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Zimbabwe-s
unemployed and poverty occupied 80%
Takura
Zhangazha
February 15, 2012
Zimbabwe-s
national economy is increasingly becoming a very complicated arena,
particularly for those that are in government and influential positions
in the business sectors. It has many twists and turns that mainly
derive from the inclusive government 's holistic economic
policy as defined by the ministries of finance, economic development,
trade and commerce, and other institutions such as the Reserve Bank
and state owned development/economic investment corporations.
The mantra of those that
head either the relevant ministries or institutions is that the
economy is 'work in progress-. This is particularly
so if they are not arguing about which political party in the inclusive
government initiated the current multi-currency monetary policy
or blaming each other for the economic sanctions that remain in
place for Zimbabwean individuals and selected corporations.
There is however
a component of the national economy that they rarely argue about
loudly or acrimoniously. This is the component of Zimbabwe-s
rate of unemployed (and poverty occupied) 80%. This is not to say
the issue of unemployment is not mentioned in policy documents or
by policy makers. Indeed the last time it was mentioned was in the
2012 national
budget that was presented before Parliament
in November 2011.
In it, the government,
through the Ministry of Finance, proposed that there shall be at
least three funds that will be set up by government to ostensibly
tackle unemployment. These are given as the youth fund, a jobs fund
and a small to medium enterprises fund. It is yet to be announced
whether the millions allocated to the three funds have been disbursed
from treasury but that is not the crux of the matter.
The key issue has been
the politicized narrative around these funds as if every unemployed
citizen of Zimbabwe is a member of a political party or is generally
expected to mollycoddle one of the three parties in the inclusive
government. The attendant culture to such politicised processes
inevitably becomes one of partisan political patronage as well as
the unsustainable 'feeding at the trough- of the few.
And this also means the
'unemployed 80%' are not going to disappear. They will remain without
jobs throughout the lifespan of the inclusive government and beyond
because they are continually sidelined to the periphery by those
with power, access to power as well as access to resources, however
acquired.
It is however necessary
to explain the nature of the unemployed and therefore poverty occupied
sections of Zimbabwe-s population. They are unemployed because
they do not have formal jobs. Where they are in the informal sector
as it is referred to, they remain at the mercy of those with political
power and influence in order to remain in business. As a result,
the same 1 in 8 unemployed become 'occupied- by a vicious
cycle of political patronage, a politicized informal economy and
an unsustainable social process of living from hand to mouth, even
if on every other day, the hand has nothing to forward to the mouth.
The consequences of this sort of occupation has been the emergent
decadence of Zimbabwe social and democratic societal fabric to the
extent that it is no longer democratic values that count. Instead
it becomes how close an individual is connected to a particular
powerful politician or political party.
This is even more problematic
in the sense that it is Zimbabwe-s younger generation that
is most affected and is beginning to lose hope as to their lives
ever getting better. In a number of instances, young Zimbabweans
upon leaving school or tertiary level training have been unable
to find decent jobs, decent housing and access to basic health care.
Some have resorted, whether with degrees or not, to cross border
trading (which the government seems intent on reducing without providing
a viable alternative).
Others have taken to
making it a life priority to leave the country of their birth while
others have resorted to commercial sex work and general crime as
a way of making ends meet. Those that consider themselves lucky
normally find themselves embedded to one political party or the
other in order to get access to a gold-panning or diamond field
(only to be chased away after an election) or to become a part of
the very politicized policy of economic indigenization. The latter
policy which is already showing signs of being not so much about
new found entrepreneurship among indigenous Zimbabweans but more
about who gets what government tender or contract/account.
As it is, Zimbabwe has
its own unemployed 80% which is also occupied by poverty, state
and political party patronage, as well as a lack of a clear sign
of hope on the horizon. Whether they will decide to follow the route
of the 99% in the north who formed, for example, the Occupy Wall
Street Movement (OWS) is yet to be seen. But that they will at some
point begin to make specific political noises of disgruntlement
is a given, unless the inclusive government demonstrates a new found
and democratic seriousness at addressing their plight.
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