|
Back to Index
Zimbabwe emergency recovery program
World
Bank
September 01, 2008
Download
this document
- Word
97 version (160KB)
- Acrobat
PDF version (348KB)
If you do not have the free Acrobat reader
on your computer, download it from the Adobe website by clicking
here.
Introduction
Approach
and objectives
This paper outlines a possible Zimbabwe Emergency Recovery Program
(ZERP) which Government could implement with support from Development
Partners following the articulation of an internationally-backed
recovery program. The draft ZERP is based on information gathered
from a number of stakeholders in the course of implementing the
Multi-Donor Trust Fund (MDTF) led by the World Bank and supported
by a number of development partners to assist with improving stakeholder
knowledge on Zimbabwe. An emergency program would give Government
the breathing space needed to re-formulate and finalize a medium-term
development strategy.
It started off as a list
of ten priorities based on information from stakeholders, and each
topic was allocated to a Technical Review Groups (TRG) under the
MDTF to document by way of a page summarizing the situation analysis
using available knowledge (and clearly identifying gaps in knowledge
which should be filled from further studies); and a second page
on policy options using available study findings and stakeholders'
views (and clearly indicating areas where more dialogue is needed
to refine policy options). It is a living document to be updated
with the availability of new information from analyses and consultations
with stakeholders - it now contains a list of twelve issues
following inputs from a number of stakeholders.
The draft ZERP
provides a platform for dialogue among various actors likely to
play a role in the financing, implementation, and monitoring of
an emergency program not exceeding12 months. The draft outline of
priorities has been shared with the Ministry of Economic Development
(which is leading the Zimbabwe Economic Development Strategy -
ZEDS - process), the Ministry of Finance, the National
Association of NGOs (NANGO), the Confederation of Zimbabwe Industries
(CZI), the main Donors likely to finance an emergency program, and
opposition parties' economic policy-making teams; but not
with the Reserve Bank (RBZ) of Zimbabwe and the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU), among others. Inputs from these
key stakeholders are being used to improve on this draft.
The goal is to produce
a short document outlining the kind of options that a government
seeking to implement a credible stabilization program will face,
with an indication of resources likely to be needed. The draft will
also give a rough estimate of resource requirements for a 12 months
period, in order to later mobilize resources for the emergency program.
Once an internationally-backed
stabilization program has been articulated by Government, a multi-donor
Rapid Needs Assessment Team will make a short visit to Zimbabwe
to discuss and agree on the elements of the program. After that,
Government and potential Financing Agencies, along with a mapping
of donors' resources in the existing Multi-Donor Trust Fund (which
currently finances analytical work), will be modified to finance
the program in part or in totality. Donors will then be expected
to put resources in accordance with the emergency program and the
mapping of their resources.
The implementation of
ZERP will be supported by a team of stakeholders (donors, civil
society, selected Government agencies, representative bodies of
industry and commerce, etc.) who will monitor progress and use the
results to inform the development of a medium-term development strategy
under the leadership of Government.
This draft ZERP
is meant to promote consensus among stakeholders around what challenges
face Zimbabwe and how they could be tackled when agreement is reached
with the international community on a framework for re-engagement.
It recognizes that Zimbabwe is faced by a social, political, and
economic crisis that is being debated at many levels of society;
and a viable ZERP will depend on the emergence of a national consensus
- which the international community can support.
Download
full document
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|