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Is there juice in the MDC's million-job manifesto
Farai
Shoko, Mail and Guardian
January
11, 2013
http://mg.co.za/article/2013-01-11-is-there-juice-in-the-mdcs-million-job-manifesto
Zimbabwe could see radical
economic changes, including the reversal of Zanu-PF's indigenisation
laws, if Morgan Tsvangirai wins the upcoming polls.
Prime Minister
Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC-T) recently
launched an economic blueprint - known as Jobs,
Upliftment, Investment, Capital and Environment (Juice) -
which promises, among other things, to create a million jobs in
the first five years of the MDC taking over power and an 8% annual
growth rate over the same period.
The plan is targeted
at Zimbabwe's unemployed citizens. Independent analysts estimate
the country's structural unemployment rate at 80% of the population.
Trashing Zanu-PF's indigenisation
law, which forces all foreign companies to give up 51% of their
shareholding to locals, Tsvangirai said in the document: "The
current version of indigenisation is tantamount to nationalisation
and expropriation and is clearly a political gimmick by Zanu-PF."
Juice, he said, would
generate decent jobs that would not only end poverty but also empower
citizens. The blueprint advocates for a broad-based economic upliftment
of citizens by "expanding people's choices in attaining sustainable
livelihoods, not through asset stripping and looting", he added.
The MDC-T has also promised
that between 2013 and 2018 it would normalise Zimbabwe's international
relations, mobilise domestic savings, bring about macroeconomic
stability anchored by single-digit inflation and attract foreign
direct investment of at least 30% of gross domestic product (GDP).
The MDC-T also envisages
running a green economy, deepening and strengthening the role of
small and medium-sized enterprises, and implementing a Natural Resources
Charter.
The party's
plans include creating a $100-billion economy by 2040, increasing
Zimbabwe's power-generating capacity to 6000 megawatts by 2018 compared
with the 1200MW generated at present, rebuilding the country's infrastructure,
putting in place a social contract and ensuring decent wages.
Mixed
responses
Zanu-PF has been quick
to tear into the plan with Indigenisation Minister Saviour Kasukuwere
describing it as a "hare-brained scheme" that would not
fool anyone.
"The economy can
only be expanded through Zanu-PF'S black economic policies. Indigenisation
of the economy is the only sure way to go, not to dream of creating
jobs in an economy controlled by foreigners," said Kasukuwere.
Political and economic
commentator Psychology Maziwisa, who is a fiery critic of Tsvangirai,
says Juice is not a well-thought-out economic plan. "There
is no juice in that thing," said Maziwisa.
"It's an empty policy
by an insubstantial party desperate to gain support from the people
ahead of crucial elections. It's absurd that a party that has failed
to create a single job in four years can talk of creating one million
jobs in five years. They are obviously taking Zimbabweans for fools,"
he said.
Economic commentator
Eric Bloch said Juice sounds like a very good programme but it is
dependent on components such as employment creation, which requires
the "restoration of monetary liquidity", and the projected
8% growth, which will rely on "major policy changes in the
banking sector and agriculture".
The restoration of Zimbabwe's
international relations remains key to attracting foreign direct
investment, said Bloch, adding that the country could not continue
to operate in isolation.
'Too
ambitious' a plan
But another
economist, Stevenson Dlamini, who lectures at the National
University of Science and Technology's department of banking,
said that, although Juice is a step in the right direction, a million
jobs in five years is "too ambitious" because of slowing
foreign direct investment.
Dlamini said fewer jobs
could be created in small to medium-sized enterprises, but not at
the magnitude envisaged by the premier.
Bongani Ngwenya, the
dean of the business faculty at Solusi University, said, although
Juice is a positive initiative, its success rests on implementation.
The country's $3.8-billion
2013 budget does not adequately address infrastructural development,
which is key to economic recovery, Ngwenya said, adding that it
does not tally with the MDC-T's economic blueprint.
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