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A paradigm shift from ownership to delivery: Embracing public private partnerships as part of our economic strategy
Arthur Mutambara, Deputy Prime Minister
June 05, 2009

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Our country has gone through an unprecedented economic downturn over the past decade. The related challenges affecting our industries, public institutions and citizens include the following; high country risk, unavailable and unaffordable infrastructure (water, power, roads/railways, telecoms), low capacity utilization, low production, under-capitalization, economic stagnation, skills drain and rampant unemployment. As the Inclusive Government of Zimbabwe embarks on a mission to address these problems, the starting point should be reducing country risk through rebranding the country, while embarking on a comprehensible infrastructural development and rehabilitation plan. The availability and cost of water, power, telecoms, and logistics affect both private and public institutions. Infrastructure is an input to every citizen and every institution.

Beyond resolving the infrastructural challenges and attracting both domestic and foreign investment, the agenda should be driving shared economic growth and job creation through increased production and productivity in agriculture, mining and manufacturing, while instituting reform and capacitation of public sector institutions. This will then result in dramatic increase in both industrial capacity utilization and disposable incomes, while our education, health, social and local government sectors will then flourish. This is the democratic, prosperous and globally competitive Zimbabwe we seek to establish. In pursuit of this vision the role of the State must be clearly redefined as that of an enabler and facilitator. The Private Sector and Civic Society are the doers. More significantly, we must recast and rethink our understanding of sovereignty, away from the traditional emphasis on ownership of non-performing assets to the ability to effectively and efficiently deliver high quality and affordable services to both citizens and institutions. Delivery and not ownership should be the operative word in both the Private and Public Sectors.

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