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What are the prospects for Zimbabwe's turnaround?
Zachary
Ochieng, Business Daily Africa
September 03, 2008
http://www.bdafrica.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=9766&Itemid=5848
Necessity is the mother
of invention. And the crisis in Zimbabwe has sent experts scratching
their heads for a solution. Observers believe that the Zimbabwean
economy can be salvaged through efforts to reform the country-s
political corruption and irresponsible monetary policies.
Against this background,
a group of experts last week held a roundtable discussion at the
United States Institute of Peace (USIP) in Washington and came up
with a report titled Depoliticizing Zimbabwe-s Economy: Solutions
for Two Million Per cent.
Raymond Gilpin, Director
of USIP-s Sustainable Economies moderated a panel of experts
comprising Callisto Madavo, visiting professor at the African Studies
Programme at Georgetown University. Keith Campbell, managing director
at the Executive Research Associates; Bernard Harborne, Lead Conflict
Specialist at the World Bank and Frank Young, Vice President of
Economic Policy Research think tank, Abt Associates.
The report says Zimbabwe-s
deep-seated economic malaise has robbed citizens of their savings,
rendered incomes practically worthless and undermined domestic productivity.
It adds that soaring
inflation and currency depreciation have been the most visible manifestations
of Zimbabwe-s economic woes during the first half of 2008.
By mid-July, estimates of annual price increases exceeded a mind-boggling
2,000,000 per cent, while the domestic currency lost practically
all its value every time it changed hands. According to some estimates,
the Zimbabwean dollar (ZIM$) depreciated three-fold in June 2008.
Three main factors have
accounted for this precipitous decline in the country-s economic
fortunes. The first is bad economic governance perpetrated by President
Robert Mugabe and his team. Excessive government spending and a
series of wrong policy choices, such as price controls and fixed
exchange rates, have crippled the productive sectors.
Chronic fiscal indiscipline
is the second. Rather than take steps to correct policy failures
and institutional weaknesses, the Mugabe regime ran substantial
ongoing budget deficits.
They deficits were primarily
financed by Zimbabwe-s central bank, which injected money
at extraordinary rates. Third, the failure to uphold the rule of
law created chaos and uncertainty, which eroded business confidence,
led to the misallocation of resources and depressed economic output.
This has been particularly worrying in relation to corruption and
land ownership.
In addition to creating
a litany of economic woes, these factors have also stymied prospects
for peace. Bad governance has fostered a culture of impunity and
helped reinforce the political and economic muscle of the regime-s
leadership.
This group has become
deeply vested in the status quo. They have demonstrated a capacity
to do whatever it takes to maintain their privileged positions,
which guarantee unfettered access to wealth and power—at the
expense of the vast majority of Zimbabweans. At the household level,
severe and deepening deprivation contributes to a sense of helplessness
and frustration.
Failure to resolve Zimbabwe-s
political and economic problems could exacerbate horizontal tensions
(as groups compete for dwindling resources) and vertical tensions
(as individuals and groups try to change the system of governance).
In March, the Zimbabwean
currency tumbled to a record 25 million dollars for a single US
dollar.
According to Madavo,
the deliberate mismanagement of Zimbabwe-s economy by the
Mugabe regime shows that they "care more about themselves
than about their people." The economic policies they adopted
deepened poverty and made doing business in the formal sector prohibitively
costly.
For example, while the
mismanaged exchange rate and staggering inflation make the earnings
and savings of Zimbabweans worthless, the government insulates itself
by conducting transactions at an overvalued "official"
exchange rate.
"The government
ignored the implications of this policy (such as foreign currency
shortages and an increasing parallel market premium) and sought
to mitigate its effects by introducing price controls and imposing
limits on daily bank withdrawals", Madavo says.
Politics and economics
are very closely intertwined in Zimbabwe. The Mugabe regime views
both the finance ministry and the central bank as its money machines.
Continued government
intervention in credit allocation, resource distribution and trade
has progressively weakened the economy and its institutions. This
is why Campbell believes that "Zimbabwe-s economy won-t
get fixed until politics gets fixed."
Harborne reiterated the
importance of "a political breakthrough" and outlined
steps that could be taken to encourage meaningful economic reform
in Zimbabwe.
These include designing
a clearance mechanism to address the massive debt amassed by the
Mugabe regime, developing a comprehensive strategy and mobilizing
external resources to help finance reform and provide social safety
nets. Zimbabwe-s external debt was estimated at $4.8 billion
in 2007, while domestic debt rose from ZIM$346 billion in December
2002 to ZIM$1.4 trillion in June 2005.
International strategies
and domestic commitment to reduce this burden are critical for adequate
investment flows and buoyant private sector-led growth to resume.
A comprehensive strategy
should guide efforts to mobilize and utilize external financial
support. Harborne talked about the importance of coordinating international
assistance in order to ensure aid effectiveness and maximize development
impact.
The country-s exchange
rate policies should also be revised. The effects of the failed
fixed system have been felt across the economy and it will take
some time to restore confidence. During this period, the Zimbabwean
currency could be pegged to a convertible currency (or basket of
currencies). The ultimate goal would be to effectively unify the
official and parallel market exchange rates and ensure some predictability
in the foreign exchange market.
At the same time, steps
should be taken to re-establish the rule of law, remove punitive
trade controls, encourage private sector development and institute
public expenditure management reform.
Ultimately, the report
says, rebuilding Zimbabwe-s economy will require concerted
effort from a wide range of stakeholders, especially Zimbabweans.
True country ownership and broad-based participation are critical.
Appropriate Zimbabwean
individuals and institutions must assume leadership of this process
because any strategy must fully reflect the country-s changing
economic relationships and address current and emerging challenges.
A political solution
that wrests control of Zimbabwe-s economy from Mugabe and
his regime is a precondition for sustainable economic reform. In
addition to correcting the failed policies of the past, this would
also dismantle Mugabe-s collectively reinforcing network that
has monopolized access to government subsidies, contracts, public
institutions and finance.
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