Realignment 

Today Zimbabwe reminded me why I think this is such an amazing place to live. I woke at just after five, outside it was crisp, dew on the grass and the birds just waking up with me – a pair of Robins serenading each other from the bottom of the garden. Just enough of a chill in the air to make it invigorating. A deep blue sky being rolled back above me. At midday it was about 25 degrees Celsius – bone dry with green grass and bush stretching to the horizon.

Source: Realignment – The Zimbabwean


Eddie Cross

I drove down town to a café for breakfast with a few friends and enjoyed a cup of coffee at a place where I was greeted by name by the security guard at the gate and by every waiter. We sat in the garden with shade provided by a collection of trees from all parts of the world.

And it’s not just the physical beauty of the place and the magnificent weather, it is the people. I drove through an intersection where the robots (traffic lights) were not working and a street kid was directing traffic. At an intersection a 30 tonne truck pulled up next to me – the driver gave me a big grin and a wave. A Church put out an appeal for aid for the people caught up in the cyclone in the East and the Police had to direct traffic when the response simply overwhelmed the Church. One elderly women walked 17 kilometres to give her surplus kitchen utensils – carrying them on her head. A local Businessman who saw the picture of her doing so, came up with an offer to buy her a home of her own.

I am not saying this is paradise – but heck there are compensations and I think this is a great place to live in and call home. Here the thing we call the “Africa Bug” is alive and well and often takes visitors hostage.

When Emmerson Mnangagwa launched the exercise in November 2017 to remove Mugabe from power, it was our people who gave the operation legitimacy by a national demonstration of joy and support for the tough soldiers on every street corner. This was not contrived and people across the globe watched as we freed ourselves from a tyranny – many with tears in their eyes as they watched history being made in a small way in an African State that had lost its way after Independence.

And boy, had we lost our way!! We did it big time and as a consequence all our economic and social fundamentals were so far out of kilter that we were no longer able to give a decent standard of living to our people, no longer able to feed ourselves, no longer able to give our children an education that would prepare them to compete in an increasingly complex world.

Millions of our people were now living abroad, at home, life expectancies plummeted and our young people dreamed of moving away to anywhere that might give them a better chance at life. Our rich and wealthy made their money, not by enterprise and hard work but by patronage, stealth and corruption. In the process, creating a country where the disparity between the rich and the poor is as great as anywhere in the world. By and large, Zimbabweans agreed they had been better off before Independence and that our liberators had messed up, big time.

The new Government had a rough start – the first six months a confused mixture of those who felt they deserved power and a “chance to eat” because they had supported the small group who engineered the transition and the old guard who had survived the purge. Then the election and the emergence of a Government without real political roots in our society. Ethnically the centre of power moving from Mashonaland West to the Midlands.

Facing a hostile and sceptical world and the Zimbabwe population, the new leadership struggled to convince people that anything had changed, but it had. The dictatorship of Mugabe who had ruled Zimbabwe with an iron rod for 38 years had been swept from power. The new leadership knew they had to win the support of the people before 2023 or be swept away just like Mugabe. A transition was underway and the new Government needed the help of the both the domestic and the international community to fix the problems they had inherited. Did we really think we could fix all our historical problems without pain? If we did we were mistaken.

The adopted mantra of the new Government was “we are open for business” but this false store front hid a far wider agenda of reform and change. In days after the November 2017 transition the new President had instituted far reaching reforms to the very institutions that had carried him into power. The leadership of the security services and the armed forces were changed, in succeeding months the military Junta which had kept Mugabe in power since Independence and which had increasingly subverted constitutional and civilian government was dissolved. The reform of the security forces is continuing and has a long way to go but a great deal has been achieved in the past 15 months.

In August 2018 he appointed a new team at the Ministry of Finance – not just Mthuli Ncube but a whole raft of changes at a senior level. The new team lost no time – a “Transitional Stabilisation Plan” was crafted and a program of reform to fiscal and monetary policy agreed and rolled out. The changes have been dramatic – in weeks the fiscal deficit was eliminated, then foreign exchange balances in the Banks ring fenced and protected. Then monetary reform and right now we are in the process of gradually allowing exchange rates to find a rate at which supply and demand are in equilibrium.

Soon a new currency will follow and normal conditions of trade within a stable money market restored after three decades of chaos. The new Minister was clear – this would be a time of austerity while we found our feet in a new dispensation of fiscal and monetary discipline. He was not exaggerating in any way – our living standards have plummeted and the real value of our local currency devalued to 25 per cent of what it was two years ago.

But it was necessary and all Zimbabweans should understand this and I call it the struggle for realignment to the new realities of our situation after decades of economic delinquency. The impact of these changes has been dramatic and the process will continue for much longer. But we are establishing a market driven economy and the process of what we call “price discovery” is well underway – this refers to the way the markets establish equilibrium and balance when they are allowed to do so. The State can only guide and stabilise this process, they cannot stop it and any attempt to do so will end in failure.

The new dispensation is going to strengthen the productive elements in our society – those who actually produce value are going to prosper and in the process this will eventually make Zimbabwe one of the fastest growing economies in the world – one of the new African Lions of Growth. The consumptive elements – including the corrupt and those who have been feeding at the trough of patronage and privilege are going to find themselves being forced to work and use their ill-gotten gains to actually make a living for once.

But for the ordinary person living on a fixed salary or trying to make a living on the margins of society and in the massive informal sector we have, this is a time of painful sacrifice and I am just amazed at how patient they have been. The floating of the currency from 1:1 with the US Dollar to the levels prevailing today of 3,1:1 on the official interbank market and 4,5:1 on the open market means that prices have had to rise 3 to 4 times. Many firms have increased salaries but the changes have been marginal. Fuel prices were first, maize meal and bread will follow along with vegetable oils.

Major adjustments are now needed to salaries and disposable incomes and this MUST be the next area to receive attention and Mr. President, please explain what you are doing when you have to do whatever is necessary – not like the fuel price adjustment. If we know what you are doing and why and the reasons are reasonable we will take the pain but we need to know that they are taking us towards the new beginnings that were promised when we said yes to the removal of Mugabe.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 3
  • comment-avatar
    Ndebele;e 5 years ago

    Eddie. Please stop sugars coating the Zanu theft of the peoples’ money and their vote. You are now a Queen Bee Soothsayer and it has become nauseating. It is just woffle about how you see Zanu and ED as born again Economic Gurus when they are simply murdered and thieves. It really undoes any credibility you may have. All that Zanu has done in the last 39 years and more rectory the last 18 months is just dandy. How ridiculous can you get? Tale your tablets.

    • comment-avatar
      Ndebele 5 years ago

      The best free economies in th world have minimal interference from oolitivians. You are singing for maximum interference from Zanu so that they can take huge cuts. The last cut is about 75% of the peoples’ US Dollars and you endorse is as the work of a genius.

  • comment-avatar
    S. Bown 5 years ago

    Now we know what you consider the problems to be, could we also know what you consider the solution would be in order to fix it and create a better Zimabwe?