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Traders
are now importing basic foodstuffs
Ignatius Banda, Inter Press Service News (IPS)
August 10, 2007
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=38902
BULAWAYO, Aug 15 (IPS)
- Sithabile Khuzwayo is one of many women who bring groceries and
clothing from across the borders of neighbouring Botswana and South
Africa to sell at the flourishing flea markets of Zimbabwe's
second largest city, Bulawayo.
She told IPS that the
hostility of Botswana's locals to Zimbabwean traders has made
buying wares in Botswana risky. ''Before the problems
began in Zimbabwe, we could move around without attracting any trouble,
but now we have become targets. Some traders are mugged and their
goods taken by Batswana,'' she said.
The 30-year-old Khuzwayo
complains that ''the exchange rates are so volatile
it has become difficult to price my wares to at least show a bit
of profit''.
The city's markets
have become centres of trade and finance where cross-border traders
sell their wares and also source foreign exchange. For many residents
struggling in a harsh economic environment amid growing shortages
of basic commodities, cross-border traders have become the only
suppliers of food.
Apart from groceries,
cheap clothing from Botswana -- originally imported from China --
is the other essential product being sold in Bulawayo's flea
markets.
The dire economic circumstances
have attracted thousands of women to informal trade in Bulawayo,
a city of more than two million people. Recently even professionals
like teachers and nurses have joined in to keep head above water.
The scarcity of foreign
currency in Zimbabwe has meant that these small enterprises operate
below capacity. It has forced cross-border traders to turn to the
thriving illegal parallel market.
At the Plumtree border
post, where thousands of Zimbabweans cross into Botswana each week,
traders say it is becoming increasingly difficult to move goods.
Groceries are now in short supply after a government decree forced
retailers to slash prices by half. This has left supermarket shelves
empty.
There was panic last
month when the ZANU-PF government announced it was banning the importation
of groceries from neighbouring countries as part of its price blitz
against retailers. Without explanation, the government accused traders
of fuelling the shortages of scarce basic commodities.
The authorities reversed
the directive after a public outcry. The selling of commodities
such as cooking oil, maize meal, shoes and clothing from Botswana
in the streets of Bulawayo shows that informal cross-border trade
continues despite the hardships faced by the thousands of women
who have found a lifeline in this sector.
Traders point to the
high import tariffs charged by Zimbabwean customs as one of the
reasons for bringing limited volumes of goods into the country.
''I have
been asked to fork out money at customs which was almost equivalent
to the goods I purchased in Botswana. This does not make any business
sense as I have to make something from these trips,''
27-year-old Portia Zuze told IPS at the Plumtree border post, about
100 km south of Bulawayo.
She said this is not
the only challenge she has run up against. ''Transport
is hell here. Once I took the cheap Bulawayo-Francistown train.
But once you get to the Bulawayo train station, it is a hassle to
get your goods released by the customs officials.''
Zuze added that there
have been reports of women jumping off the Francistown-Bulawayo
train once they get to Plumtree, in an attempt to escape paying
the import duties.
''There are
instances where one customs official just waves you through while
another one asks you to pay duty. We do not know what is going on,"
Zuze told IPS.
Zimbabwe and Botswana
have signed a bilateral agreement on the avoidance of double taxation
as part of what Zimbabwe sees as a move to bolster trade across
the borders. However, these stories show that Zimbabwean authorities
are still making life difficult for small-scale cross-border traders.
The continued economic
instability in Zimbabwe has deprived informal cross-border traders
of opportunities for growth.
In 1997, the Common Market
for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) set up a fund to assist
small cross-border traders via its investment promotion and private
sector development desk. There has been little participation by
Zimbabwe in the initiative.
Mavis Jubane of the Zimbabwe
Informal Traders Association says not many people have heard about
the COMESA initiative.
''Many women
do not set targets for possible expansion, being happy to make trips
that will make just enough to feed their families because they are
failing to secure enough foreign currency,'' Jubane
told IPS.
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