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Marange, Chiadzwa and other diamond fields and the Kimberley Process - Index of articles
Interview
Tendai Biti on MDC-T policies (Part 1)
Violet
Gonda, SW Radio Africa
May 24, 2013
SW Radio Africa’s
Violet Gonda brings you the first in a two-part interview with Finance
Minister and MDC-T Secretary General Tendai Biti. He outlines how
an MDC-T government will tackle the party’s indigenization
policy and restore Zimbabwe’s industries, including the diamond
sector, which Biti says has lost $4billion through theft in
the four years he has been Finance Minister. He also talks about
how the MDC-T intends to repay the country’s $10.7 billion
debt and how they will establish an accountable state, after so
many years of political instability.
Violet Gonda: My guest on the
Hot Seat programme is Finance Minister and MDC Secretary General
Tendai Biti who will talk about his party’s policy document
that was unveiled at the MDC’s 8th annual policy conference
in Harare last week. Welcome on the programme Mr. Tendai Biti.
Tendai
Biti: Thank you Violet
Gonda:
First of all, what are the key aspects of this document, the policy
document?
Biti:
It’s a defining paradigmatic document in the sense that, number
one it seeks to address a mischief and that mischief being the 33
years of worst, of abuse, of misdirection, of coercive, exclusive
economic policies that have been addressed by Zanu PF. So it is
addressing the past. Then secondly it is seeking to consolidate
the decent work we have done in the inclusive
government, particularly the issue of macro-economic stabilization.
And then third it seeks to redefine a new path of growth, of upliftment
anchored in a democratic developmental model of development. So
from that point of view it is a unique document.
Gonda:
So how exactly are you, as a party, going to address the issue of
macro-economic stabilization?
Biti:
Macro-economic stability is simple. Macro-economic stability refers
to what I can call for lack of a better word, the economic vitals
of a country. Just like a human being has bodily vitals like your
body temperature, your blood pressure, your heartbeat. So macro-economic
stability refers to issues such as inflation, your rates of inflation,
your growth rates, your current account, your balance of payment.
So these things, particularly from our experience in government,
require common sense, require decency, require discipline. You don’t
have to be a rocket scientist to understand that inflation harms
you. We Zimbabweans lived in an era, which got us to a point of
500 billion percent inflation by December of 2008 and 231 million
percent by July 2008.
So in
respect of macro-economic stability, firstly there must be a social
open market system where supply and demand sets pricing policies.
We’ve done that in the last few years and we have seen the
stabilization of prices. Our inflation has been averaging three
percent in the last five years and we will continue doing that.
Number two we
have liberalized interest rates in Zimbabwe. During the crisis years,
interest rates were kept artificially low because the government
was borrowing a lot through treasury bills. We have hardly borrowed
from the market in the last few years and interest rates have remained
positive and market determined.
Number three
is the issue of supply side recovery because supply side recovery
is so key to macro economic and here there are a number of things
that the MDC will pursue which are fundamentally different from
Zanu PF. In the outlook period 2013 to 2018 we will maintain the
US dollar as the anchor currency of Zimbabwe. We know that Zanu
PF wants to bring back the Zimbabwean dollar but we are saying as
MDC it’s not yet time to return the Zimbabwean dollar.
The beauty of
not returning the Zimbabwean dollar in the outlook period 2013 to
2018 is that number one you maintain people’s confidence;
two you don’t create exchange rate arbitrarily; three you
don’t create monetary policy distortions particularly in situations
where we have seen in the past where people try to monetize the
budget deficit by the printing of money with all the consequences
that we saw between 1997 and 2008.
The fourth thing
that we will do is of course to maintain cash budgeting or a balanced
budget. It is so critical for a developmental state to maintain
a balanced budget because as I said before, budget deficits and
in particular the manner that you finance them is very disastrous.
Number five
we intend, the MDC government intends to deal with the issue of
the crippled current account deficit and then of course another
issue that is so key to our macro-economic performance is the issue
of Zimbabwe’s sovereign debt. We’ve got a sovereign
debt of ten point seven billion US dollars. It is critical that
that debt is wiped off, both from a macro and micro point of view
so that we are able to accept the huge amounts of money that are
most essential for development of our country. So that’s on
macro-economic stability.
Gonda:
Where will you get the money from in terms of sorting out Zimbabwe’s
huge debt?
Biti: The country
doesn’t have a capacity to deal with its own debt. Even if
we had capacity, it would be very foolhardy for anyone, and any
finance minister to use our resources to pay for our legacy debts
when we have got our schools in the positions that they are, our
hospitals in the positions that they are, our roads in the way that
they are. I think it’s immoral to pay ten point seven billion
dollars of debt that we half understand – some of it was used
to pay guns, some of which was used to engage in all kinds of shenanigans.
So instead of
looking in the past, the positive thing is to engage in a programme
of sustained engagement with the World Bank, with the IMF, with
the international donor community so the same can counsel and forgive
our debt. We have already started that; at the Ministry of Finance,
through the development of the Zimbabwe accelerated debt and development
strategy. So the long and short of it is that the international
community must end, if we do our macro-economic trajectory right,
will pay and will cancel and forgive our debt.
Gonda: And who
will pay for infrastructural development since you say Zimbabwe
does not have money and these are some of the issues that…
interrupted
Biti: What we
envisage as MDC is that within the first ten months of President
Tsvangirai’s government we will have an international conference
to deal with Zimbabwe’s reconstruction. You will recall in
1981 with the Zimbabwe conference on debt and development, it is
so important that we have a full dialogue with the international
community for full reengagement. You’ve just seen in London
last week, the conference on Somalia, we definitely intend to have
a bigger one with all the multi-lateral, the bi-lateral international
community there, the Chinese, the Americans, the British, the Scandinavians.
That conference is very important because Zimbabwe has to be fully
reintegrated.
Then number
two; it is important Violet that we have proper full integration
in the IFIs, in particular the African Development Bank, in particular
the World Bank. Donald Kaberuka the president of the World African
Development Bank has been excellent for Africa in his capacity as
president of the ADB. The African Development Bank has over 30 million
US dollars for infrastructural development for Africa for the next
five years. We are not on the party because of these huge arrears.
The World Bank,
both under the old president and the new bank president, has got
over 75 billion US dollars for Africa, we are not able to access
that.
Most importantly
Violet, because of our high risk factor, because of our arrears
we are not able to go on the international markets to issue bonds
or other paper, in other words borrow from the international finance
market. If you look at Rwanda, it has just floated a bond of 600
million, Zambia floated a bond of 300 million dollars, it was subscribed
to the tune of 11 billion US dollars, and we can’t do that.
So the bottom
line of what I’m saying is that once we lower our risk profile,
once we deal with our arrears clearance, it will be able for Zimbabwe
to access money from the international community at a bi-lateral
level, hence the conference I’ve discussed.
Two it will
be able to access money from the IFIs.
Three it will
be able to access money from the international markets.
Four it will
be able to access capital in the form of foreign direct investment
but the precondition for this is a sustainable, credible election
and our policies are written on the basis that we are going to win
this election, Morgan Tsvangirai’s going to win this election
by 78%. He’ll form the next government and he will implement
what we are calling ART – Agenda for Real Transformation in
Zimbabwe and ART is what we will be launching on Sunday afternoon,
the 19th of May in the year of our Lord 2013.
Gonda: So how
would you answer your critics who say you’ve had four years
to show Zimbabweans that this is what you are capable of doing and
so why have you not been able to do that in this inclusive government?
Biti: Firstly
we have stabilized the economy Violet. When I came in, inflation
was 500 billion percent, now inflation is three percent; when I
came in there was no food in the supermarket, there was water and
firewood, now there is any goods that you want in the economy. When
I came in the economy had last had a positive growth rate in 1996;
in the last four years we have had the positive growth rate, in
fact between 2009 and 2011, Zimbabwe was the fastest growing economy
on the planet so we have done these things.
The second level
of our growth trajectory, is inclusive growth, sustainable growth
and we can do that, but you must also know that Zanu PF has been
working against us. If you take the indigenization policies where
comrade Mashakada has been saying foreign directors must come in
with investment, you know what the minister of Indigenization has
been doing.
So we have done
extremely well with one hand of ours tied. Can you imagine what
we can do when all our hands are free? We’ve done well with
our legs tied; can you imagine what we can do when we can sprint?
We will be faster than Usain Bolt.
Gonda: You mentioned
the issue of indigenization and many people believe that one way
of encouraging or restoring investor confidence is if Zimbabwe establishes
a proper indigenization policy because the Zanu PF indigenization
policy seems to be frightening investors.
Biti: That’s
correct Violet, that’s correct Violet.
Gonda: So what’s
the MDC’s policy?
Biti:
What ART is going to do which is already articulated in JUICE
– what ART is going to do is do the following: number one
acknowledge that the Zimbabwean economy needs to be democratized
so everyone needs to be an economic player and not an innocent bystander.
So we agree that there has to be upliftment. But the best form of
upliftment is the following: number one – it’s a job.
Everyone needs a job and a job is development and development is
freedom. Without a job there is no development and without development
there is no freedom.
So we have put
at the epicenter of ART and of JUICE – job creation, which
is why we have said in the next five years between 2013 to 2018,
we will create a minimum, a minimum of a million jobs. Jobs are
empowering. As you know if you don’t have a job, you are so
totally disempowered. So that’s number one.
Number two –
as part of our, if you like, our empowerment programme and in the
process of creating those jobs, the issue of domestic savings is
critical. The MDC intends to ensure that there is financial inclusivity
in this country, which will guarantee savings of at least 30 to
50% of GDP. When people save it means others will borrow and start
businesses, re-equip their businesses, retool their businesses.
Number three
is foreign direct investment. This economy needs foreign direct
investment that is at least 75%, 50% of GDP and because we have
got friends all over unlike Zanu PF, we will be able to attract
foreign direct investment.
Number four
Violet; we have got a false – and this is where Zanu PF doesn’t
get it right, we have got a false accumulation model. The false
accumulation model, which we have is extractive; diamonds are extracted
and sent to Israel; tobacco is extracted – 90% of it goes
elsewhere. We make the best cotton in Zimbabwe but 80% of it goes
out. If you look at a dress that a person is wearing in Zimbabwe
or a shirt it is all written made in China and so forth so there
is no value edition. So the MDC is saying let’s change the
accumulation model from extraction to beneficiation and value addition.
So the greatest empowerment project of the MDC is an agro-industrial
transformation of Zimbabwe which will see beneficiation and value
addition industrialization, industrialization, industrialization
it’s key.
Number four
is the issue of technology – ICT. This economy is rural and
it’s underdeveloped. So you need to revolutionize this country
through ICTs so that there is 4G, there is futuristic technology.
If you have a population that is educated, ICT literate which is
producing manufactured goods, not the situation where we can’t
even make chisharo chebhasikoro then you have got proper empowerment
in our country. Then of course you must also have a situation where
in respect of every investor, there is an appreciation of what he
is doing for the local economy. In fact in terms of taking locals
on board, in terms of educating our people, in terms of community
social responsibility, the building of schools, of hospitals. What
we are calling in our document ‘horizontal and backward linkages’
– spatial linkages particularly in the mining sector, one
of the sad things about the Zanu PF mining policy if you take Marange
and so forth, is that people are just being given licenses’
left right and centre, nothing comes to the country, there is no
valuation of what is underground.
So if a person
spends three million dollars to set up a diamond company like Mbada,
one diamond carat is five million, what comes to the government
is zero because everything is shrouded in corruption and so forth.
So the issue again of giving meaningful mineral values to our minerals
is an essential corner of the MDC policy.
Gonda: How much
can you estimate in terms of how much the country is losing out
from these diamonds. How much has Zimbabwe lost since you became
Finance Minister?
Biti: We’re
talking about the MDC policy Violet.
Gonda: Yes I’m
going to come back to that issue.
Biti:
Yes, I’ll answer both questions. Firstly if we get our mining
policy right, if Zimbabwe gets its mining policy right and I said
this in my 2013 budget
and we say this in ART, the Agenda for Real Transformation, the
country should by 2018 be getting at least 14 billion US dollars
mineral exports, 14 billion US dollar mineral exports. But there
has to be a paradigm shift, a fundamental paradigm shift.
Number one you
need exploration; exploration is not taking place. Exploration last
took place in 1968 in Zimbabwe, real exploration.
Number two you
fundamentally need to change the way you parcel out concessions.
At the present moment Mpofu just quietly, nocturnally, opaquely
parcels out mining concessions. Some of us we just read the newspapers
– ah suddenly there’s a company called OGPD in diamonds,
suddenly there’s a Ghanaian company mining diamonds. It’s
opaque it’s not transparent! How those concessions are being
given out nobody knows but the value is being lost.
Thirdly you
must come out, we must revise the Mines and Minerals Act so that
when an investor is coming in here we need to know the value of
the platinum that is underground – that is not happening.
Fourth is the
issue of spatial linkages that I’ve already referred to. Number
one you need horizontal linkages. This is a situation where procurement,
domestic procurement for mining is sourced locally, then backward
linkages which is value addition. Then the most important thing
– spatial linkages. Spatial linkages arrive in the following
manner – mining is high value, low impact so companies extract
but the communities around those companies are very poor so you
want to ensure that there is high value and high impact. So if you
take a mine like let’s say Mbada, it must build houses, it
must build universities, it must value add the diamonds that it
is making. And with diamonds it pains me Violet that a little village
called Surat in India is employing 60 000 Indians who are cutting
and polishing our diamonds when we can do that – because to
cut and polish a diamond you don’t need a Bachelor of Arts
degree from the University
of Zimbabwe but Zanu PF is allowing these things because they
functionally illiterate when it comes to issues around the economy.
But to your
more specific question on diamonds – in 2013, 800 million
US dollars diamonds were exported out of Zimbabwe but what we got
as treasury was 45 million US dollars. Now 45 million as a percentage
of 800 million is less than 10% so people are stealing and people
have got degrees of stealing. These are not sustainable. So I’m
suffering as Minister of Finance and yet, and I’m going around
begging, but I’m begging with a gold begging bowl because
people are stealing. That’s not sustainable.
What we are
saying is now, and what we are saying in ACT and JUICE is Zimbabwe
must move away from these vicious cycles of extraction to virtuous
circles of inclusion, of incentive, of putting the country first.
Unfortunately that is not the position right now.
Gonda: You mentioned
that we only got 45 million in 2013 alone but are you able to give
us an estimate from 2009 to 2013?
Biti: The rough
estimate would be around four billion dollars. Remember, remember
when we say 800 million that is only that which has been acquitted
through the central bank, that has been acquitted through the central
bank in terms of CD 1 forms but you and I know that the bulk of
the diamonds are not even being sold legally. They are being transported
illegally, smuggled out illegally. So if you were to get the figures
of production, the current figures that are coming from the ground
and just put a rough cost of say 60 dollars a carat, what has been
lost since we started producing diamonds is at least four billion
US dollars.
Gonda: Right
what will happen to all these dubious companies that you mentioned
that have been given licenses’ clandestinely? What will an
MDC government do about this?
Biti: Well anything
that has been done irregularly, irregularly, must be regularized.
Anything, done illegally, irregularly, must be regularized.
Gonda: We hear
there is massive theft everywhere – in the diamond industry,
in government departments – so how will you monitor this and
how will the MDC establish an accountable state?
Biti: The problem
with the current situation is that the law is not being presented
and one of the things of ART is that there must be a redesigning
of the state so that the state itself, the government institutions
themselves respect the law, respect the people of Zimbabwe and are
transparent and accountable and subordinate to parliament. And if
you look what we have done in the constitution, which is an integral
part of MDC policy, the MDC, the constitution was born out of struggles
of the MDC and the democratic movement in Zimbabwe. One of the things
that is happening is that you have all these executive commissions
liable, all these executive commissions and their people subject
to two terms of office including permanent secretary. That will
go a long way towards establishing an accountable state. But in
terms of resources the law is very clear – even the current
constitution – every cent to the benefit of Zimbabwe must
go the Consolidated Revenue Fund and the Consolidated Revenue Fund
is the budget which is looked after by parliament but the problem
now is that you’ve got sub-budget – the police have
got their own police fund, the judiciary has got its own fund for
fines and so forth, a road fund and so forth. So you’ve got
a multiplicity of these funds. The constitution must be respected.
Unless parliament itself has said you can have this fund like the
road fund everything must come to the Treasury.
So the question
Violet is not about what has happened in the past, the question
is are you going to move forward well and correct and legal in the
future and that is what the MDC wants to focus on – in the
future because if you are not careful you might spend a lot of your
energy pursuing the past. The MDC doesn’t drive looking in
the rear view mirror, it looks at the front mirror because we want
to move forward and serve our people.
Gonda: You know,
people will say your proposals are good on paper but will be difficult
to implement because of maybe a small group of people, the elite,
and that until there’s political stability, it’s going
to be difficult even to get people to invest in Zimbabwe, so how
are you going to manage this?
Biti: You know
Violet, the reason why all political parties must put their policies
on paper, and so far we are the only party who has done that, is
that people must be able to hold us accountable. You said you were
going to do this – what have you done? Zanu PF has not done
that, they are attacking our JUICE but what do they have.
Even indigenization
is not a Zanu PF policy – it is a government policy. They
don’t have anything on paper. In 2008 they didn’t even
have a manifesto so we are putting this so that we are held to account
– you guys you promised this, why are you not doing this?
You guys you have got your JUICE, you have got your Agenda for Real
Transformation, why are you not delivering? So that’s important.
Then the second
thing is yes, implementation Violet is a problem. You are going
to have the challenge of number one; the securocrats, the selectorate
– those that are appointed, the bureaucrats, if they don’t
want you to move these things, you won’t move them. That will
be a fight. Then number three you will have a fight with Zanu PF
and the chaos faction of Zanu PF.
Number four
you will have a fight with certain sections of the international
community that are not sympathetic to you because you would have
shut tapes that they were drinking from when Zanu PF was there.
So we are aware of these challenges but we don’t need to say
I am not going to go into my field to plant because it is going
to rain today. You don’t do that. You look the beast in the
eye and you won’t blink and the MDC is not going to blink!
Gonda: Join
us next week for the final part of the interview with Finance Minister
Tendai Biti where the MDC-T Secretary General details his party’s
land policy. What will happen to multiple farm owners and will the
party embark on a land audit? He also responds to questions regarding
the image of the MDC-T, which some observers say has been damaged
by individuals who have adopted the ‘Zanu PF way of thinking’.
To contact this
reporter email violet@swradioafrica.com
or follow on Twitter
SW Radio
Africa is Zimbabwe's Independent Voice and broadcasts on Short Wave
4880 KHz in the 60m band.
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