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Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Zimbabwe's Development Impasse
Suzanne Dansereau
Extracted from the publication: Zimbabwe - The political economy of decline
March 2005

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Introduction
Shortages of food, pharmaceuticals and petrol, inflation rates hovering between 400 and 600% a year, a drop in tobacco sales to a quarter of the 2000 level,1 unemployment and poverty at about 75%, as well as documented human rights abuses and press censorship are but some of the indicators of Zimbabwe’s current crisis. Many outside observers blame the crisis on an ageing dictator trying to hold onto power by ignoring the rule of law, with solutions resting in the hands of popular opposition forces, merely awaiting free and fair elections to put things right. This simple dichotomy is reiterated by the two main political parties. ZANU-PF presents itself, as the bulwark against Britain’s efforts to recolonise the country while it describes the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) as a-historic, in search of a rapprochement with the forces of globalisation.2 The MDC on the other hand, offers itself as the way to return to normality, blaming ZANU-PF for ‘two decades of misrule and poor governance at the hands of a rapacious clique of power-hungry politicians (that) have transformed the jewel of Africa into a failed state’.3 This dichotomy reveals the depth of the country’s polarisation, but the prolonged nature of the crisis, the difficult search for a way-out and the lack of alternatives reveal a profound impasse stemming from the lack of development options available to the country.

The situation in Zimbabwe resembles that of many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa experiencing increasing conflict and instability after rising debt levels, and the introduction of structural adjustment and governance conditionalities weakened the national economy, narrowed state capacities and political options. The state is left with few tools to meet rising demands from popular groups and others excluded from the benefits of development, especially as they conflict with pressures from business and donors. Instead, the ruling elite, in a bid to protect itself, takes the carrot proffered by donors, along with the stick, drawing economic benefits from its proximity to the state, while entrenching itself politically through state repression. In some cases, conflict generated by the exclusion of the many, contributes to state collapse, particularly if it coincides with regional cleavages, and especially when fuelled by an illegal trade in natural resources. Zimbabwe's experience demonstrates that it can also result in a social or class-based struggle over the direction of the country’s development programme. The lack of development options can result in growing resistance from popular groups and intransigence from the ruling elite, which can also contribute to state collapse.

This paper will demonstrate the failure of both the inward-oriented development strategies adopted in 1980 and the export-driven model in 1990, supported by structural adjustment. It will document the key role played by Bretton Woods institutions in transforming state-led development into a market economy, protecting the interests of foreign-owned mining companies and commercial farmers, and reducing state capacities to intervene against growing economic and social demands resulting from rising unemployment and poverty, at a time when capital and donor agencies pushed for further liberalisation. The inability to meet those demands resulted in the emergence of an opposition, shaped less by regional factors4 than by the country’s labour and urban groups, eventually coming together to challenge ZANU-PF in parliamentary and presidential elections. In 2000, the government, feeling its survival threatened, returned to promises of land reform in an effort to consolidate its economic base and retain what it considered to be its electoral base in the rural areas. It took refuge in greater repression against popular demands and isolated itself from external influences, abandoning all pretence of adherence to fiscal austerity and good governance. The paper will then examine proposals put forward by ZANU-PF, the MDC and Bretton Woods agencies in the light of these failed development strategies, revealing their lack of alternatives, and thus the depth and complexity of the impasse facing the country.


1. Business Report, South Africa (SA), March 29, 2004.
2. T. Ranger, "Historiography, Patriotic History and the History of the Nation: The Struggle over the
Past in Zimbabwe",Journal of Southern African Studies, vol. 30 no. 2, 2004.
3. Zimbabwe Independent (Harare), Jan. 30, 2004.
4. Soon after independence, conflict did take on a regional character as government troops sought to
quell 'dissidents' in the Matabeleland provinces. This history is highly contested, subjected to partisan
and other conflicting interpretations. (See J. Alexander and J. McGregor, Violence & Memory:
One Hundred Years in the 'Dark Forests' of Matabeleland. Oxford: James Currey, 2000.) By 1987,
ZAPU, whose membership was concentrated in the Matabeleland provinces, agreed to join the government.
Joshua Nkomo, ZAPU President, became one of the country's two vice-presidents, and
other ZAPU members were given ministerial posts. Tensions did not disappear altogether between
ZANU and ZAPU but they now tend to be intermingled and cross-over current conflicts.

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