Mugabe must learn from Mauritius

Source: Mugabe must learn from Mauritius – DailyNews Live

22 March 2017

HARARE – President Robert Mugabe was this week in Mauritius where he
attended the African Economic Platform (AEP) inaugural conference.

We sincerely hope the nonagenarian leader and his Zanu PF government took
a few minutes to reflect and learn the economic success story of the
island nation.

Mauritius has been branded a success story in terms of its sustained
economic growth performance, with major improvements in the living
standards of its population at large over the past few decades.

Since its independence in 1968, Mauritius has developed from a low-income
economy based on agriculture to a middle income economy increasingly
diversified into industrial, financial and touristic sectors – services
accounting for two-thirds of the economy.

The country’s rapid economic progress over the last four decades has set
it as an example of an African success story in terms of economic and
social development.

The institutional source of Mauritius’ success has traditionally been
attributed to the provision of a stable and competitive regulatory and
fiscal – including relatively low income and corporate taxes environment
that favour labour-intensive activities in sectors such as sugar, textiles
and tourism.

Such policies have tended to reduce unemployment and increase labour force
participation, in particular that of women.

The Indian Ocean island nation, which is known for its beaches, lagoons
and reefs, also employed a poverty reduction strategy that has since been
expanded to include employment opportunities and modernising its economy,
while maintaining an elaborate social safety net.

Mauritius has also had a policy of allocating significant public resources
to education and health. Adult literacy and life expectancy are well above
the sub-Saharan African average. Healthcare is free and health facilities
are of reasonably good quality and accessible throughout the country.

The benefits of Mauritius’s educational system have also become more
universally distributed in the last 15 years, with a move away from a
strongly elitist system to one with greater accessibility to secondary and
higher education.

Mauritius’s economic success has largely been built as a sugar and
clothing exporter as well as an upmarket touristic destination.

The government’s development strategy has recently largely centred on
attracting foreign investment.

This has created a large number of offshore entities, many of which in
direct commercial links with India and South Africa.

Instead of preaching to Africa about the negative effects of colonialism,
we hope Mugabe and company learnt a lesson or two from Mauritius about
growing the economy.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 3
  • comment-avatar
    Mazano Rewayi 7 years ago

    If you cannot teach an old dog new tricks, try giving a 93 year old new ideas. Let’s stop deluding ourselves folks, nothing short of an overhaul can save us from further ruin.

  • comment-avatar

    Overall and incarceration of the perpetrators who destroyed a whole generation of Zimbabweans. If we do not punish these idiots it will happen again and again

  • comment-avatar
    Ben'Oua 6 years ago

    Mauritius as a nation is an unborn and hybrid one. It is being stolen from Afrika.