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MDC-T,
Zanu PF economic blueprints: Big on style, weak on form and substance
Clive Mphambela,
The Independent (Zimbabwe)
December 07, 2012
Read this article
on the Independent (Zimbabwe) website
Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai's MDC-T party last week launched its new
economic blueprint, Jobs,
Upliftment, Investment, Capital and the Environment (Juice)
to succeed the Reconstruction Stabilisation Recovery and Transformation
(Restart): Our Path to Social Justice plan which was part of its
manifesto and campaign strategy in the last elections.
Restart was concerned with the country's immediate stabilisation
and reconstruction, as well the party's industrialisation
strategy, through which jobs and economic growth would be sustained
in the long-term.
The main objectives of Restart were to reconstruct the social fabric
and economic infrastructure, to stabilise the macro-economic fundamentals,
recover levels of savings, investment and growth, and to transform
the economy and society to achieve equitable, inclusive national
development.
It was set to increase real incomes and employment, empowering previously
disadvantaged groups by providing them with access to resources
and opportunities to increase their incomes in a meaningful way.
The programme also sought to ensure Zimbabweans had equitable access
to high-quality, affordable health, education and social services,
which are essential for economic development.
Prior to Juice and Restart, the MDC-T launched Bold, Revitalising
& Innovative approach to the economy based on Development, Growth
& Employment strategies (Bridge).
Its key elements were job creation, driven initially by increased
public spending on health, education and housing, exchange rate
stability, cutting inflation, alleviating poverty, privatisation
and, crucially important, agrarian reform.
While nothing much about Bridge and Restart has been achieved during
the MDC-T's foray in the inclusive government, except macro-economic
stabilisation after the introduction of the multicurrency regime
in 2009, the party has now come up with Juice, promising a million
jobs under it.
In what appeared to have been a response to the Ministry of Youth
Development, Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment's framework,
underpinned by the current economic empowerment thrust, Zimbabwe
Broad-Based Economic Empowerment Policy 2013-42 (ZBBEEP), the MDC-T
launched a new plan for economic recovery and job creation.
Whilst these policy documents are not quite two sides of the same
coin, they have one thing in common: they make big promises but
don't elucidate on the how part of it.
The MDC-T's Juice is an initiative for the next five years
but has a long-term outlook of 30 years.
It aims to initially deliver one million new jobs by 2018 and a
US$100 billion GDP by 2040. However, it does not address the key
issue: how will all this be achieved?
The ZBBEEP, driven by the Indigenisation ministry and guided by
the Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment Act (Chapter 14:33)
of March 2008 and the Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment (General)
Regulations issued in February 2010, also suffers from the same
problem: it does not address how company seizures will translate
into economic growth, job creation and employment, and empowerment
of the people.
The essence of the widely-criticised empowerment laws is "to
endeavour to secure that at least 51% of the shares of every public
company and any other business shall be owned by indigenous Zimbabweans".
The regulations provide that all businesses in Zimbabwe with a net
asset value equal to or above US$500 000 should formulate plans
that will lead to 5% of its shares being transferred to "indigenous"
Zimbabwean shareholders within five years from the date of operation
of the regulations.
While the MDC-T and Zanu PF policy documents agree unemployment
is a huge problem in the country, they both fail to detail credible
job creation initiatives beyond wishful thinking.
Juice says it will deliver one million jobs by 2018, whilst ZBBEEP
claims it will create five million jobs by 2042. But they propose
no viable job creation strategies and implementation mechanisms,
leaving them open to criticism that they are just unrealistic and
empty election manifestos.
According to Juice, the wheels came off Zimbabwe's economy
in 1997 when the controversial land redistribution exercise began,
resulting in the fallout with the international community and a
toxic local business climate.
These issues combined to drive the loss of jobs and livelihood for
a large number of people across various sectors of the economy as
new investment dwindled and companies' output shrank.
In an apparent reference to Zanu PF's economic empowerment
programme, Juice argues the creation of new jobs is more empowering
than opaque share-ownership schemes via obscure community share-trusts,
which may ultimately not benefit the intended marginalised people.
"As a direct result of Juice we expect to achieve the creation
of one million new jobs between 2013-2018 within the framework of
a projected average GDP growth rate of 8% per annum during that
period, macro-economic stability anchored by single digit inflation,
the deepening and strengthening of the role of SMEs, widening domestic
savings mobilisation and the normalisation of Zimbabwe's international
relations," the MDC-T says.
The MDC-T blueprint, just like the Zanu PF one, is good in describing
the problems not offering a solution. The party says it will implement
a Natural Resources Charter and promote a green economy, increase
power generation capacity to 6 000 megawatts by 2018.
It hopes in that timeframe to drive reconstruction of the country's
infrastructure and attract FDI that is at least 30% of GDP. The
aim is to lay the foundation for a US$100 billion economy by 2040.
Juice also promises creating decent employment opportunities for
all Zimbabweans, whilst providing opportunities to every citizen
to pursue happiness, achieving social justice and nurturing their
natural environment in a democratic society without state bureaucratic
hindrance.
Its other key elements
include creating an investor friendly environment to attract domestic
and Foreign Direct Investment.
This would help increase the productive sector's capacity
utilisation to ensure job creation through capital investment.
The blueprint also proposes policies that promote capital formation
through efficient financial markets and greater integration with
regional and global markets to facilitate sustainable growth.
Juice also aims at a comprehensive programme that provides for the
delivery of good-quality social services such as education and healthcare
in a way that is affordable to all.
In addition to managing the country's foreign debt, Juice
also promises restructuring the ownership and control of the economy
through a broad-based economic empowerment programme.
ZBBEEP says it is underpinned by the desire to expand the economic
base through promoting, encouraging, forming and growing existing
and new industries of all sizes, across all sectors of the economy,
particularly the creation of a vibrant micro, small and medium enterprise
sector dominated by previously disadvantaged Zimbabwean entrepreneurs.
However, judging by experience, these programmes are likely to suffer
the same fate as the plethora of other plans such as the Transitional
National Development Plan in 1980, Five-year Development Plans in
the 1980s, Economic Structural Adjustment Programme (Esap) and Zimbabwe
Programme for Economic and Social Transformation (Zimprest) in the
1990s, Vision 2020, Economic Revival Plan, Short Term Emergency
Recovery Programme (Sterp) and now the Medium Term Plan after 2000,
among others.
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