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Elections,
fuel increases and the grass that suffers
Takura
Zhangazha
April 10, 2013
http://takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com/2013/04/elections-fuel-increases-and-grass-that.html
The inclusive
government, prior to the March 16 2013 constitutional
referendum, decided to pass on the cost of holding elections
to Zimbabweans in a rather unorthodox manner. Through the Ministry
of Finance it increased the excise duty on fuel imports and as a
direct effect thereof, increased the costs of both public transport
as well as goods/services. The logic given was that these increase
would raise revenue to fund both the constitutional referendum as
well as the pending harmonised elections. That decision was not
only insensitive to the plight of the poor majority in the country
but sadly indicative of a lack of seriousness in policy implementation
by the government.
Democratic reasoning
as well as budgeting would normally indicate that periodic national
elections (in our case every five years) are events that are budgeted
or fundraised for well in advance and with anticipation of the much
vaunted ‘electoral cycle approach’.But because the inclusive
government has been politicizing the entirety of not only its existence
but also the duration of its term of office, there was never any
thorough or focused planning on the inevitability of either the
referendum or elections.
This particularly
so where and when it came to the annual budgets that have been presented
since 2009. The point is not that the budgets did not allocate money
for a perceived election, which they generally did. The key issues
however remain two-fold. Firstly that these allocations were inadequate
and secondly that with each passing year, why were the allocations
never cumulative in relation to shortfalls for years that the elections
were budgeted for but never occurred?
This is a debate
that would initially appear to be abstract or more for the economists
and political scientists if it did not have a bearing on the livelihoods
of ordinary citizens. This is in one primary respect. The government’s
decision to increase the surcharges on fuel imports has almost immediately
caused the evident increase in at least public transport costs for
the ordinary civilian.
It will most
certainly, if it hasn’t already, cause further increase in
the costs of basic commodities and other services on an already
financially strained consumer. This would mean that while it would
be assumedly noble that Zimbabweans are funding their own political
processes by default, it is highly insensitive on the part of government
to make the citizen pay for its mistakes and planning shortcomings.
Such a development is indicative of the no longer shocking arrogance
of our political leaders when it comes to matters that affect Zimbabweans
directly. It is an arrogance that borders on dismissing the challenges
the citizen faces regularly in favour of massaging the electoral
egos of the few in government.
Another angle
to look at this development is assessing the bigger picture of whether
or not the processes Zimbabweans are now funding in an unorthodox
manner have had democratic meaning in their lives. Where one looks
at the constitutional referendum there is a distinct imprint of
the same sort of arrogance that informs an almost knee jerk instruction
to increase fuel import tax regardless of the views of the people.
As a result, the process of the constitutional referendum became
more an imposition than a democratic one . And the process still
appears not to have ushered in any new and popular ‘democratic
era’ as the political parties still in the inclusive government
would have us believe especially with the continuation of a repressive
political environment and a government that functions with limited
little oversight. So if one does a cost-benefit analysis, Zimbabweans
have been short changed while their economic circumstances have
taken a turn for the worse. And this by their own government.
It would also
be important to take into account the new contestations about harmonized
elections between the MDCs and Zanu PF. Again, the potential of
the persons carrying the dual burden of economic hardship and a
polarized political environment being short changed is high. The
message from government to the people of Zimbabwe is literally ‘fund
our fight even if it will not have any direct economic benefit or
new democratic meaning to you’. In any event, the government
is firmly persuaded it can do what it wants without further or adequate
public explanation necessary as it did with the constitutional referendum.
In the final
analysis, the people of Zimbabwe have been asked to carry yet another
undemocratic burden on behalf of the three parties in the inclusive
government. With each party probably assuming it will win the election,
it is a burden that will be politicized and have limited further
meaning to democratic processes in the country. This while the government
is attempting a pretense at democratic honesty via the undemocratic
means of trying to cover up for its shoddy electoral planning processes
and budgeting.
By passing on
the buck to the ordinary Zimbabwean in such an abrupt fashion, the
inclusive government has shown its true character of elitism and
smugness at never being challenged or brought to account on democratic
value and principle. For this, Zimbabweans will have to suffer the
circumstances described in the proverb, ‘When elephants fight,
it is the grass that suffers’. In our case, the grass may
no longer exist.
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