News / National
Kasukuwere wins empowerment spat with Gono
10 Jul 2012 at 01:29hrs | Views
EMPOWERMENT Minister Saviour Kasukuwere has won his empowerment battle against the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe governor, Gideon Gono. For now, it looks like the two men have "cut the crap" and ended the mutually-destructive public dispute.
Kasukuwere's victory, ends the public spat between the two officials over the takeover of foreign-owned banks in line with the country's economic empowerment legislation.
Gono is reported to have confirmed that Kasukuwere called him and told him to tow the line.
"The Minister (Kasukuwere) called me earlier this (Monday) morning from Dubai and we spoke at length very cordially and, like the brothers we are, reconciled our positions and agreed we had 'assisted newspapers to do good business out of our differences' and that enough was enough.
"We will (now) work things out taking each other's views on board before we do anything. I am happy with the new way forward and the mode of collaboration we have agreed upon," said Gono
The row between the two was sparked by a government notice issued last week by Kasukuwere ordering foreign banks to reduce shareholding in their Zimbabwe operations to the 49 per cent required by law within a year.
During the empowerement muscle flexing - Kasukuwere - reminded Gono that implementation of the indigenisation programme was not his responsibility.
"I know some would have wanted to be doing this task, but let's not turn it into unwarranted personal attacks.
"Discharging national responsibilities require maturity and sober reasoning. We will not fall for the attacks; but will continue to be guided by the rule of law and the necessary transformation of key institutions," said Kasukuwere targeting Gono.
Kasukuwere says the foreign banks â€" two British, Barclays and Standard Chartered, and three South African, Stanbic, MBCA and CABS building society â€" must be "transformed" because they play political games by denying "you (Zimbabweans) funding".
But Gono, backed by Finance Minister Tendai Biti among others, is urging a cautious approach, arguing that applying the 51 per cent local ownership threshold to banking could destabilise a sensitive and key sector of the country's struggling economy.
The RBZ chief insists he is not against the indigenisation programme but has reservations over "technical methodologies that seem to be blind to the fact that, as with everything we do in life, the devil is in the details of the implementation."
He adds that Zimbabweans should not be quick to forget "the way price controls of 2007 were implemented, leading to unintended consequences that gave birth to BACOSSI (Basic Commodity Supply Side Intervention) and fuelled hyperinflation because a lot of money needed to be printed to buy forex with which to entice industry to go back into production."
Gono is currently in Beijing, China, attending a shareholders meeting of the African Import and Export Bank (Afreximbank) which is being hosted by the Chinese Import-Export Bank.
He said: "Both institutions are key to crucial to financing Zimbabwe's trade and development needs at a time other development agencies such as the IMF, the World Bank and the African Development Bank are not extending support to the country due to its arrears situation and the sanctions."
Kasukuwere's victory, ends the public spat between the two officials over the takeover of foreign-owned banks in line with the country's economic empowerment legislation.
Gono is reported to have confirmed that Kasukuwere called him and told him to tow the line.
"The Minister (Kasukuwere) called me earlier this (Monday) morning from Dubai and we spoke at length very cordially and, like the brothers we are, reconciled our positions and agreed we had 'assisted newspapers to do good business out of our differences' and that enough was enough.
"We will (now) work things out taking each other's views on board before we do anything. I am happy with the new way forward and the mode of collaboration we have agreed upon," said Gono
The row between the two was sparked by a government notice issued last week by Kasukuwere ordering foreign banks to reduce shareholding in their Zimbabwe operations to the 49 per cent required by law within a year.
During the empowerement muscle flexing - Kasukuwere - reminded Gono that implementation of the indigenisation programme was not his responsibility.
"I know some would have wanted to be doing this task, but let's not turn it into unwarranted personal attacks.
"Discharging national responsibilities require maturity and sober reasoning. We will not fall for the attacks; but will continue to be guided by the rule of law and the necessary transformation of key institutions," said Kasukuwere targeting Gono.
Kasukuwere says the foreign banks â€" two British, Barclays and Standard Chartered, and three South African, Stanbic, MBCA and CABS building society â€" must be "transformed" because they play political games by denying "you (Zimbabweans) funding".
But Gono, backed by Finance Minister Tendai Biti among others, is urging a cautious approach, arguing that applying the 51 per cent local ownership threshold to banking could destabilise a sensitive and key sector of the country's struggling economy.
The RBZ chief insists he is not against the indigenisation programme but has reservations over "technical methodologies that seem to be blind to the fact that, as with everything we do in life, the devil is in the details of the implementation."
He adds that Zimbabweans should not be quick to forget "the way price controls of 2007 were implemented, leading to unintended consequences that gave birth to BACOSSI (Basic Commodity Supply Side Intervention) and fuelled hyperinflation because a lot of money needed to be printed to buy forex with which to entice industry to go back into production."
Gono is currently in Beijing, China, attending a shareholders meeting of the African Import and Export Bank (Afreximbank) which is being hosted by the Chinese Import-Export Bank.
He said: "Both institutions are key to crucial to financing Zimbabwe's trade and development needs at a time other development agencies such as the IMF, the World Bank and the African Development Bank are not extending support to the country due to its arrears situation and the sanctions."
Source - Byo24News