Opinion / Columnist
Zimbabwe needs complete transformation, not patchworks.
16 Jun 2019 at 19:13hrs | Views
"In a world of conspicuous institutional failure, one entity that still offers some important lessons for the practice of governance is Singapore." Kent Calder
Zimbabwe is experiencing a structural regression, with an acceleration of de-industrialisation and economic informalisation. Whether he denies it or not Mnangagwa has been part of the leadership that led to this economic regression. Worse still, Mr Mnangagwa is presiding over unprecedented confusion, economic meltdown and violence we haven't seen in as many years. These challenges are caused by difficult economic problems, including infrastructure and regulatory deficiencies, policy uncertainty, and insufficient formal employment.
We can see the glaring mistake done by current President who recently appointed government leadership based on party loyalty, tribal lines or connectedness. Instead, the President should have picked the best citizens to run the country. Unfortunately, we are seeing a bunch of individuals whose combination of financial mismanagement, disrespect of the law and business ignorance can only by their venality. For comprehensive success, Zimbabwe needs exceptional leadership. This means a team lead by an inspirational leader of the second Republic, ably supported by shrewd economic architects and roving philosophers. This exceptional team will implement exceptional policies.
Zimbabwe has massive land and natural resources. But this country has been transformed into a land of villages, rundown urban areas and an endless shortage of basic commodities. Basic economic freedom, which is a very important component of total freedom has been taken away, resulting in an exodus of Zimbabweans into the diaspora. This trend is accelerating at an alarming rate under the current regime.
High taxes, excessive capital restrictions, foreign currency shortages and restrictive immigration policies have made Zimbabwe one of the most unfriendly places on Earth to its diasporans. Unlike most progressive countries, Zimbabwe lacks liberal policies, free trade, low tariffs and non-tariff barriers. While it takes months to start a business in Zimbabwe, one can have a company running in Singapore in three hours and less than a day in New Zealand.
For a complete transformation, Zimbabwe needs a leader who understands the politics of this diverse country and put together the laws that create a stable, peaceful place that makes it a magnet for national, regional and international investors. No amount of publicity stunts will create a shortcut to this rationale. The leader must believe that Zimbabwe's development and growth is tied to the shared values of its different ethnic, political and religious groups. Unless he changes, Mnangagwa currently has too much baggage to be a uniter and statesman par excellence who can command the respect of all. The "tichingotonga" mantra the President continues to boast about shows that he has failed to transform into a national leader guided by pragmatism.
Pragmatism means that a country does not try to reinvent the wheel or charter expensive planes for endless trips to nowhere. Need good smart researchers in the president's office. No matter what problem the country encounters, somebody, somewhere, has solved it. Let us copy the solution and adapt it to Zimbabwe. Copying best practices are something any country can do. However, implementing "Honesty" is the hardest thing to do. Corruption is the single biggest reason why most Third World countries have failed. The greatest weakness of Zimbabwe's founding fathers was that they were ruthlessly dishonest, and this includes ED. They failed and still fail to see that being shrewd and cunning was more than sloganeering.
Transformation dictates that the new leader be willing to keep the government small, efficient and honest—qualities absent and foreign to Mnangagwa and his Zanu-PF. With 20 cabinet ministers, 13 deputy ministers and nine provincial ministers, 2 vice-presidents- the size of the executive is nowhere near lean. Compare this to the USA which has 15 cabinet ministers, Germany has 14, Japan has 19, Kenya 20, and China has 26. The USA has a population that is 21 times bigger than Zimbabwe, China is 92.4 times bigger. How then does one justify 29 ministers and 13 deputy ministers? The lean government makes it easy to do business with. I have personally witnessed the nightmare of dealing with a bloated government.
Zimbabwe is experiencing a structural regression, with an acceleration of de-industrialisation and economic informalisation. Whether he denies it or not Mnangagwa has been part of the leadership that led to this economic regression. Worse still, Mr Mnangagwa is presiding over unprecedented confusion, economic meltdown and violence we haven't seen in as many years. These challenges are caused by difficult economic problems, including infrastructure and regulatory deficiencies, policy uncertainty, and insufficient formal employment.
We can see the glaring mistake done by current President who recently appointed government leadership based on party loyalty, tribal lines or connectedness. Instead, the President should have picked the best citizens to run the country. Unfortunately, we are seeing a bunch of individuals whose combination of financial mismanagement, disrespect of the law and business ignorance can only by their venality. For comprehensive success, Zimbabwe needs exceptional leadership. This means a team lead by an inspirational leader of the second Republic, ably supported by shrewd economic architects and roving philosophers. This exceptional team will implement exceptional policies.
Zimbabwe has massive land and natural resources. But this country has been transformed into a land of villages, rundown urban areas and an endless shortage of basic commodities. Basic economic freedom, which is a very important component of total freedom has been taken away, resulting in an exodus of Zimbabweans into the diaspora. This trend is accelerating at an alarming rate under the current regime.
For a complete transformation, Zimbabwe needs a leader who understands the politics of this diverse country and put together the laws that create a stable, peaceful place that makes it a magnet for national, regional and international investors. No amount of publicity stunts will create a shortcut to this rationale. The leader must believe that Zimbabwe's development and growth is tied to the shared values of its different ethnic, political and religious groups. Unless he changes, Mnangagwa currently has too much baggage to be a uniter and statesman par excellence who can command the respect of all. The "tichingotonga" mantra the President continues to boast about shows that he has failed to transform into a national leader guided by pragmatism.
Pragmatism means that a country does not try to reinvent the wheel or charter expensive planes for endless trips to nowhere. Need good smart researchers in the president's office. No matter what problem the country encounters, somebody, somewhere, has solved it. Let us copy the solution and adapt it to Zimbabwe. Copying best practices are something any country can do. However, implementing "Honesty" is the hardest thing to do. Corruption is the single biggest reason why most Third World countries have failed. The greatest weakness of Zimbabwe's founding fathers was that they were ruthlessly dishonest, and this includes ED. They failed and still fail to see that being shrewd and cunning was more than sloganeering.
Transformation dictates that the new leader be willing to keep the government small, efficient and honest—qualities absent and foreign to Mnangagwa and his Zanu-PF. With 20 cabinet ministers, 13 deputy ministers and nine provincial ministers, 2 vice-presidents- the size of the executive is nowhere near lean. Compare this to the USA which has 15 cabinet ministers, Germany has 14, Japan has 19, Kenya 20, and China has 26. The USA has a population that is 21 times bigger than Zimbabwe, China is 92.4 times bigger. How then does one justify 29 ministers and 13 deputy ministers? The lean government makes it easy to do business with. I have personally witnessed the nightmare of dealing with a bloated government.
Source - Dr Gus Manatsa
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