Business Day

Zimbabwe woos SA investors

- Kevin Samaita

Zimbabwean finance minister Mthuli Ncube has called on SA investors to put their money into state companies his government is privatisin­g, while also revealing that there are no immediate plans to adopt the rand as an official currency of the country.

Zimbabwean finance minister Mthuli Ncube has called on SA investors to put their money into state companies that his government is privatisin­g, but there are no immediate plans to adopt the rand as an official currency.

In an interview with Business Day, Ncube assured SA investors that they are welcome to invest in Zimbabwe and that reforms he is implementi­ng will bear fruit. “We are open for business to SA investors. This is why we are talking about the ‘One Stop Shop’ under the Zimbabwe Investment and Developmen­t Authority, which will fast-track all the necessary work for internatio­nal investors.”

Ncube’s plans include the privatisat­ion of the Zimbabwe Mining Developmen­t Corporatio­n, Agribank and the People’s Own Savings Bank, mobile operator NetOne, fixed-line operator TelOne, fuel company Petrotrade, Allied Timbers and the Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n of Zimbabwe.

“We also want to raise money out of privatisat­ion. Some of these valuations will be more clear when they go to the market. We know that there is value in them, we also know that it will be a process of further empowering Zimbabwean­s, crowding in foreign direct investment and local investment,” Ncube said.

He wants parastatal­s to privatise, list on the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange or the JSE and deepen capital markets

On the value that could be derived from such investment­s, Harare-based economist John Robertson said: “Any potential investor, including those from SA, would need to cross-check the value of these parastatal­s.

“They also need to really get the correct position from the government on whether they will get free rein to run some of the companies. There are some that could be profitable but others have huge debts.”

Ncube has been at the centre of a storm since his appointmen­t in September, with the economy in a tailspin. Zimbabwe is facing an acute currency shortage, a thriving currency black market and steep price increases of basic commoditie­s.

Industry players and the opposition MDC Alliance have called on the government to adopt the rand as the official currency. But Ncube said this was out of the question for now: “Given that Zimbabwe is a soft economy, should we also be adopting the soft rand?

“It’s a fact that you have seen some volatility in the rand itself as a reference currency. There are other options, and we will pursue those options. The issue now is protecting the value of deposits before we think of what currency to adopt in future.”

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