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Aid will cripple Zimbabwe, again
Rejoice
Ngwenya
March 26, 2009
President Robert Mugabe
has appealed for international assistance to rebuild his self-battered
country. Many aid activists are already salivating at this rapprochement
from Africa-s most beleaguered president. The reason is simply
that they never learn. However, they have a strong backing from
the academic and entertainment industries.
Irish rock legend Bono
of U2 and his counterpart, Bob Geldorf of the seventies teen pop
group Boomtown Rats are part of a clique one can safely refer to
as 'Angels of Mercy- who habitually perceive Africa
as an object of pity. This image seen through a prism of philanthropy
nevertheless contaminated with molecules of colonial patronage is
not without justification.
African governance standards,
particularly in Zimbabwe, Sudan, Swaziland, Democratic Republic
of Congo and Somalia are not exactly models of excellence. Somalia
and DRC have never experienced peace since the departure of Siad
Barre and Mobutu Sseseseko respectively. Political strife reigns
supreme in the Darfur, Niger Delta, Guinea, Chad, Ivory Coast and
Zimbabwe as the 'Lord Resistance Movement- kills for
a living in Uganda. Swaziland is an island of despair while fear
of competition has stirred the African National Congress Youth League
[ANCYL] in South Africa into combative mood swings. Egyptian prisons
are swelling with opposition prisoners and Madagascar has just legalized
a coup with its popular Mayor torpedoing an insecure President.
Thus, who could vilify these two 'nice white rockers-
for shedding tears for a continent that is either struggling to
feed itself or chocking with human blood?
A recent UNDP
report entitled Comprehensive
Economic Recovery in Zimbabwe - a Discussion Document
seems to concur with the common sense knowledge that dishing out
development assistance to any African country, no matter how deserving
in the eyes of Western Philanthropists, adds very little value to
lives of common citizens. UNDP says of Zimbabwe: "The real
extent of external indebtedness is unknown, partly because of the
contingency liabilities of the government and the central bank in
respect of offshore loans for which they have provided guarantees,
partly because the full extent of the current payments pipeline
is unknown, and also because details of loans from non-OECD countries
such as China, India, Iran and Venezuela are not in the public."
If one then takes economic
indicators as a country-s test of 'good health-,
it is during Zimbabwe-s 2000-2007 'deep crisis
period- of gross indebtedness that indicators show an exponential
decline and the highest negative trends. There is also no doubt
in one-s mind that this is the same period that Zimbabwe experienced
the highest and crudest levels of political rights abuses. In simple
terms, there is converse relationship between aid and development.
The latest publication
of the Business Council of Zimbabwe titled 'Blue Print for
Zimbabwe-s Economic Revival- shed more light on this
paradox: "Even where we apply for 'Least Developed Country-
status to get preferential treatment in OECD markets, Aid surges
can cause distortions and harm competitiveness. They can also breed
dependency - build in obsolescence into programs." They
then dilute an otherwise good argument by proposing "effective
management" of aid as a panacea - but has this ever
happened anywhere in the developing world? For us in Zimbabwe we
even have firsthand experience on how free money in the hands of
incorrigible rascals results in unmitigated disaster. Beleaguered
Reserve Bank Governor Gideon Gono had for the past five years poured
millions of foreign currency into what he termed 'agricultural
mechanisation programs- for the benefit of President Robert
Mugabe-s political support base. The Chinese, Libyans, Iranians
and South Africans followed suit, yet the World Food Program reports
that almost nine million Zimbabweans will require food aid this
year.
Now that Morgan Tsvangirayi-s
MDC is an appendage of the Government of National Unity (GNU), how
do we propose that this 'fledgling democracy- satisfies
its reconstruction requirements without a Jeffery Saachs 'jumpstart-
or Marshall Plan approach? A report from electronic newspaper ZimOnline
says: "A high-level International Monetary Fund this week
returned to the country after a two-year break to assess the economy
and review policies to address the economic and humanitarian crisis.
Regional leaders have put Zimbabwe-s needs at around US$2
billion." About the same time, a memo from new GNU Finance
Minister Tendai Biti warned that if Zimbabwe did not immediately
get cash injection of US$ 1 billion, "failure to pay some
of these obligations urgently would weaken the country-s credit
rating..."
Expectedly some promises
are being made. Australian Foreign Minister Stephen Smith then immediately
announced that his country would provide USD$10 million to help
with clean water and attract professionals back to the country's
health system.
He pontificated: "Now
is the time for Australia to assist Zimbabwe's reconstruction by
giving as much help and assistance as possible to its people and
Zimbabwe Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirayi." Meanwhile, Mozambique,
Tanzania and Uganda-s national budgets are probably forty
percent ODA-funded, but they still languish in the lower leagues
of least developed economies.
Yet the International
Monetary Fund concluded that Zimbabwe still owes too much to qualify
for any realistic ODA. This cruel reality could be long term good
news, but flies in the face of Minister Biti-s short term
requirements. My idea of reconstruction is not the overnight wine-at-Cana
miracle approach.
First, we should disabuse
ourselves of the cap-in-hand mentality. The poisoned chalice is
the bloated GNU predisposition towards recurrent expenditure, which
really is the second point - reducing the size of Government.
Thirdly, we can restore the viability of the banking sector by getting
them to re-capitalise via offshore, not ODA financing. Fourthly,
Zimbabwe is sitting on a wealth of public property that can be liquidated
to raise working capital for infrastructure reconstruction. Fifth,
almost thirty years of plunder and state-assisted pillaging have
stashed billions of foreign currency in tax havens and discrete
foreign accounts. If that money can be repatriated, it will be sufficient
to sustain us until our entire productive capacity has been restored.
Ngwenya is a director of Coalition for Market and Liberal Solutions
and an affiliate of www.AfricanLiberty.org
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.
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