The Zimbabwe Sentinel-Media Centre

Telling the other story – MEDIA CENTRE

Opinion & Analysis

Edith Chibhamu urges Zim to focus more on economic recovery

It’s now crystal clear that the current government has failed to attract any meaningful investment from within and its surrounding neighbors.

Many countries are prioritizing domestic investment and a special invitation is also extended locals based abroad to use their reserves and experience to develop their countries.

The only future for Zimbabwe now lies in its ability to attract foreign direct investment (FDI), but of great importance would be the type of the FDI its going go attract; short term FDI will not help the nation in achieving its long term goals, which in most cases are the pillars of a well functioning economy with the ability to manufacture and export high quality products.

These products must be able to compete on the global stage and generate foreign currency, which has been in short supply. In fact, export revenues have been a trickle at around US$3.5 billion a year because FDI has been subdued at about half million dollars per annum.

The rest of Southern African economies receive between US$2 billion and US$5 billion yearly. Countries receiving FDI at this rate have been notching double digit gross domestic product growth rates and building up a huge middle-class that consumes at a bigger scale. This is how Angola has risen in the aftermath of the civil war to create Southern African Development Community’s second biggest economy.

With the African Continental Free Trade Area shaping up, the race to capture the region’s US$3 trillion market will intensify, and economies will relax restrictions so as to attract multinationals to produce from their countries and export into Africa and reap the rewards. Those that will struggle on this front will remain perpetual underachievers and perennial beggars.

This is why Zimbabwe, at this point, requires an effective agency to promote both FDI and local investment. The transition from the Zimbabwe Investment Authority to the Zimbabwe Investment and Development Agency (Zida) must not be only on paper.

The ZIDA Act was promulgated last February, and a numbers of laws were either repealed or amalgamated to streamline the operationalization of the new investment agency. These include the Zimbabwe Investment Authority Act (Chapter 14:30), the Joint Venture Act (Chapter 22:22), and the Zimbabwe Special Economic Zones Act (Chapter 14:34).

One Stop Investment Service Centre (OSISC) chief facilitator Never Nyemudzo, said the centre brings together all Government departments into one to streamline the registration process for potential investors.

This is a vital institution whose executives must understand the depth of the task at hand. They must be ready to sacrifice in order to bring change to a country that has been torn apart by mismanagement and plunder. They must be skilled enough to pick up the pieces and rebuild industries that have been affected by capital flight so that thousands of graduates can be absorbed and earn a living.

Not all Zimbabweans will become entrepreneurs. Those who cannot venture into business will require somewhere to work. Local investors have failed to create enough jobs for everyone. That is why unemployment levels are as high as 80%. This places Zida at the heart of an important operation to rebuild Zimbabwe.

Its role is as important as that of the central bank, or a major hospital. Zida’s leaders must know that as they restructure, they must meet the demands of today’ s investor, who now brings billions of dollars, not thousands, which was the case a decade ago.

Zida must remember that there is no holiday time or time to sleep in workshops. It is no time to embark on extravagant shopping sprees when Zimbabwe sends them out to scout for investors. It is time to get down to real work that changes lives and saves a population that has been growing at breakneck speed when opportunities have been shrinking. Zida must be frank on policy proposals. It must be bold enough to tell the government how to move and where to get FDI. This is no time for bootlicking.

Edith Chibhamu is a business woman, human rights activist and aspiring president of Zimbabwe Economic and Democratic Freedom Party (ZEDFP). She can be contacted on Instagram: @official_queendee

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Chief Editor: Earnest Mudzengi Content Editor: Willie Gwatimba