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Zimbabwe
needs you, or your cash
Jason
Moyo, Mail and Guardian (SA)
April 19, 2013
http://mg.co.za/article/2013-04-19-zimbabwe-needs-you-or-your-cash
The country is calling its children back, but most seem unwilling
to risk returning to an unstable environment.
The fears of a Zimbabwean
who is eager to return to his home country were best portrayed by
comedian Carl Joshua Ncube in one of his acts not long ago.
He describes how he and
his wife, who both recently returned home to start a business, have
learnt to share a bucket of water in a way that preserves the peace
in their marriage. "One splash for her, one splash for me,
one splash for her …" Ncube said, to peels of knowing
laughter from his audience.
It is one of many tales
of woe – water shortages – that Zimbabweans at home
easily joke about, but it is the kind of story that terrifies those
outside the country considering a return to Zimbabwe.
Deputy Prime Minister
Arthur Mutambara acknowledges these fears, but says these can be
opportunities: "Yes, there are problems and challenges in Zimbabwe
– poor infrastructure, low access to financial services, food
security matters, governance, low productivity and low beneficiation
– but these must be seen as potential opportunities by creative
entrepreneurs."
Many people are indeed
taking the plunge, with private agencies being set up in Zimbabwe
to help returning citizens to settle in, and large companies are
actively recruiting from within the diaspora.
But the government appears
more interested in making sure that repatriated funds are channeled
into state coffers. There is no official data on how much Zimbabweans
send back to the country each year because most of the transfers
happen informally. Bus conductors on the Johannesburg to Harare
route make a pretty penny by charging a minimum of 20% in commission
to send cash home.
Remittances
A report by South African
nonprofit organisation People Against Suffering, Oppression and
Poverty says that Zimbabweans living in South Africa repatriated
$847-million in 2011.
According to central
bank data, remittances into Zimbabwe through formal channels were
$190-million in 2009, 142.6% higher than in 2008, and 335% more
than what was recorded in 2007. A more recent Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe
(RBZ) report puts annual remittances through "formal channels"
at $138-million.
First National Bank,
which recently launched a cellphone-based cash remittance service
to Zimbabwe, says its research had shown that about 1.9-million
Zimbabweans living and working in South Africa send home an average
of R6.7-billion a year.
Another indicator came
from Standard Bank, which says it handled more than R1-million in
transfers to Zimbabwe since it launched a money transfer service
in December.
There are also no recent
official figures on how many Zimbabwean households still depend
on remittances. At the height of the economic crisis, a study by
the Economic and Social Research Council found that 50% of urban
households in Harare and Bulawayo were dependent on migrant remittances.
But the impact of remittances
appears to have weakened, according to the central bank. RBZ governor
Gideon Gono says that "diaspora inflows" are one of the
main sources of income for Zimbabwe, but that Zimbabwe was now increasingly
seeing only "moderate remittances", owing to changes in
economic realities both at home and abroad.
Exodus
of professionals
Zimbabwean professionals
began leaving in large numbers late in the 1990s, with the exodus
speeding up after the economic crisis deepened after 2000.
According to Zimbabwe's
Scientific and Industrial Research and Development Centre, by 2003,
500 000 skilled workers had left. In the same year, Zimbabwe lost
80% of the doctors, nurses, pharmacists and radiologists it had
trained since 1980. According to the ministry of health, 92% of
pharmacists' posts were vacant by September 2004.
In 2008 alone, the year
the global economic crisis peaked, mines lost half of their critical
skills base, mostly to South Africa.
However, Zimbabwe still
appears undecided about what it really wants out of its diaspora;
its people back, or their money.
A 2005 International
Organisation for Migration survey found that 67% of exiled Zimbabweans
surveyed had said they would like to return to Zimbabwe at some
point in future. But the years of economic crisis since then, and
the delayed reforms under the unity government, would likely have
dampened the hopes many may have had of returning.
In 2009, Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai was booed off a stage by his own supporters in
London after he called on them to return home.
But there are
many efforts under way to reverse the trend. Websites such as comehometozim.com
and motherlandzimbabwe.org
on which "diasporans" register for jobs at home are increasingly
popular.
On zimbabwehumancapital.org,
set up by the government and the migration organisation, Zimbabweans
abroad can submit applications for jobs at home.
The website,
comehometozim.com, calls out to Zimbabweans abroad: "Don't
wait for ‘things to come right' in Zimbabwe. Things don't
fix themselves, it takes people - that's why Zimbabwe needs you."
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