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Privatisation
of the Zimbabwean state
Mike Mavura
October 23, 2013
http://www.dailynews.co.zw/articles/2013/10/23/privatisation-of-the-zimbabwean-state
There is consensus
that safety, security, justice and the rule of law are core functions
of the State as well as basic service delivery, financial and macro-economic
management, inclusive growth and job creation, the protection of
human rights protections and so on and so forth.
These are State
responsibilities stipulated in the Constitution
of Zimbabwe and they shape societies’ expectations of the
State.
The provision
of basic services to the populace shapes the relationship between
the State and its subjects and is essential for the State to retain
its legitimacy and relevance as well as to maintain stability.
The State and
the services it offers are thus public goods.
In situations
of economic and social strife, like what the country has experienced
over the past decade or so, the role of the State as provider of
first resort of basic services, security, employment, justice amongst
other citizens’ needs becomes even more pronounced and urgent.
However, the
state is nowhere to be seen.
It seems that
this thesis of the relationship between the Zimbabwean State and
its subjects rests on the false assumption that the State has domestic
sovereignty and political authority based on popular legitimacy;
entrenched legitimacy premised beyond elections with predetermined
outcomes.
If this assumption
was true, how can we make sense of State manoeuvres such as Operation
Murambatsvina (Clean-Out filth), national policies that have
led to a severe economic collapse and grave failure of the health
system, the education sector, service provision (especially water
and electricity), infrastructure, outbreaks of cholera and typhoid,
hyperinflation and an unemployment rate of over 80 percent?
To understand
this, seemingly an open and shut case of political hara-kiri, we
have to understand the nexus between political power and the levers
of the state.
The arrival
of a credible challenger to political power in the theatre of domestic
politics precipitated a “road to Damascus” moment for
the incumbents.
Assured landslides
at the polls since 1980 began to ebb for the ruling party at the
turn of the millennium.
The ruling party
lost the Constitutional Referendum in 2000, lost 57 seats to the
opposition in 2000 House of Assembly polls, lost 42,10 percent of
the electorate in the 2002 presidential election and lost
the election altogether in 2008 leading to a power
sharing agreement.
Something had
to give.
Whereas before
the Zimbabwean State was fairly strong with political authority
based on domestic revenue, popular acceptance, and commerce, the
arrival of credible political opponents changed that functioning
State bureaucracies are believed to foster strong candidates (usually
men) who can capitalise and build rival power centres.
The change in
tactics embraces hibernating the State, intentionally crippling
the arms of the State and governing through patronage networks.
The logic is bizarre but tried and tested.
This contraction
of the State actually depicts the flexibility and capacity of political
and economic elites to adapt to changing international and national
circumstances.
Popular legitimacy
of the State slowly gave way to relationships of kinship, lineage
and patron-client networks which began to shape, to a considerable
extent, the decisions taken by public officials and political leaders.
This patronage
system revolves around an exercise of power based on patron-client
links; a conception of leadership linked to the distribution of
benefits; an expectation by citizens (with the right credentials)
to be rewarded by their patrons; an organisation of citizens around
patrons. Patrons and Clients dependent on patronage are a more reliable
power base that the public.
As such, the
State has ceased to be concerned with developmental aims and morphed
into a platform for accumulation and distribution of wealth amongst
patrons and clients.
Who gets land,
government jobs, tenders, shares in extractive industries (diamonds)
and now indigenised companies and asserts is underpinned by this
patron/client relationship.
As the State
withdraws from its core functions, essential services seize to become
public goods but private ones regulated by supply and demand principles
of the black market.
To get a passport
in reasonable time, one needs a ‘facilitator’, police
officers are for hire to enforce ‘the law’, prosecutors
are available on auction, healthcare needs cash payment upfront,
decent education has to be private! Adequate water and electricity
supplies require private boreholes and generators.
The NGO sector
fills in the rest of the void left by a fast receding State. With
an unemployment rate of around 80 percent, the majority of citizens
eke a living out of the vast informal sector where the State is
invisible, where the State collects no tax or regulates.
State withdrawal
leaves chaos and disorder in the health, education, services, economic
and other sectors but the point to drive home is that this is not
chaotic chaos but organised chaos albeit with a distinct logic.
Our rulers are
trapped in a politics of survival and thus the nurturing and provision
for essential allies replaces the cumbersome exercise of cultivating
popular legitimacy which is fickle as it is political, economic
and social weather dependant.
Patrons and
clients are an all weather support base.
As such, large
numbers of State officials who consume resources but are not essential
for regime survival are ejected and essentially left to their own
devices; teachers, health care workers, and other civil servants.
Our political
elite have thus engaged in simple mathematics and converted political
resources into economic resources.
They must behave
with largesse towards allies of propinquity in dogma in order to
survive.
This system
has been replicated in the public sphere too by public officials
in their tiny spheres of power.
As a result
power has become de-institutionalised and highly personalised.
One gets nothing
done without a “connection” of some sort, either a kin
and keen one or a hired one.
Personalised
relationships and patronage networks thus decide who gets what,
when, why and how - far removed from any vain pronouncements about
empowerment and development or “at your service” mantras.
To be sure,
the illusion of due diligence must always appear, a jik-job of sorts;
so a community somewhere, a clinic here, an individual there will
always be paraded via the state publicity machinery as proof of
state-sponsored development.
In reality,
however, the benefits that accrue from the state are selective,
private and channelled along established distribution networks vital
for regime sustenance.
Thus for the
majority of citizens, there is a genuine and deadly serious question
they ask, whither the state?
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