Gono saved Zim: Chinamasa

via Gono saved Zim: Chinamasa – DailyNews Live 3 February 2015 by Chengetai Zvauya

HARARE – Finance minister Patrick Chinamasa yesterday defended former Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) governor Gideon Gono’s quasi-fiscal activities, saying the interventions were necessary to save the economy from collapse.

The trained lawyer told the parliamentary portfolio committee on Finance, which was gathering evidence on the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Debt Assumption Bill, that government had assumed the central bank’s $1,2 billion debt after realising that the money was used to prop up Zimbabwe during the hyper-inflationary period.

“The quasi-fiscal activities were taken in an emergency situation,” Chinamasa said.

“The country was under a state of emergency as the economy was going down and the RBZ was now running the economy as an agent of the government,” Chinamasa said.

Responding to questions raised by David Chapfika, chairman of the Finance committee and Bikita West MP Munyaradzi Kereke on how the $1,2 billion debt was accrued, the Treasury boss rallied to Gono’s defence.

Both Kereke and Chapfika have in the past had fierce rows with the ex-Central Bank chief.

“We should not personalise these matters and blame the Reserve Bank for these actions,” Chinamasa said.

“Some of the money was used for agriculture mechanisation programme aimed at supporting the land reform because some of our farmers did not have hoes, let alone capital,” he said.

Chinamasa’s statement gives Gono the last laugh, if not a rare moment of Schadenfreude at the expense of his detractors, with officials acknowledging that he made tremendous contribution to Zimbabwe during its trying times.

The Harare businessman, who retired after a 10-year tenure in December 2013, was at the forefront of President Robert Mugabe’s fight against “crippling economic sanctions.”

During the quasi-fiscal operations of the hyper-inflationary era, all roads led to Gono and the Central Bank.

Analysts say not a single government office, Parliament included, the judiciary, defence forces, State security, prisons, police, embassies, parastatals, local authorities, newspaper groups, ZBC radio and TV, and virtually all sectors of the economy which were not assisted one way or the other by the former central bank chief who today is blamed for the collapse of the Zimbabwe economy.

During yesterday’s debate, Gono’s former advisor and former deputy minister of Finance, Kereke and David Chapfika, chose to personalise the RBZ  debt matter although they were at one point involved with the RBZ operations.

Critics who spoke to the Daily News wondered why the Kereke/Chapfika and Gono feud was being allowed to cloud real issues in the august House.

Gono has in the past said quasi-fiscal measures were necessitated by a complete “abrogation of duty by some of the responsible government ministries, boards and management teams at some of the parastatals and local authorities”.

During his tenure, he rolled out such facilities as the Productive Sector Facility to assist companies to access cheap funding to boost production across all sectors of the economy and in a bid to boost production.

On the other hand, Gono also introduced the Agriculture Sector Productivity Enhancement Facility, the Parastatals and Local Authorities Re-orientation Programme and then the Basic Commodities Supply Side Intervention.

Because not every sector accessed the money, the programmes did not work out according to plan, as companies would buy expensive inputs from other sectors that were not covered, which did not help in reducing the prices.

In the end, the RBZ got engaged in non-productive sector financing.

Chinamasa, who was accompanied by RBZ governor John Mangudya, was also taken to task by legislators over the demonetisation of the Zimbabwean dollar.

Various MPs demanded that government put a demonetisation programme under the RBZ Assumption Bill Debt as part of efforts to restore confidence in the banking sector.

Chinamasa ruled out putting the programme under the RBZ Assumption Debt Bill saying that it was another matter that was going to be handled separately by government.

Treasury last year was yet to determine the exchange rate to use in settling payments of Zimbabwean dollar account holders.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 7
  • comment-avatar
    Mpisi 9 years ago

    Produce the till slips and the vouchers. You took other people’s hard-earned forex,systematically and cynically changed it for bearer cheques knowing they were worthless – and spent it on what? 5 floors of luxury vehicles, houses, sports clubs, stashed outside in personal accounts? Jollies? When Morton Jaffrey needed chemicals to purify the water – no forex! If forex
    was used for “strategic purposes” prove it – why are you afraid to tell us ? Gross dishonesty and now no one trusts this govt, this nation, it’s banks. Gono did not ” save” anything – except possibly his own neck. Money wasted on non-productive briefcase farmers. Forex was pivotal to power. All enlightened and thriving countries have free exchange beyond the grasping hands of governments.

  • comment-avatar
    Doctor Do little 9 years ago

    @Mpisi my brother, Chinamasa is 100% correct. Gono saved them, the Zanu US. When Zanu people talk they talk of the economy as them. They dont look or see the povo. That statement GONO SAVED US is true in the contex of us being Zanu Cadres who were getting the US dollar at 20 to 1 whilst we were 1) unable to get it 2) When we traded for it it was 400 to 1. They bought it at 20 to 1 a resold it on the black market at 400 to 1 and used the money to buy more etc. etc. so yes he SAVED them the Zanu US.

  • comment-avatar

    You are 100% correct D.D – the “dual exchange rate” was in fact the Zanooo Money Tree. And you are right also that The Mafia think that they are Zimbabwe

    Gidiot didn’t save the economy, he destroyed it – though probably on his masters’ orders. Remember that The Bhobho is numerically illiterate. As for Patsy Chinamasa . . . what can one say other than “a trained snake in the grass”?

  • comment-avatar
    Justice 9 years ago

    Spare us please from these idiotic Chinamasa comments!

  • comment-avatar
    Mukanya 9 years ago

    Former Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) governor Gideon Gono’s quasi-fiscal activities,were intended to save the looting Zanu PF clique, hangers-on and Gono included, thus pauperizing the nation- as it stands today.

  • comment-avatar
    Mixed Race 9 years ago

    They stole all our invested pensions and assets to enrich the dirty group supported by useless opposition parties who could have made a difference if they had public suffering conscience but they decided to join the dirty club.It is an insult to tell the public that Mr Gono saved the country’s economy when he actually killed it.All our hard earned money was lost over night, reducing everybody to a beggar,including future children’s school fees banked in anticipation of a better education,eg I lost everything I had banked for my grandsons through my medical aid claims rebates.You call this guy a saver for who except for the looters and corrupt useless gang stars who cannot be brave enough to pay back what they owe the public.
    As already stated above that at that time health needs were ignored whilst funds were being diverted to promote patronage and corruption,thanks to the external NGOs who moved in to save precious and ignored lives.The state is supposed to protect the poor not to ignore them,during times of economic hardships,but he decided to channel funds to the elite on political grounds which has completely backfired.
    Therefore,Mr Chinamasa try to respect the public instead of insulting them using funny words which are meaningless to us.