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Economic
package being crafted for new government
Stanley
Kwenda, Inter Press Service (IPS)
October
16, 2008
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=44288
The Southern African
Development Community (SADC) is mobilising economic aid for its
troubled member state Zimbabwe. The economic aid package is part
of efforts by the region to help bolster the faltering political
deal, widely regarded as the initial phase towards the recovery
of Zimbabwe's wretched economy.
Southern African
leaders, who came to Harare last month to witness the signing of
the power sharing agreement,
have tasked the SADC Secretariat with the crafting of an economic
package for Zimbabwe.
SADC Executive Secretary
General, Tomáz Augusto Salomão, who was also in Harare
for the signing ceremony and has been involved in efforts to resuscitate
the country's economy, told IPS that his office has been working
on an economic blue print for Zimbabwe since 2005.
''We are
working on a package to help finance the recovery of the Zimbabwean
economy. The signing of the political settlement augurs well for
this programme. We hope the political conditions in the country
will improve and help the quick implementation of this programme,''
Salomão expounded.
His office has conducted
studies of the Zimbabwean economy and will now be adding new elements
of the political agreement into the final blueprint. ''There
is no doubt that the signing of the deal will provide that much-needed
momentum for us to kick-start the economy of Zimbabwe.
''We have
put in place a fund to help finance the recovery of the Zimbabwean
economy. We have looked at its policies, the central bank, agricultural
sector, monetary policy and exchange rate determinants,''
said Salomão.
Asked about the amount
of money and the conditions that might come with the package, he
said, ''that's an issue for the SADC leaders to determine''.
He did not give any timeline
for the implementation of the financial package, only saying that
it will depend on the political deal.
Article three of the
Zimbabwe power sharing agreement addresses economic issues. It talks
about issues to do with the restoration of economic stability and
growth. Since 2000, when the Zimbabwean government embarked on farm
invasions, the country's economy started plummeting, the currency
lost value and the country became one of the worst countries to
do business in.
The negotiating parties
agreed to give priority to the restoration of economic stability
and growth in Zimbabwe; to work on an agricultural recovery plan;
to establish a national economic council which will be made up of
representatives of all sectors of the country; and to endorse the
SADC resolution on the country's economy which flows from the SADC
Secretariat's studies.
Several SADC leaders
have spoken of the urgent need to put together resources for Zimbabwe.
South Africa has been leading the efforts, with its former president
Thabo Mbeki having already put into motion an agricultural plan
for the 2008 to 2009 farming season.
That country's treasury,
agriculture and foreign affairs departments have been working on
acquiring farming inputs and implements for Zimbabwe before the
start of the agricultural season.
Although Zimbabwean farmers
have already started receiving seed maize and fertilizer as a result
of this intervention it is not yet clear if the new South African
administration under president Kgalema Motlanthe, which has been
critical of President Robert Mugabe, will take over from where Mbeki's
administration left.
Meanwhile other international
funding institutions such as the Bretton Woods institutions have
expressed interest in engaging the new government of Zimbabwe as
long as it shows commitment to economic reforms.
The European Union, a
key funder of many humanitarian projects in Zimbabwe, has announced
that it will provide 10 million euros in humanitarian aid to the
country.
Brussels said the funds,
following the signing of the power-sharing deal between Mugabe and
opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai, will be used mainly to assist
in the provision of clean water, health and sanitation requirements
for the most vulnerable population groups.
European commissioner
for development and humanitarian aid Louis Michel said: ''The
EU's humanitarian assistance is neutral and impartial and not an
instrument of politics. I expect all restrictions on humanitarian
operations to be totally lifted as a result of the recent political
settlement.''
The aid is on top of
15 million Euros in food aid already made available to the country
this year.
The EU has welcomed Zimbabwe's
power-sharing deal but has said it wants to see how Mugabe and Tsvangirai
implement the deal on the ground before it can commit itself to
providing more significant aid for the rebuilding of the southern
African country's collapsed economy.
Brussels said targeted
visa and financial sanctions imposed on Mugabe and his government
officials six years ago will remain in place for now until they
show genuine commitment to building a stable and democratic country.
Although some of the
financial aid seems to be coming with strings attached, it seems
to be trickling down. The Zimbabwean government has already announced
that it has secured 80 million dollars for maize and fuel imports
from African Export Import Bank (Afreximbank).
Afreximbank is a multilateral
financial institution whose main objective is to facilitate, promote
and expand intra and extra African trade.
Some analysts however
believe that it will take more than just donations for the economy
to start ticking again.
''Optimists
believe that when the politics normalise, Zimbabwe will revert seamlessly
to the mostly unsuccessful growth path of the 1990s. That is wrong,''
Harare-based economist Tony Hawkins, a professor at the Graduate
School of Management at the University
of Zimbabwe, said at a meeting in Pretoria, South Africa last
month.
He also stressed that
international donors would not support a new government in which
Mugabe or the ruling ZANU PF still had a big say in policy. Mugabe's
government is accused of having destroyed Zimbabwe economically
in its bid to hold onto power.
According to Reserve
Bank of Zimbabwe figures, the country's external debt was estimated
to be at 4.8 billion dollars in 2007, while domestic debt has also
been rising.
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