|
Back to Index
Plain
talk about the Zimbabwean economy
Ambassador
Christopher Dell
November 02, 2005
This speech was
delivered at the Africa University, Mutare, Zimbabwe (as prepared for
delivery)
Honourable Governor
Tinaye Chigudu, Honorable Mutare Councillor Norman Togara, Captains of
Industry, distinguished guests, and Vice Chancellor Murapa,
It is an honour to
be here with you today. Vice Chancellor Murapa, allow me first of all
to thank you, the students, faculty, and staff of Africa University for
your generosity in coming to the aid of the victims of Hurricane Katrina.
Your donation of bedding destined for 15,000 people in Zimbabwe to New
Orleans where many Americans were in desperate need in a time of crisis
was greatly appreciated. We in government appreciate the efforts made
by Americans and Zimbabweans of faith to help their fellow mankind in
a time of need. The gesture was emblematic of the spirit that made the
founding of Africa University possible, and which brings 300 American
volunteers a year to Mutare to work on charitable projects. I salute this
distinguished institution and the fine work you are carrying out.
Since 1992, the US
Embassy and Africa University have maintained a close relationship in
furthering higher education in Zimbabwe and Africa.
We have supported
the Institute of Peace, Leadership and Governance in its work developing
professionals dedicated to spreading peace and democracy throughout Africa.
I commend your efforts and wish you success as you continue to develop
the Institute's programs. As a leading institution of higher education
in Zimbabwe and Africa, it is only fitting that straight talk about the
Zimbabwean economy begins here.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
no issue today is more important to the future of Zimbabwe nor has the
potential to harm the region than the growing collapse of the Zimbabwe
economy. Not too long ago, Zimbabwe had a vibrant and diversified economy.
It was a land of great hope and optimism in Africa. It had a leadership
role on the continent and was a symbol for the rest of the world of what
Africa could become. Today, as you know, it is a country in deep crisis.
I know of no other example in the world of an economy that, in times of
peace, has contracted so precipitously in the course of six years.
The facts and figures
will be familiar to you. I'll mention them only briefly: Real GDP fell
by almost 30 percent from 1997 to 2003, and the trend has continued through
2005. Inflation is at least in the mid-triple digits and clearly on the
rise. If the government continues to print money to meet its obligations
it could well drive inflation into quadruple digits by year's end. Manufacturing
has shrunk by 51% since 1997 and exports have fallen by half in the past
four years. Almost every major economic indicator has declined significantly
since 2001. The investment and operating environment is dismal. Foreign
direct investment has evaporated from US$444 million in 1998 to US$9 million
in 2004.
Agricultural production
- the mainstay of the economy - has collapsed under violent implementation
of a necessary but badly thought through land reform. The government,
or officials of government acting on their own authority, have continued
to expropriate commercial farms without compensation and to distribute
these farms in a non-transparent manner to ruling party insiders even
though it formally declared the end of the process earlier this year.
Not only the commercial farm owners have been affected. This misguided
and ill-fated land grab also displaced over a million farm workers and
their family members.
The human cost of
Zimbabwe's economic crisis has been extraordinarily high. The estimated
proportion of the population living below the official poverty line has
more than doubled since mid-1990s - it is now about 80 percent of the
population. At least half the country faces food shortages. The country's
human development indicators, once the envy of Sub-Saharan Africa, have
sunk to the lowest fifth percentile in the world. Well over a quarter
of the population has fled the country according to the last national
census
It was more than dismaying
to read a paper published in July by the Centre for Global Development
in Washington on the Costs and Causes of Zimbabwe's Crisis. It estimated
that Zimbabwe's economic crisis has set the country back more than half
a century. The paper calculated that the purchasing power of the average
Zimbabwean in 2005 had fallen back to the same level as in 1953 when the
Confederation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland was established. That's an astonishing
reversal of 52 years of progress in only a half dozen years.
The flood of economic
bad news has been continuous. Most recently, the World Economic Forum
published its assessment of the state of Zimbabwe's competitiveness. Alarmingly,
it ranked Zimbabwe as the least competitive of all 117 economies studied.
The facts and figures
are bleak. I pose the question: What has caused Zimbabwe's unprecedented
economic descent?
The government's official
position has been that the economic collapse is the result of drought
and sanctions imposed by unfriendly western nations.
Let's look at these
assertions one at a time.
On the face of it,
it seems possible that drought could account for Zimbabwe's precipitous
fall in output, especially since so much of the economy is based on rain-fed
agriculture and the region faces a regular cycle of varying rainfall.
This explanation, however, does not hold up well under scrutiny.
The Cato Institute
in Washington recently published an insightful paper on the collapse of
Zimbabwe's economy. I understand the paper is being widely discussed in
business and academic circles in Zimbabwe. The author, economist Craig
Richardson, shows that the "drought" of 2000/01 was less severe
than at least 12 other recent low rainfall periods. Richardson studied
the correlation between GDP growth rates and rainfall since 1985 based
on data provided by Zimbabwe's Meteorological Services Department from
all 93 rainfall stations in the country. He found that the historically
close correlation of GDP with rainfall cycle no longer holds after 1999.
Since 1999, when rainfall has recovered, the Zimbabwean economy nevertheless
has continued to decline.
The Centre for Global
Development paper I referred to earlier carries the rainfall analysis
one step further. It notes that rainfall patterns are regional, yet Zimbabwe's
decline in maize production over the past five years has been dramatically
greater than Zambia's or Malawi's. In fact, Zambia's maize production
actually increased after 2002.
Ladies and gentlemen,
I don't pretend to be an agronomist, but I do know that Zimbabwe has experienced
cycles of drought since time immemorial. Its agricultural sector adapted
to the conditions and built impressive irrigation systems and dense networks
of dams. As challenging as the conditions are when rainfall is below average,
let's put the drought defence to rest. Under scrutiny, it doesn't sufficiently
account for Zimbabwe's economic collapse.
Let's also set the
record straight on sanctions.
The Zimbabwe Democracy
and Economic Recovery Act of 2001 is the cornerstone of U.S. policy toward
Zimbabwe. Under the Act, the United States conditions aid and financing
for Zimbabwe on the government's restoration of the rule of law, the conduct
of free and fair elections, placing military and police forces under effective
civilian control, and a commitment by the government to an equitable,
legal, and transparent land reform program.
Until Zimbabwe meets
these conditions, the United States - joined by the European Union and
others - will maintain narrowly tailored financial and travel sanctions
on ruling-party and government leaders and their families. Sanctions on
specific high-level individuals and their families, are the vehicle that
the United States and like-minded countries use to signal international
disapproval of the way that Zimbabwe's ruling elite has trampled on democratic
freedoms.
The travel and financial
sanctions that we have imposed target the highest-level individuals in
Zimbabwe. They restrict entry into the United States for senior members
of the government, and others who formulate, implement, or benefit from
policies that undermine Zimbabwe's democratic institutions. The financial
sanctions prohibit any U.S. person from engaging in any transaction with
any person or entity found to be undermining democratic institutions and
processes in Zimbabwe.
Let me make it perfectly
clear ladies and gentlemen, Zimbabwean firms that are not connected to
regime leaders are free to do business with American firms, and American
firms are free to invest in Zimbabwe and trade with any individual except
those top-level sanctioned officials. The argument that these narrowly
targeted sanctions have hurt the larger economy could only be true if
the economy as a whole were entirely in the hands of the 86 government
and party officials on the list and they controlled all of it. No doubt
they have a disproportionate share of Zimbabwe's economy in their hands,
including multiple farm ownership, but not even the most suspicious observer
credits the international sanctions with that degree of influence.
There is so much misinformation
about sanctions being bandied about that you might be surprised to learn
that Zimbabwe actually has a trade surplus with the United States. It
exports more goods and services to the U.S. than it imports. U.S. imports
from Zimbabwe were US$76.2 million in 2004; our exports amounted to US$47.3
million. The United States ranked fourth in 2004 among the major destinations
for Zimbabwe's exports; the U.K. ranked second. To me this is clear evidence
that, despite assertions in the press and by government officials to the
contrary, there are no blanket sanctions against doing business in Zimbabwe
and the effect of sanctions is confined to the senior people they are
meant to hurt.
Back to the original
question: What has been the cause of Zimbabwe's unprecedented economic
descent?
The answer is really
quite simple, as well as quite shocking: Neither drought nor sanctions
are at the root of Zimbabwe's decline. The Zimbabwe government's own gross
mismanagement of the economy and its corrupt rule has brought on the crisis.
The examples of misguided
economic decision making since the 1990s are manifold and well documented.
The fiscally reckless, massive, unbudgeted payout to war veterans in 1997
is often cited as the beginning of the economic decline. Zimbabwe's costly
misadventure in the Democratic Republic of Congo followed soon after.
It was also during this period that the parallel foreign exchange market
emerged.
The government's policy
of land seizures and tolerance for chaotic disruptions on commercial farms
led to the collapse in food production. The impact of the farm invasions
has extended beyond food security, beyond Zimbabwe's balance of payments
crisis, and beyond the plight of the thousands of individual expropriated
farm owners. The land grab has intensified the suffering of Zimbabwe's
most vulnerable segments of society - the rural and urban poor.
Fast-track land reform,
still underway, as you know, here in Manicaland, also had the ugly and
debilitating side effect of spurring violence, racial mongering, and the
destruction of property and livelihoods. Attempts to get the country back
on track since the onset of land seizures have been riddled with political
favouritism, disregard for transparency and the refusal to admit and correct
mistakes. Farm audits and re-audits take place, but the results appear
to drop into a black hole. No wrongs are righted; the rule of law is a
shamble. Multiple farm ownership by the politically powerful and their
families makes a mockery of the government's official "one man, one
farm" policy.
Fiscal probity is
nonexistent when the budget deficit hovers in the double-digits. Even
at Zimbabwe's high rate of tax collection, revenue in a contracting economy
cannot keep abreast of the country's public spending. The government's
wage bill, saddled as it also is with ghost workers benefiting from the
patronage system, is an astounding 20 percent of GDP. I ask you, are you
receiving a level of service commensurate with this outlay?
The Reserve Bank keeps
the printing press running and the economy suffers through the ripple
effects on the value of the currency and on food and fuel supplies.
Let me share a nugget
of information with you that illuminates Zimbabwe's odd-man-out status
in Africa. In 2004, only Angola and Zimbabwe in Sub-Saharan Africa had
inflation rates above 20 percent. Angola brought its rate down from 77
percent in 2003 to about 30 percent a year later. I needn't remind you
how far out of control the cost of living is these days in Zimbabwe.
Since I arrived in
this country I've been struck repeatedly by the extent of the government's
involvement in so many far-reaching aspects of the economy. Its urge to
control, control, and control some more puts a stranglehold on economic
activity that belongs solidly in the private sector. Where else in the
world does a central bank governor formulate sectoral policy? Why do the
officials fear unleashing market forces? Do they have so much to lose
personally if they were forced to compete on a level playing field with
others? Their actions provide the answer to that, I fear. Moreover, it
is the certainty of misguided government policies and not/not the effect
of limited, targeted sanctions that have discouraged foreign direct investment.
Officials across the
government have made an art out of repeatedly uttering throwaway statements
about indigenising industry, without thought to drawing up a plan involving
all stakeholders. Let me tell you something: Nothing rattles investor
confidence more than the prospect of expropriation. The constitutional
amendment striking down the right to redress in the courts for victims
of land expropriation sent a shock wave through the community of investors
who keep an eye on the climate in Zimbabwe.
Ladies and gentlemen,
while the Zimbabwean economy appears to be entrenched in a downward spiral,
and the abandonment of sensible economic policy has shut off most foreign
aid, scared away most foreign investment, and spurred an alarming rate
of brain drain, there is good economic news coming out of other parts
of the region. Zambia, for example, once regarded, I understand, as Zimbabwe's
poor cousin, has been reaping the benefits of prudent economic management.
The Zambian government's
commitment to macroeconomic reform has produced a remarkable turnaround.
Zambia clearly still faces daunting challenges, but its leadership has
implemented sound policy advice, received very deep-cutting debt relief
from creditors and the donor community this year, and has put itself on
a sustainable growth path. I read recently that real GDP growth projections
had been upped to the high single-digits marking a remarkable about face
after two decades of decline. Most interestingly, the turnaround is based
on strong performance in three pillars of the economy that were once the
mainstays of this country's prosperity: agriculture, tourism and mining.
In addition, Zambia's turnaround has attracted a flood of grants and investment
in the country.
Botswana is a further
example of a close neighbour where the sound management of natural resource
wealth over many years has yielded tangible benefits. Real GDP growth
there has averaged nearly 9 percent per annum, and per capita income has
risen above US$3,500. Botswana has also made impressive gains with respect
to many social indicators.
Last month Reserve
Bank Governor presented his Monetary Policy Review Statement for the third
quarter. At his presentation to the diplomatic community he called on
the assembled ambassadors to do Zimbabwe a favour and portray a positive
picture of Zimbabwe to investors at home. I believe Governor Gono has
misjudged diplomats' influence on investors. There are not many governments
left in the world that can persuade or direct their business community
to invest in a particular country. Investment flows to countries with
sound macroeconomic policies, where the rule of law is respected and contracts
enforced, to countries that offer a good opportunity for generating a
healthy return on investment, to countries that do more than pay lip service
to the concept of transparency. In short, to countries with policy predictability.
As an example of the
wrong signals being sent by the government of Zimbabwe, I learned recently
of the experience of Lazarus Zim, CEO of Anglo American in South Africa.
He related a telling story of his investment experience in Zimbabwe. Anglo
American, you might know, is a shareholder in Hippo Valley Estates, which
is under threat of seizure by the government. Mr. Zim travelled to Zimbabwe
to sort out the problem and was told to talk to the new governor of Masvingo
province. He approached the governor, pointing out that Hippo Valley Estates
had a contractual agreement with the government to farm in Hippo Valley.
The governor alleged no knowledge of the agreement. Mr. Zim then produced
the contract, which happened to bear the governor's own signature. To
the Anglo American executive's astonishment, the governor blithely passed
off that the contract was "open to re-negotiation". You can
imagine the lesson Mr. Zim took back to Anglo American's Board from this
experience and the consequences it has had on Anglo American's plans to
invest further in mining in Zimbabwe.
When Minister of Transport
and Communications Chris Mushohwe suggested to the Annual Congress of
the Confederation of Zimbabwe Industries in early September that the government
might take over white-owned firms just as it had taken over commercial
farms, alarm bells rang at international banks. They asked whether it
was time to rein in the lines of credit they had extended to their clients
operating in Zimbabwe.
I understand President
Mugabe designated 2005 the Year of Investment. Is there no greater irony
than bludgeoning property rights under the banner of investment promotion?
Taking another look
at economic development in the region: I'm also always keeping an eye
on how Mozambique is doing, having served there from 1991-1994. Back then,
during the last years of its long civil war, it was a desperately poor
country near the bottom of every survey of measures of poverty and suffering.
Over the past years, however, Mozambique's strong commitment to sound
macroeconomic policies and structural reform has led to a remarkable improvement
in economic performance. During the last decade, real GDP growth averaged
8 percent a year - the highest in Africa. Despite a sharp increase in
petroleum prices, inflation has declined to low single digits, driven
by lower food prices. Growth in traditional exports is strong. The turnaround
has attracted substantial private capital and donor assistance in an outpouring
of goodwill toward the country.
Circling the region,
I would be remiss if I failed to acknowledge and commend South Africa
as an anchor of stability and sound economic management. The economy is
growing strongly, inflation is down, public finances have been strengthened
and the country's external position has improved markedly. The Broad Based
Black Economic Empowerment program has made advances. The elevation of
Lazarus Zim to the top spot at Anglo American is only one example. Furthermore,
the South African government's commitment to basing land reform on well-defined
legal principles also appears to be strong.
Ladies and gentlemen,
the US Government is committed to fostering economic growth and poverty
reduction throughout Africa. In 2000, we took a major step toward this
goal by enacting a new law called the African Growth and Opportunity Act,
or AGOA. This US law offers tangible incentives for African countries
to open their economies, build free markets, and embrace political pluralism.
Those countries that adopt free market principles, adhere to the rule
of law, and respect human rights are eligible under AGOA to export a wide
range of goods to the United States duty free. Because of this generous
piece of legislation, US imports from Sub-Saharan Africa, for example,
increased by over 50 percent from 2000 to 2004. This jump in trade included
a diverse list of products, among them apparel, cut flowers, and processed
agricultural goods.
Thirty-seven African
nations have met the AGOA criteria and are eligible for the trade incentives.
Unfortunately Zimbabwe is not among them. Like Sudan and Somalia and a
small number of other countries, bad policies have sidelined this country.
For similar reasons,
Zimbabwe has also missed out on President Bush's Millennium Challenge
Account Initiative. The Initiative draws on development lessons learned
over the past 50 years to provide assistance to those countries that rule
justly, invest in their people and encourage economic freedom. The U.S.
Congress provided nearly US$1 billion in funding for this initiative in
FY 04 and US$1.5 b in FY 05.
Distinguished guests,
let me not leave you with the impression that the United States has forsaken
the people of Zimbabwe when need has never been greater. And do not for
a moment leave here with the thought that the United States is the enemy
of the Zimbabwean people. We support, and will continue to support, civil
society, democratically minded groups in Zimbabwe, and the sick and the
poor of this country.
Despite the government's
refusal to acknowledge the widespread hunger that its policies have caused
- and the grim irony of President Mugabe, who has presided over and led
this decline, lecturing the Food and Agriculture Organization was lost
on no one - we and other donors are helping to feed over five million
Zimbabweans. The United States is prepared to help protect Zimbabwe's
most vulnerable populations from the disastrous consequences of this government's
policies. Since 2002, we have spent $300 million on food assistance for
Zimbabwe. While policy makers drive the economy to ruin, the United States
has worked to keep Zimbabweans from starving. Unlike the government of
Zimbabwe, we will not play politics with food. We remain committed to
providing assistance to all who need it based solely on their needs.
Allow me also to take
this opportunity to also note that the United States implements the largest
HIV/AIDS program in Zimbabwe of any donor in the world. Despite the erosion
of Zimbabwe's formerly excellent health care system, current modest HIV/AIDS
programs are having a real impact. HIV prevalence is reliably reported
to be falling and the United States is proud to have contributed to that
decline.
Ladies and gentlemen,
the United States is not alone in its assessment of the dire state of
the Zimbabwean economy and the measures needed to put this extraordinarily
endowed and profoundly beautiful country back on track. But without decisive
and deep cutting policy action, the outlook for the next years is bleak.
Zimbabwe cannot pull
itself out of the hole it has dug by itself. It must re-engage with the
IMF to get balance of payments support and debt restructuring. Governor
Gono noted in his last Monetary Policy Review that the public external
debt is now over US$ 4 billion and rising. Zimbabwe cannot service this
debt on its own. Paying down its arrears to the IMF, however, is only
one of the IMF's requirements for reengagement. The second requirement
is implementation of a comprehensive macroeconomic reform package that
will lay the basis for sustained growth, low inflation, and external viability.
The policies undertaken by the government today fall well short of what
is needed to address the economic deterioration caused, as I said before,
by shortsighted and misguided government policies.
In closing, may I
say that, for our part, the United States adds a third pre-condition for
re-engagement. And it goes beyond the economic realm because a dynamic
economy hinges on the government representing the people' s interests.
To reiterate my remarks in clarifying the U.S. sanctions policy:
While our humanitarian
assistance is generous and you can count on it to remain generous, only
when Zimbabwe's government restores the rule of law, conducts free and
fair elections, puts military and police forces under effective civilian
control, repeals repressive legislation such as POSA and AIPPA, and commits
to an equitable, legal, and transparent land reform program will we support
financial support for the government of Zimbabwe.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
it is my hope that this speech will begin a series of discussions on the
important issues of peace, stability and prosperity in Zimbabwe.
Tinoda kuti Zimbabwe
ibudirire zvakare
(ti-no-da ku-ti Zimbabwe i-bu-di-ri-re zva-ka-re)
(We want Zimbabwe to prosper again)
Thank you, Nda-te-nda,
(Shona) Ngi-ya-bonga, (ngee ya vonga - Ndebele)
* Ambassador Christopher
Dell is the US Ambassador to Zimbabwe
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|