Botswana Guardian

Comment: Moving BAMB, BMC to a new ministry is a wrong turn

-

Government has made a decision to move the troubled Botswana Meat Commission and yet another struggling Botswana Agricultur­al Marketing Board to the new Ministry of Entreprene­urship. Government has not told the public in detail why the decision was taken. However, by the look of things, and basing on current prevailing challenges with the two parastatal­s, we are of the opinion that the move is ill- advised. First and foremost, the entreprene­urship ministry’s core mandate is to drive and inculcate the spirit of entreprene­urship, simple as that. We don’t see why all of a sudden, government believes this new ministry, with a shoestring budget, can be in a position to help bring these parastatal­s back to normalcy. As we speak, BMC, which is a perennial loss making entity, is on the news for being elbowed out of the lucrative Norwegian market. The BMC, cannot pay farmers on time. The BMC, despite being the major export player in the beef market, still fails to make a profit. We strongly believe, the new ministry does not have the capacity to bring back the BMC to life, as its priorities are elsewhere. Its full mettle, as a ministry, is yet to be tested. It has inherited LEA and CEDA, who are also under siege for failing to mentor and fund businesses. If fact, the decision to move the two parastatal­s under Minister Karabo Gare, has itself set the latter up for failure. For a long time, BMC has been under the agricultur­al ministry. We strongly believe the agricultur­e ministry has all the structure necessary to help BMC. The problem is with efficiency. Government should have solved these issue and not parachuted the parastatal into the entreprene­urial ministry, which, even as we speak, is yet to fine- tune its organisati­onal structures. BAMB is not doing any better. The fact that it is run by a caretaker Chief Executive Officer shows there are emerging and old challenges to address. As you read this, consumers, whose pockets have been further dented by COVID - 19 are struggling to buy sorghum which is a staple food. Its price have shot by double, partly because farmers are not producing enough. In fact, the price of a 10 kg sorghum is not far from that of rice of the same quantity. Amid all these, the government finds it fit to move this important corporate to a new ministry which is still finding its feet. BAMB too, is struggling to get sorghum and other staple foods from farmers. In fact, farmers are finding it fit to sell to private players since BAMB does not offer competitiv­e prices, some say. Government should support BAMB, which itself will be in a position to empower farmers to grow more and feed the nation. BAMB should have been left at the agricultur­e ministry, where, like we have mentioned before, there are proper, yet inefficien­t structures which need to be rectified. The two corporates, complement each other. They are better placed with the previous ministry. As we speak, the above challenges are not being solved correctly because, BAMB and BMC services, are housed under two separate ministries with total different mandate. We believe this transition should be halted, more still it was done through a directive, we are told. Let us not play political expediency and address matters of national interest on sober minds.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Botswana