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2008 harmonised elections - Index of articles
Economists:
only new leadership can revive Zimbabwe's collapsed economy
Peta Thornycroft, Voice of America (VOA)
March 14, 2008
http://www.voanews.com/english/2008-03-14-voa38.cfm
Zimbabwe's economy has
been in crisis for nearly 10 years, but as election day approaches,
its collapse is gathering pace, and no one is sure where it is heading.
Peta Thornycroft reports for VOA that economists, industrialists
and political analysts say the economy can only recover if there
is new political leadership.
Zimbabwe used to be a
breadbasket of Africa and was the second most industrialized nation
on the continent. Now it depends on food aid and most of its industries
have closed or are working only one or two days a week, a decline
many analysts attribute to the failed leadership of President Robert
Mugabe and his chaotic land reform program.
Mr. Mugabe blames Western
nations, particularly Britain and the United States, for his country's
economic woes.
Economist John Robertson
says the economy is so tattered, it will require new political leadership
of a special caliber to launch a recovery process.
"They will have
to do some amazingly difficult things, because most of ZANU-PF policies
over the last decade or more have been policies designed to avoid
pain, avoid the difficulties they should have accepted front on,"
he said. "A new leader would have to fix those very quickly
and [that] would be very much more painful than a politician trying
to win popular support."
Robertson is alluding
to the coming election in which two candidates are challenging Mr.
Mugabe to become the new president of Zimbabwe.
Simba Makoni, who was
finance minister during the start of the land reform program, announced
his candidacy just last month. He had to quit his job, or was forced
to, when he advised his then boss, Robert Mugabe, to devalue the
Zimbabwe dollar in 2002.
The other candidate is
Morgan Tsvangirai, who started out as a unionist and led the recovery
of the trade union movement in Zimbabwe before he became the founding
present of the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) in
2000.
Both men devote a lot
of campaign time telling people how the economy needs to be reformed.
Economist Robertson says if either man wins the election he will
be faced with a daunting task to inject life back into the economy.
At present it takes about
30 million Zimbabwe dollars to buy $1 U.S. on the black market,
which is the only way to acquire foreign currency these days. Robertson
says Zimbabwe will not recover without international assistance,
in particular to stabilize the Zimbabwe dollar, which loses value
every day.
"We need to be treated
as a disaster zone in desperate need of assistance much as if we
had suffered an earthquake or a flood," he explained. "If
the country tried to recover with its own resources, it would take
far, far too long, so the assistance we would need would be mainly
to recapitalize the country to give people the resources needed
to hit the ground running in every industry, especially in agriculture."
Robertson suggests that
a new leader will have to respond to market forces and drastically
cut the size of the civil service. He also notes that companies
or individuals in debt at the time of a transition to a new political
dispensation would struggle to survive a stable Zimbabwe dollar
and real interest rates.
A few people have made
fortunes out of Zimbabwe's political and economic chaos. With the
plummeting value of the currency, the few who have cash invest it
in the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange, the only viable option to preserve
or grow its value. The economically perverse consequence of this
is that in 2007 the ZSE was the best performing stock market in
the world.
Stock exchange chief
executive Emmanuel Munyukwi laments the ever deepening crisis and
says most companies still operating are only trying to survive until
there is a new political dispensation.
"These
companies are probably operating at less than 20 percent capacity,
they have got assets which are real, the assets are there, so should
circumstances change here the upside potential is huge," he
noted.
Munyukwi says the banks,
for example, no longer operate as they did when Zimbabwe's economy
was sound. He says important traditional roles of private banks
such as lending to investors and supporting agriculture have been
taken over by the central bank. He says commercial banks are now
more like post office banks, dealing only with individuals' accounts.
Munyukwi says he is an
optimist and believes that there could be a recovery reasonably
fast if there is a new political leadership.
"When you look what's
happening on the ground, most of our problems are political,"
he said. "Once the political situation is resolved, it cascades
down. The executives running the companies in Zimbabwe are going
through a very difficult time, even producing in some instances
good results under very, very trying circumstances. Now if the playing
field is level - this is the potential I am talking about - people
will start making money."
Both Makoni and Tsvngirai
have said if they won the presidential election they would restore
the ailing banking sector and return the central bank to its traditional
role.
However, President Mugabe
is campaigning hard. He has apologized to people for their suffering
mainly blaming the west for their plight, but saying that ZANU-PF
has also made mistakes. He is determined to serve at least another
five years, and many Zimbabweans wonder what will happen to the
economy if he retains power.
Political analyst Brian
Raftopoulos says if he does the West will not recognize the outcome
of the election because, he says, already there are strong indications
that the polls will be neither free nor fair. Raftopoulos predicts
the economy will shrink further and suffering will escalate.
"Well if Mugabe
wins it is simple, conditions will continue to deteriorate,"
he said. "This would not be an election that is widely recognized,
there will be no recovery, the Mugabe regime will be further isolated.
The economy will continue to deteriorate, with Mugabe and his regime
having no policy to bring Zimbabwe out of the current crisis, and
therefore, all-round the conditions will get worse."
At month's end
Zimbabweans will vote for the first time in four simultaneous elections
- for the president, legislators, senators and, for local government
representatives. Many are hoping that the election will indeed herald
a new economic beginning in their country.
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