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Economic
fundamentals
Eddie
Cross
August 24, 2007
For most people
the situation in Zimbabwe is quite bewildering. They find it very
hard to work out what is happening and to understand why. In fact
if you observe a few simple, but fundamental rules, it is quite
easy to understand why the collapse here has taken place and the
speed with which it has destroyed what had been quite a decent,
if small, economy.
In my own business
I have to observe these simple rules every day - or go out of business.
So for example I watch the following issues very closely on a daily
basis:
1. Does my
staff feel they are a real part of the business and have a very
real say and stake in what goes on? If not, I cannot command their
loyalty and commitment to the business and without that, we simply
cannot succeed in the long term.
2. Are we making more money than we are spending? Its very simple
really - you can ignore the issue of "profitability"
because that can mean many things, but you cannot ignore your
cash flow. In basic terms if you are not making more money than
you are spending, you are going broke.
3. Management is about managing change. Our working environment
is changing every day - sometimes by the hour. You cannot do much
about the changes taking place but you can learn how to surf the
waves and enjoy the process. If you do not, you will pretty soon
find yourself on the beach.
It's like that
in the country. If you print more money that is actually needed
to fund day-to-day transactions, you reduce its value. It's like
pouring water into a glass with some cool drink concentrate in the
bottom. Put too much water into the mix and it is tasteless - in
monetary terms, it will buy less. By doing so, government destroy
value and savings, they secretly tax their people by reducing the
real value of what they earn or have in their pockets by running
the presses at the Reserve Bank.
If a nation
spends more than it earns it has two options - it can borrow the
money from others willing to lend or it can print money. In the
first instance if they borrow from those who are a captive lender
and take advantage of their power to do so on uneconomic terms,
then they pay a lower return on such borrowings than would be demanded
in a "free" market. Both happen in Zimbabwe. We run a
budget deficit that is extraordinary by historical and world standards
- last year it was over 60 per cent of GDP.
When even borrowing
on the scale we undertake simply cannot fund this level of spending
then we print money, vast amounts of it and in doing so we foster
inflation and destroy value. This is why the real earnings of everyone
who lives in Zimbabwe are now down to about 10 per cent of what
they were 20 years ago. This is why all pensions are no longer worth
the paper they are written on. I think the failure of the pensions
industry to protect the real interests of their clients is an absolute
disgrace. In my own case I contributed to 5 separate policies for
all my working life and when they matured it would have cost the
company more to write me a letter thanking me for 50 years of servitude
and to write a cheque that would not buy me three loaves of bread
today.
When governments
behave like this they are in criminal dereliction of their duty
towards their people. That is the position of the Zanu PF regime
in Zimbabwe today. The fact that the private sector has been complicit
in this whole exercise is another shameful episode.
Then we come
to two other key issues. The first is the truth that people only
look after what they own or have secure tenure over. When I was
a small boy my father became an alcoholic. He started out as a social
drinker, it got out of hand and when he finally woke up to what
he was doing, we were homeless, broke and five kids dependent on
a working mother with a standard two education.
We moved from
a large home in an up market area to what was effectively a slum;
Municipal housing occupied by low-income families. When we had been
there for a few years, the City decided to give us title. We were
allowed to treat the rent we had paid as a deposit and were given
a bond for the rest. The transformation was immediate; people painted
their homes, put up walls and planted gardens. I have never forgotten
the lesson.
Even today you
can drive around any suburb and you will see which homes are owned
and which are rented. In the agricultural sphere it is the same
- the foundation of productive agriculture is a sound and secure
tenure system within a functioning legal system. Destroy that and
you create deserts. Africa's biggest problem is the loss of productive
land through land degradation. That is why our deserts are growing
faster than anywhere else in the world.
The second truth
is that only markets can allocate resources efficiently and make
the hard decision as to what a product or a service is worth. You
interfere with this principle and you will pay a terrible price.
I have seen it all too often - try to knock a price down in a negotiation
and you will often get nowhere until you can say the magic words,
"I can get this product cheaper elsewhere".
In Zimbabwe
we have violated all these fundamental principles and are now paying
the price. The loss of security of tenure has destroyed our farms.
The failure to observe basic discipline in our economic affairs
is driving inflation to historic levels, the attempt to halt inflation
by exercising control, is now wiping out what is left of our economy.
I warned my
colleagues in the MDC leadership the other day that no foreign owned
firm or even a locally owned firm would accept the demand for 51
per cent control. This is true for any country in the world but
even more so in Zimbabwe where everyone knows what the intended
beneficiaries would do with such control.
Countries, like
ordinary people, can only learn from their mistakes. We are certainly
doing that and I see in that process great hope. Perhaps when finally
we throw off the yoke that we were landed with in 1980, a new generation
of leaders will come to the fore and having seen what happens when
you disobey the basic rules of economics, will instead make the
necessary decisions to take the country in a radically new direction.
It's not rocket science.
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