999). The reform programme referred to as ESAP was first announced
in the Budget Statement and an accompanying statement, Economic Policy
Statement: Macroeconomic Adjustment and Trade Liberalization (GOZ,
1990), in July 1990. A more elaborated statement, Zimbabwe: A Framework
for Economic Reform 1991-95 (GOZ, 1991), was published in early 1991
as an input into a meeting of donors held in Paris in February that
year. It was only after the Paris meeting that there were pledges
of financial support from donors.
The political dynamism for development henceforth shifted from Harare
to Paris, from the people to the donors. The assumption was that ESAP
would raise investment levels, thereby facilitating higher growth
rates, employment creation and uplifting the standard of living of
the majority of the people (GOZ, 1991).
The key targets of ESAP were to:
- achieve
GDP growth of 5% during 1991-95;
- raise savings
to 25% of GDP;
- raise investment
to 25% of GDP;
- achieve
export growth of 9% per annum;
- reduce
the budget deficit from over 10% of GDP to 5% by 1995;
- reduce
inflation from 17.7% to 10% by 1995;
To achieve
these, the Economic Reform Programme (ERP) had as its main components,
competition enhancing measures including trade and exchange rate
liberalisation, domestic deregulation and financial sector reform
and institutional reforms pertaining to fiscal reform. The fiscal
reforms encompassed fiscal and parastatals' deficit reduction,
privatisation and commercialisation of public enterprises."
The way forward
Time has come for Zimbabwe to shift the political, economical and
developmental debate from neo-liberal economistic discourse to the
people centred developmental alternatives in a more sophisticated,
historical, structural and humanist manner.
The IMF delegation will be in Zimbabwe soon and they are coming
under Article IV consultations, which basically mean they are coming
to check whether Zimbabwe is now adhering to the conditions suitable
for the resuscitation of Balance of Payments talks. Zimbabwe in
its present situation may be forced to talk to the IMF, but it should
set its own conditions that it feels are suitable for the development
of the people of Zimbabwe. We concur with the UNDP 1999 Human Development
report on Zimbabwe. We suggest that government should seriously
consider the following in negotiation with the IMF not only for
this reason, but in future negotiations:
- Supporting
productive sectors: The domestic market has been more or less
destroyed by ESAP. It has to be practically re-generated. Creating
a critical mass of effective purchasing power in order to re-create
the domestic market means negotiating with the workers unions
and the employers for substantial real wage increases to restore
to the workers a life of dignity. In return for concessions from
the employers, the Government should protect them from foreign
competition in basic industries that produce wage goods, such
as food and food products, clothing and textile, shoes, household
products and basic services such as transport, health and education.
If this involves the provision of subsidies, then this should
be done. There is no country in the world that does not use subsidies
as a tool of social policy. If this also involves raising of tariffs
to protect local industry from outside competition, then Government
should negotiate with industry on how best to do this. If there
is a conflict with the provisions of the WTO, then Government
should ask for either waivers or special and differentiated treatment
that is allowed under the WTO.
- Tier trade
regime: The government should give incentives to local producers
and manufacturers especially in the agro-processing industries
for value added goods. There should also be a beneficiation mechanism
for the mineral resources the country is endowed with.
- Imports:
The Government should also closely look at its import bill and
its contents. It should cut down on all inessential imports, but
be liberal with providing credit facilities for necessary imports
of machinery and technical know-how to local industry.
- The question
of Debt: An audit should be carried out on the external debt to
analyse which of them are legitimate debts and which are not.
If there are debts left over from the Smith Government then these
are, technically speaking, "odious" debts. The precedent Zimbabwe
should use is the US Supreme Court decision in 1896 in which it
determined that the US did not have to pay the debts that it owed
to Spain following the take-over of Cuba because Spain was a colonial
oppressor of the Cubans. Then there are debts that were created
on account of fulfilling Zimbabwe's obligations to the United
Nations in respect of the resolutions passed on the liberation
of Mozambique, Angola, Namibia and South Africa. It is the world
body that should pay those debts and not Zimbabwe. The audit should
also find out if there are debts incurred as a result of fraudulent
deals with multinational companies, and if increases in debt service
charges have been a result of speculation in currencies and in
interest rates. After all this, the Government should discharge
its debts to its foreign creditors on the basis of sharing the
responsibility with the creditors, for in law the creditors are
as much to blame for making bad loans as the debtors. This should
release a fairly substantial sum of money for investment as not
to require Zimbabwe to extend a begging hand at donors with all
their conditionalities.
- Compensation
from IMF: The IMF together with the WB is responsible for the
worst forms of structural violence and impoverishment of the Zimbabwean
people through their wrong prescriptive policies. The Government
of Zimbabwe, Parliament, Media, Private sector and the NGOs should
demand compensation from the IMF if they are serious in seeing
the reduction of poverty in the country.
- Empowerment
for indigenisation: Government should look at the deprived and
marginalised sections of the society not just from a welfare perspective
but from an empowering one. The Government owes it to the people
to provide adequate access to food, health, education, housing,
cheap transport and other wherewithal of life. Therefore, whilst
the Government should provide the means in the budget by which
to assist those that do get deprived by market forces, the real
way forward is to build on the creativity and energy of the people.
Concretely it means putting effective resources (knowledge, money,
institutions, infrastructure, etc,) in the hands of small farmers,
small and medium scale enterprises, indigenous business-people
that produce for the domestic market, indigenous scientists and
technicians, and so on.
- Regional
Integration: It would be necessary for Zimbabwe to negotiate with
its neighbours in order to work out a regional strategy along
the above lines. If this can be done within the SADC framework
then this should be pursued, but if not, then Zimbabwe should
simply work with all those who can agree to a joint programme
of action.
The Zimbabwean
people and its leadership have now an understanding of what happened
under the IMF policies. There should now be national consensus involving
all stakeholders in shaping the future of the country. Civil society
organisations should play a key role in this process. And as the
IMF is heading towards Zimbabwe the government should consult with
all relevant stakeholders to ensure ownership of the negotiating
process by the people. It is of the utmost importance that the national
Parliament is involved in discussing the broad policy direction,
and in surveillance.
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