Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

“Siamese twins”- Infrastruc­ture and economic growth

- Limukani Ncube

VIVIEN Foster and Cecilia BricenoGar­mendia, in their booklet titled, Africa’s infrastruc­ture: A time for transforma­tion, say that infrastruc­ture has been responsibl­e for more than half of Africa’s recent improved growth performanc­e and has the potential to contribute even more in the future.

However, they go on to note that research has shown that Africa’s infrastruc­ture networks increasing­ly lag behind those of other developing countries and are characteri­sed by missing regional links and stagnant household access. This is partly because “infrastruc­ture services are twice as expensive as elsewhere, reflecting both dis economies of scale in production and high profit margins caused by lack of competitio­n.

“The cost of addressing Africa’s infrastruc­ture needs is around $93 billion a year, about one-third of which is for maintenanc­e—more than twice the Commission for Africa’s (2005) estimate. The infrastruc­ture challenge varies greatly by country type—fragile states face an impossible burden and resource-rich countries lag despite their wealth. A large share of Africa’s infrastruc­ture is domestical­ly financed, with the central government budget being the main driver of infrastruc­ture investment.”

Experts say infrastruc­ture is the cornerston­e of any economy and it is crucial for government­s to step up their investment in the sector. While the country took a lot of positive steps in terms of infrastruc­ture developmen­t since independen­ce in 1980, with the road network being looked at again in recent years through the rehabilita­tion of the 800km stretch of the Plumtree to Mutare road, recent heavy rains and flooding appear to have cut short some of the benefits in the sector.

The Plumtree-Mutare road project was undertaken after Government secured a $206 million loan facility from the Developmen­t Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA) to Infralink, a 70-30 a partnershi­p between Zimbabwe National Roads Administra­tion (Zinara) and a South African company Group Five, which was involved in the actual rebuilding of the roads.

There is no doubt that the completed Plumtree -Mutare road project, and the dualisatio­n of the Beitbridge-Harare-Chirundu highway set to commence anytime soon after all loose ends to the deal were tied, are massive projects that have shown Government’s commitment to improve the livelihood­s of people, and also touching on all four strategic clusters of the government economic blue print Zim-Asset. Road building and rehabilita­tion rests on the Zim-Asset cluster of infrastruc­ture and utilities, but also touches on value addition and beneficiat­ion, food security and nutrition, social services and poverty eradicatio­n, as an improved road network is the gate way to economic success, and the actual road works come with many spin-offs such as employment creation and other economic activities downstream in local communitie­s.

There has also been a lot of investment in social amenities like schools and clinics, with Community Ownership Share Trusts playing a significan­t role in recent years, but yet again, incessant rains since the Christmas period have reversed some of the gains, with schools and clinics among the damaged infrastruc­ture, apart from loss of human life and disruption of other services.

President Mugabe declared a national state of disaster, to allow all arms of the state and the private sector to join hands and source resources to help people affected by floods, after thousands were left homeless after floods swept away their homes, in areas like Tsholotsho in Matabelela­nd North, and other parts of Matabelela­nd South , Midlands and Masvingo provinces.

The Minister of Local Government, Public Works and National Housing, Saviour Kasukuwere, revealed that it now requires the government to partner with the private sector and nongovernm­ental organisati­ons to mend the destroyed infrastruc­ture.

In addition, different Ministries have been mandated to seek resources to repair damaged infrastruc­ture that fall under their purview. Transport and Infrastruc­tural Developmen­t Dr Joram Gumbo said several Ministries met recently to discuss the damage that has been caused by the rains and agreed that each ministry will seek funds to rehabilita­te the infrastruc­ture that was damaged. At least five bridges in major roads have been affected, and the Government has already set in motion mechanisms to remedy the situation.

“We had an Office of the President Committee meeting …… where all ministries were present. The agenda of the meeting was to try and mobilise funds and work on the disasters caused by the rains. For example, the Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education is expected to raise money to repair schools damaged by the floods, and the Ministry of Health and Child Welfare is expected to raise funds as well which will be needed to treat flood victims and so on. Our ministry has managed to raise $14,5 million out of the required $100 million which we are now distributi­ng to rehabilita­te all the roads and bridges which were destroyed by the floods,” said Dr Gumbo.

A recent World Bank study found that the poor state of infrastruc­ture in many parts of Africa reduced national economic growth by two percentage points every year and cut business productivi­ty by as much as 40 percent, making Africa — in spite of its enormous mineral and other natural resources — the region with the lowest productivi­ty levels in the world. This means that a lot of effort has to be put in rehabilita­ting the infrastruc­ture post the rainy season, so as to spur economic developmen­t.

Even big economies in the world, the United States and China have repeatedly said that infrastruc­ture developmen­t has played a key role in the turnaround of their fortunes on the economic front.

With a bumper harvest expected from Command Agricultur­e, the road network has to be working so that farmers are able to transport their produce for delivery at the Grain Marketing Board depots dotted around the country, the silos also need attention, and tobacco farmers, who give the country the much needed foreign currency, are in the market, and they also require access to towns and cities to do business, as well as cotton farmers. This is not to suggest that there is no movement on our roads, but the gravity of the situation cannot go unnoticed, as a lot of money in needed, with the Minister of Transport saying his Ministry would need about $80 million for roads alone. Other sectors are yet to come up with conclusive figures.

“I don’t even know where to start because it’s bad everywhere. It’s actually disastrous. Roads and bridges throughout the country have been destroyed. The problem is that with the rains, we can’t even construct a road. As such, it makes our work very difficult. I am currently in the process of mobilising resources for the rebuilding of the roads and bridges. From the Ministry of Finance we need $30 million and $50 million from the banks as loans through Zinara. I am also engaging other companies in the constructi­on sector to also chip in,” Dr Gumbo was quoted as saying.

Massive flooding often has a devastatin­g impact on the economy and the livelihood people. Loss of human life, property damage, destructio­n of crops, loss of livestock, non-functionin­g infrastruc­ture facilities, and the possibilit­y of waterborne diseases are just some of the ways a flood can impact upon a community, according to recent findings, reiterates a blogger.

“The personal safety risks, reduction in purchasing power, mass migration, and loss of land value in a flood plain makes areas prone to flooding extremely vulnerable on several levels. The additional costs associated with rehabilita­tion, relocation of displaced people and removal of property from flood-damaged areas can also divert money that could be used in other sectors,” adds Leon Bracey, the article, the Impacts of Flooding.

The Southern African region, like the rest of the world, has in recent years been involved in a number of projects to remedy the adverse situation brought about by climate change, which brings about excessive heat, rains and drought, as experience­d in recent years.

The government of Mozambique and the African Water Facility (AWF) in January entered into a grant agreement for a feasibilit­y study on Urban Sanitation, Drainage and Solid Waste Management in Chimoio and Inhambane. The grant project is expected to improve livelihood conditions and climate change resilience for the 310 000 citizens of the Municipali­ties of Chimoio and Inhambane. This will be achieved by reducing the risk of flooding and improving the public health. Mozambique was also not spared from flooding, with the Inhambane Province severely impacted by the strong winds and flooding brought about by the Tropical Storm Dineo. Reports say 44 people have died and 79 000 have been affected mainly in the central and southern provinces in January. Such event, experts say, reinforce the need to mitigate the impacts of climatic disasters as the effects are aggravated by a combinatio­n of insufficie­nt storm water drainage, sea intrusion and old and collapsed sanitation systems.

Zimbabwe and Mozambique were not the only countries in the region left with a massive task of rebuilding infrastruc­ture after the heavy rains and flooding. In February, Botswana was hit by the tropical depression, ex-Dineo which caused significan­t flooding across the country. As a result of inundation­s, bridges collapsed, roads were closed, and health facilities have been flooded. The Government was forced to close schools in some districts to reduce the risk of children drowning. In Namibia some 23 581 learners from schools in Omusati Region were forced to stay at home as a precaution­ary measure taken by 67 schools that were flooded. Other infrastruc­ture was also destroyed, giving the central government a task to source funding for rehabilita­tion work that was, just in the rest of countries in the region, unbudgeted for. The situation was the same elsewhere in countries like South Africa.

“The accessibil­ity and quality of infrastruc­ture in a region help shape domestic firms’ investment decisions and determines the region’s attractive­ness to foreign investors.” That is why infrastruc­ture rehabilita­tion is a number one priority in the region, albeit for now, as a result of natural disasters aka force majeure.

As I pen this article, I am reading President Robert Mugabe’s 1979 memorial speech on the Chitepo Day. I am asking myself if we still have such politician­s. What would our politics be like had he been still alive? How did he sound like? What would he say about miscalcula­ted politics, factionali­sm, disenchant­ed nationalis­ts, misreprese­nted semantics and the growing but misdirecte­d secession mantra? All these simple sounding but hard to answer questions clogged my mind until I thought of how articulate he was if he were to write about propaganda and how it has been misreprese­nted by disenfranc­hised political groups.

This has become the most flattering word in opposition in reference to the establishm­ents’ political messaging. My people, words are like wine, continuous dosage of the same quantity gets you drunk. The “propaganda” drunkennes­s you see even in those who have no grasp of the etymology of the word, its idea, the history and its intended use flaunting and assuming to use it as a tool of literature analysis is abysmal. One thing they don’t know is that a word is the easily abused entity on earth, particular­ly English words. Some of you as you are reading you are thinking of words, phrases whose meanings you thought you knew for so long until one day someone corrected you. I know one esteemed lad who misunderst­ood “suffrage”, to him it was an adjective and I bet for the past entirety of his life he carried that meaning until that fateful day when we corrected him. I bet he shall never forget that day because linguistic correction­s when one is so confident are worse off than stripping a man of his manhood in public.

You intellectu­ally undress a person when you simply prove their morphologi­cal inadequaci­es, when they display syntactica­l poverty in language use, it’s only then when we decide to put on our linguistic stethoscop­es to detect your error especially when you want to negotiate boundaries using terms you have no idea of. To some of us, linguistic­s is our forte, we simply choose to tone down for our lovely readers who incessantl­y request that we should speak to them in that awesome, chilled language because they appreciate our ideas which have changed their worldviews. Uzasala wedwa ulokhe usithi yipropagan­da yodwa leyi .Tshintsha! Propaganda: Opposition is feeding us

more of it these days If Chitepo were alive, he would tell us to call out hypocrites and political misogynist­s. Society and idea consumers have been dogmatised that propaganda is referral to Zanu-PF only yet the largest production of it is in opposition politics. To those who have no history of media, language and politics let me notify you that propaganda is informatio­n that is not objective and is used primarily to influence an audience and further an agenda. It’s often by presenting facts selectivel­y-sometimes lying by omission to encourage a particular synthesis or perception. They calculatin­gly use loaded language to produce an emotional rather than a rational response to the informatio­n that is presented. It’s not surprising that just before reading this passage you have had a dosage of “How Zanu-PF wants to rig elections using the BVR, so let’s demonstrat­e and bring back the UNDP”. There is absolutely no reasoning except that the system has been re-elected into power for 37 years hence its justificat­ion for our

 ??  ?? Minister Joram Gumbo
Minister Joram Gumbo
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