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Zimbabwe
Treasury's sin tax way to go to fund education
Students
Solidarity Trust
November 18, 2012
The world over,
tobacco companies have been under the cosh from governments now
legislating against excessive consumption of its products. In Europe
and North America, Class action has seen tobacco companies forking
out a lot of money in compensation. Science has not been favourable
either with scientific revelations that nicotine, one of the substances
in cigarettes is addictive and hazardous to the health of both the
active and passive smokers. This has forced governments to invoke
their responsibility to protect by raising money for social programs.
Tobacco companies therefore find themselves heavily regulated and
taxed as a way of raising this money.
Tobacco companies
have fled to what they have termed new markets in Asia, Africa and
South America. Sports such as Formula 1 mainly powered by tobacco
dollars have even moved away with Malaysia, China and Singapore
being the new homes for the sport.
Similarly alcohol
has also been under the spotlight as beverage manufacturers are
some of the few companies making super profits from Zimbabweans
consuming mainly alcoholic beverages. The last three years has seen
exponential growth in plant and equipment refurbishment and replacement
with new state of the art equipment being brought into the country
to meet the increase in demand.
Enter Zimbabwe's
Finance Minister Tendai Biti presenting the 2013 National Budget
on November 15, 2012, suggesting raising excise duty on cigarettes
and alcohol. Reason? To fund education by ring-fencing the resources
realised and putting them to the education budget. His estimation
is that eleven million dollars will be realised in December alone
as his proposal is to take effect on December 1. The Students Solidarity
Trust, a registered not for profit organization encourages more
holistic solutions in funding the education sector. The organization
welcomes the efforts to raise 4, 5 billion through the Education
Medium Term Plan in the next five years by World Bank, UNICEF and
other stakeholders. The plan will lead to the construction of 750
secondary schools, refurbishments of 24 000 classrooms, restoration
of professional status of teachers and promotion of electronic learning
among other things. The plan is a follow up to the Education Transition
Fund by which was largely a success.
The education
sector in Zimbabwe has been somewhat dissonant with the Education,
Arts, Sport and Culture ministry proactively making inroads into
resolving the decade-long challenges it has been facing. On the
other hand, tertiary education has been less visible with politicians
and bureaucrats in the ministry throwing barbs at the finance ministry
without making public suggestions of how to get out of the quagmire.
Resultantly,
students continue to find the going tough in tertiary institutions
with institutions such as the University of Zimbabwe even ignoring
government directives not to send students away who are on the cadetship
scheme. Notwithstanding the administrative bungling that has seen
the Commercial Bank of Zimbabwe account of the University
of Zimbabwe frozen, authorities continue to wantonly ignore
calls to allow Zimbabwean students from poor families an opportunity
to be educated.
The Student
Solidarity Trust firmly holds that Zimbabwe's education system
retains the potential to be the best in Africa and indeed the world
if resources are channelled to the right areas. It is therefore
welcome and commendable that the minister has introduced this tax.
SST hopes that the money will be put to good use and all those funding
this new education thrust through continuous intake of such hazardous
substances must be assured that their money will not be gobbled
up by the over-populated but under-performing ravenous bureaucracy
though misplaced priorities such as excessive foreign travel.
Visit the Students
Solidarity Trust fact
sheet
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