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Zimbabwe
lurches toward a pauper's burial
Patrick Bond
May 15, 2006
http://www.zmag.org/ZMag/articles/jul01bond.htm
Last year, I
spent June rambling the roads of Zimbabwe’s Eastern Highlands mountains.
The human warmth of the Shona people and physical beauty of the
rural landscape are world-class. But last June was a tragic time
because of the decay of Robert Mugabe’s once-liberatory nationalist
politics. Exhausted, corrupted, desperate, and prone to violence,
the Zimbabwe African National Union Zanu(PF) barely held off a challenge
by the nine-month-old Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), winning
just over half the 120 contested parliamentary seats.
Mugabe’s socialist
vision evaporated long ago, although he calls forth radical rhetoric
periodically to confuse matters. "Talk left, act right"
is the chosen formula, as Zanu (PF) continually seeks to revive
popular memory of a time when the party was indeed a fish in the
sea of the masses, while concurrently repressing those who protest
vigorously from the left.
Recently, for
example, the Zimbabwe
National Students’ Union president Nkululeko Sibanda was tortured
by Mugabe’s secret police, the Central Intelligence Organization,
after the CIO accused Sibanda of "working with the MDC to topple
the government." Sibanda is leading widespread student protest
over unaffordable university fees and privatization of campus facilities
and services.
The topic of
the gloomy present was replaced by the question of Zimbabwe’s very
uncertain financial future. I flew from Jo’burg to Harare, drove
east for four hours and joined a dozen civil society strategists
in a seminar in the mountains bordering Mozambique.
We gathered
to debate the country’s most durable economic problem, the buildup
of foreign and domestic debt: $5 billion and $1.5 billion, respectively.
The World Bank considers Zimbabwe only "moderately" indebted,
but the burden of repayment is so brutal that Mugabe finally said
no around a year ago.
For two NGO
activists, Davie Malungisa of the Zimbabwe
Coalition on Debt and Development (Zimcodd) and Eunice Mafundikwa
of the African
Network on Debt and Development (Afrodad), the protests they
joined at the spring meetings of the World Bank and IMF over the
past two years took on new meaning as we reviewed a new debt study.
The report’s author, Masimba Manyanya, was formerly a chief economist
for Mugabe’s finance ministry but quit to join the trade union movement
in 1999.
Zimcodd was
founded last year by the main organizations in the social justice,
church, women’s, NGO and trade union movements. "Debt is already
genocidal in Zimbabwe," insists Malungisa, "because so
few of our urgent social priorities can be met. The last budget
saw a 26 percent crash in health spending, for instance."
Continues Malungisa,
"Debt is a threat against which all Zim- babweans can and must
unite. Otherwise we face a pauper’s burial. We’re even joining the
World Bank Bonds Boycott campaign to drive this point home where
it counts: Jim Wolfensohn’s wallet."
Malungisa and
the others are way out ahead of the political curve here. In next
April’s presidential elections, the MDC will probably win, vindicating
the political courage of its founders, the Zimbabwe Congress of
Trade Unions and its supporters, the mass of the urban poor, the
youth, and the working classes.
But here arises
another hurdle. In February 2000, the impoverished young party also
welcomed big business, white farmers, and even overseas supporters
with imperialist designs, who gave enthusiastic financial and logistical
support once the MDC defeated Mugabe by 55 percent to 45 percent
in a referendum over a new constitution.
If the MDC becomes
the ruling party, it is likely to be pressured into adopting hard-core
neoliberal economic policies.
Harare has adopted
some interesting emergency policies, which any genuinely progressive
government would want to consider amplifying. In particular, three
recent government decisions are considered insane by conventional
economists: running such a relaxed monetary policy since January
that interest rates (15 percent) are at least 45 percent below the
inflation rate; pegging the currency at 55 Zimdollars to one U.S.
dollars when the black market rate is at least double that; and
servicing foreign debt only haltingly.
We need to look
at these objectively and the post-independence context is crucial.
My own theory is that the foreign debt burden and the failure of
the 1991-95 structural adjustment program designed by the World
Bank together drove Mugabe around the bend, in classical nationalist
zig- zag mode, in mid-1997.
Ironically,
in 1995, the Bank judged Mugabe’s turn to neo-liberalism as "highly
satisfactory." Most macroeconomic, sector, and financial objectives
were "substantially" achieved (again, the highest mark),
said an official Bank evaluation.
In reality,
the formerly well-balanced economy became deindustrialized and massively
indebted. The social wage collapsed as budget cuts bit deep. Gender,
race, and class inequity soared. Zimbabwe also became much more
vulnerable to international shocks. Over the period 1990-95, gross
domestic product fell by a fifth, from $8.50 billion to $6.80 billion,
as foreign debt soared 55 percent, from $3.25 billion to $5.05 billion,
according to the World Bank’s own debt tables.
Meanwhile, grassroots
protest was relatively erratic and easily contained. Finally in
1996-97, trade unions, civil servants, and farmworkers all challenged
Mugabe from the left.
Simultaneously,
Mugabe was berated by several thousand of his former comrades from
the 1960s-70s struggle who had received none of the spoils of liberation.
In late 1997 he struck a deal with these war veterans, giving them
a few thousand dollars as a pension in exchange for allegiance.
Within a year,
some of the most aggressive war vets had become a quasi-paramilitary
force, harassing trade unionists and others who staged periodic
strikes. (Within two and half years, the war vets had staged bloody
occupations of more than 1,000 white- owned farms, which aided Mugabe’s
2000 election campaign by reviving nationalist memories of the need
to rid settlers from the best land.)
In 1998, the
last full year Mugabe authorized repayment of the foreign debt,
there was only one other country in the world (Brazil) paying higher
debt-servicing charges in relation to its ability to earn exports.
(That fact, embedded deep in the World Bank’s latest Global Development
Finance report, has never been reported in Zimbabwe.)
After several
years of spending $650 million annually on debt servicing, Zimbabwe
coughed up $981 million in 1998, against just $2.57 billion earned
from exports, an untenable ratio of 38 percent. But even though
over the period 1994-98, Zimbabwe had paid $910 million more in
debt servicing than it received in new loans, the debt actually
rose over those five years from $4.54 to $4.72 billion. (At the
same time, grant aid fell by half, from a peak of $310 million in
1995 to $150 million in 1998.)
Because of repayment
scheduling and the tyranny of compound interest, Mugabe found himself
sliding backwards on the debt treadmill. Finally in early 1999,
he jumped off, refusing to pay the IMF and Bank, thereby joining
a list of rogue-financial states like Yemen, Iraq, and the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (DRC).
The costs of
short-term IMF "help" now finally outweighed the benefits.
Those costs included three main conditions attached to $200 million
in IMF credit promised in 1999. Mugabe was ordered to immediately
reverse the only redistributive policies he had adopted in a long
time, namely:
- a ban on
holding foreign exchange accounts in local banks (which immediately
halted the easiest form of capital flight by the country’s elites)
- a 100 percent
customs tax on imported luxury goods
- price controls
on staple foods in the wake of several urban riots.
Mugabe resisted
the IMF, and was cut off after the first small tranche of the loan.
But hatred of the Zanu(PF) leader continued to grow in the cities
when he deployed 10,000 troops to the DRC war, partly as an act
of solidarity against the U.S.-backed Ugandan/Rwandan invasion of
the east of the DRC.
However, Zimbabwe’s
intervention was soon unveiled as a ghastly mercenary-style arrangement
with the soon-to-be-assassinated Laurent Kabila. The deal allows
Harare’s military and state elites to loot the DRC’s cobalt, copper,
and diamonds.
Tellingly, the
IMF permitted Mugabe to continue his DRC adventure at a crucial
negotiating stage in mid-1999: "We have had assurances"
about Mugabe’s plans for further deployment, an IMF source told
Agence France Press. "If there is budgetary overspending, there
will be cuts in other budget sectors."
In other words,
health, education and other badly defended sectors would suffer
more pressure on behalf of Mugabe’s military cronies.
These are some
of the reasons Malungisa says Zimbabwe’s foreign debt should be
considered "odious," not subject to repayment by a democratic
successor.
The foreign
loans that Robert Mugabe signed for during the 1980s and early 1990s
backed the ruling Zanu(PF) party’s worst, most self-destructive
tendencies, and were contracted in a non-transparent manner contrary
to society’s interests.
A full audit
of Zimbabwe’s foreign debt would reveal systemic failure. Not only
did loan conditionality throughout the post-independence period
screw the poor. The credits also created space for degeneracy by
elites, who used the hard currency to import inappropriate luxury
goods and unsustainable machinery, to be repaid by the future generations.
But the days
of easy foreign credit ended by the mid-1990s, so government turned
increasingly to domestic borrowing. The finance minister projected
the interest bill on local and foreign loans late last year to reach
a phenomenal 48 percent of the annual government budget—of about
$2 billion—in 2001. (That’s after Mugabe absurdly projected privatization
revenues of $200 million this year, a promise that no one believes
he’ll keep since parastatal corporations are vital to his political
patronage system.)
Having failed
to make key foreign debt payments since 1999, the government is
now $600 million in arrears. Zimbabwe finance minister Simba Makoni
promised the World Bank and IMF he’d spend about that sum this year
to repay foreign loans, but it seems that Mugabe won’t let him.
Makoni, who
is considered a reliably neoliberal technocrat, conceded to the
World Economic Forum meeting in Durban earlier this month, "We
are committed to fulfilling these obligations, but it’s clear that
our economy is in no state to generate sufficient funds to clear
these arrears."
Even if the
debt was serviced, the IMF’s Stanley Fischer told Makoni that there
wouldn’t be any new loans until Mugabe fulfills a set of new conditions,
including getting war vets off the commercial farms they occupied
last year.
With the prospect
of net repayment outflow, Mugabe appears justified in ignoring IMF
repayment demands and instead hijacking a portion of foreign exchange
earned by tobacco and other exports, for emergency purchases, including
fuel. Even so, the price of petrol, which has been in very short
supply this year, was raised overnight by 70 percent. (The unions
have called a two-day general strike for the beginning of July to
reverse the increase.)
An interesting
geopolitical/economic question immediately arises: in the wake of
having effectively defaulted on foreign debt and now facing chronic
foreign exchange shortages, what further material punishment can
the world economy impose on Mugabe?
Aid has been
withdrawn by most donors, or redirected to civil society. Trade
sanctions proposed by Jesse Helms—which are not supported by the
Zimbabwean opposition—would in any case not bite much harder.
The only country
that could really finally push Zimbabwe over the economic cliff
if it wanted to, is South Africa, through which most exports and
imports flow. But Thabo Mbeki has repeatedly come to Mugabe’s aid
in various ways (although it appears that Pretoria is now finally
ready to recognize the Movement for Democratic Change as the likely
next government).
So Zimbabwe
is down but not out. Periodic shortages—including essential drugs
and California-style electricity load-shedding—contribute to the
misery of daily life.
The government
justifies maintaining an official exchange rate half that which
is available on the black market, on grounds it can’t afford to
pay for vital imports at the market rate. The private sector reverts
to the higher rate for its own imports, while government insists
on charging a quarter of all hard currency revenues from exporters,
at the lower rate.
Then there’s
the 15 percent rate of interest government decided to pay domestic
creditors for short-term loans, at a time inflation is roaring above
60 percent. The state forces institutional investors to purchase
Treasury Bills, and in the process spreads the pain of debt payback
to relatively wealthier savers who get a negative rate of return,
after discounting inflation.
The upside of
the negative real interest rate is that only half the amount that
was anticipated (nearly $1 billion) will be required to service
domestic debt this year. Productive investment can be financed more
cheaply than at any time in the last decade, for those very rare
businesses interested in expanding during the midst of depression.
But because
institutional investors aren’t getting the return on interest-earning
assets that they want, they’ve pushed unprecedented funding into
the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange, which was the fastest rising in the
world over the last year. The stocks they’re buying are absurdly
overvalued, so they’ll lose again when normalcy returns and the
market crashes.
These contradictory
policies aren’t tenable over the medium-term. But if the MDC is
ruling Zimbabwe next year it may have to drop the overall neoliberal
formula for one simple reason. The debt has become so oppressive
that there is only one way out: defaulting the foreign lenders and
cheating the local institutional investors (and by extension savers,
including some workers whose pension funds are now shrinking quickly).
This leaves
three other residual challenges:
- redirecting
financial capital, which is now flooding away from interest-bearing
assets into the stock market
- protecting
the pensions of ordinary workers
- shielding
the poor from inflation, for instance through well-conceived subsidies
on basic needs
Even if he acted
on these forcefully (which he won’t), it’s hard to see Mugabe holding
on to power, no matter how much he intimidates the rural electorate
to again vote Zanu(PF). He has lost three key nationalist militants—defense
minister Moven Mahachi, employment minister Border Gezi, and war
vets leader Chengerai Hitler Hunzvi—in unexpected deaths (two accidental
car crashes and illness, respectively). Rumors have circulated that
a Zanu(PF) military clique is anxious to take over, possibly via
a coup, if Mugabe continues to falter.
Other support
is also waning for the 77-year-old president. Controversial information
minister Jonathan Moyo, on whom Mugabe has come to rely for spin
doctoring, had his wings clipped this month by cabinet colleagues.
The judiciary still leans against the ruling party. A string of
smaller elections coming up will tire Mugabe in the run-up to the
presidential race.
But matters
are not much rosier for the opposition. Former trade union leader
Morgan Tsvangirai is likely to be the MDC’s candidate for president,
although Mugabe has him awaiting trial for threatening violence
last September, which potentially could disqualify Tsvan- girai
from the election. And even if the MDC wins next April, it would
not control parliament immediately, and would have an enormous struggle
to establish political stability in such a divided society.
The biggest
struggle, though, looks to be about ten months away: if the MDC
can extricate itself from the grip of big money and orthodox economic
ideas (and right now, I’d bet no), how would they slay the debt
monster? Tsvangirai, after all, said in an uncharacteristically
slippery way last year, "I still hate the World Bank and IMF,
like I hate my doctor."
If the MDC can’t
shake off neoliberalism, will civil society groups offer as vibrant
advocacy on socio-economic rights as they do today on political
and civil rights?
Late at night,
next to the blazing Bvumba fireplace as our seminar came to an end,
Davie Malungisa, Eunice Mafundikwa, Masimba Manyanya, and the other
folks chatting over local beers swore that in coming months, they’ll
be at the forefront of linking Zimbabwe’s best grassroots activists
to the international anti- neoliberal movement.
* Patrick
Bond is an economics journalist in South Africa. He is with the
Alternative Information and Development Center.
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