Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Paying the price of crisis of disconnect­ion

- Dr Bongani Ngwenya

PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa’s appeal to countries that imposed the targeted sanctions on Zimbabwe for their removal is quite justifiabl­e as his administra­tion has opened a new page economical­ly and politicall­y.

In his statement published by the New York Times, which he also posted on his Facebook page, the President said those insisting on the illegal embargo were living in the past. This followed the decision by the United States of America to extend the targeted sanctions.

“Zimbabwe is changing — politicall­y, economical­ly and societally — and we ask those who have punished us in the past to reconsider their sanctions against us. Zimbabwe is a land of potential, but it will be difficult to realise it with the weight of sanctions hanging from our necks,” he said.

If I may be allowed to be a bit controvers­ial today. I want to try and put the current economic problems that Zimbabwe is facing in a broader political, social and historical context, to suggest that the economy and society we live with today are the result of a set of values we have sub-consciousl­y come to embrace for a very long time, and to suggest some real causes for optimism such as the new political dispensati­on in the country that we can use this crisis, which I have decided to refer to as the “crisis of disconnect­ion” as an opportunit­y to build a better and more sustainabl­e economic recovery, growth and social justice for all. The crisis of disconnect­ion: Some analysts and some of us included are noticing the progress in attracting Foreign Direct Investment that is being made, though the progress is never as fast as what management is first class. To this end, the institute has already signed an MOU with the South Africa Bureau for People Practices (SABPP) and we have adopted the SABPP standards and a huge number of members have been trained already,” he said.

Among the 48 graduates, 35 students scored credits in the Diploma of Human Resources Management, 11 students got credits in the Higher Diploma in Human Resources Management, one student also got a credit in Management Developmen­t and the best student got a distinctio­n in people would have hoped for and expected. There is a strong feeling among the analysts that Zimbabwe’s ability to attract foreign investors is badly frustrated by the high cost of doing business, erratic electricit­y supplies, high taxes and a poor transport infrastruc­ture. To me these factors are hamstringi­ng the potential for domestic investment more than the potential for foreign direct investment and my argument is that Zimbabwe’s ability to attract foreign investors is badly frustrated by the crisis of disconnect­ion that has been there for a long time now.

I believe we are living through a deep crisis of the previous political economy. At its core is a corrosive problem of disconnect­ion as a result of the past political decisions that were made, which is actually about a sense of powerlessn­ess that we have found ourselves in.

It is becoming very difficult to untangle ourselves from. The perpetuati­on of the targeted sanctions by the USA is evidence of how rooted and entrenched the resentment of the old Zimbabwe’s political and economic policies by the West and the internatio­nal community is so deep. Naturally, politics is the traditiona­l way that a society expresses its own sense of ownership of destiny, but our past politics has been a failure. The economic difficulti­es that the country is suffering are a symptom of political and social/cultural failure in which we have allowed ourselves to become dependent on a political-economic model which was flawed, and has accelerate­d and legitimise­d the collapse of the values and virtues that we needed as a society.

I would like to take a minute to flesh out this analysis and how we might convert it into a positive programme for renewal. I want to suggest we should view the persistent negative perception­s of our country by some sections of the internatio­nal community, notwithsta­nding the positive and good signs of warming up to the country by the United Kingdom and other European Union countries so far not as the cause of our economic predicamen­t, but actually as a symptom of a deeper problem in the way we have allowed our political economy to evolve in recent years.

Now, I know “political economy” is an alien, intellectu­al Westminste­r term. But I believe the people of this country are coming to make sense of the state we are in in their own terms. Instead of thinking that everything was fine until the culminatio­n of the hyperinfla­tion era of the 2008 the then Government and political dispensati­on should have abandoned the unpopular policies and read the signs Labour relations.

Peace Security sponsored the best student with prize money and a trophy.

Meanwhile, IPMZ is partnering universiti­es and colleges offering Human Resources Management Degrees and Diplomas to ensure a smooth transition from academia to practice.

The institute seeks to ensure that universiti­es and colleges deliver human resources practition­ers who are relevant to Industry and are competitiv­e globally. and symptoms as indication­s of a deeper crisis of political economy in which public faith in the very institutio­ns and structure of our system of Government was draining away, and had been draining away for quite a long time.

I believe that underlying the current economic problems we face is a deeper sense of a system gone wrong, a deeply broken covenant between citizens and state, intergener­ational tension and an increasing­ly fragmented and dysfunctio­nal public value set.

Politicall­y, people saw the political parties and political class as part of the problem more than part of the solution, and felt a rising sense of frustratio­n and disappoint­ment at the powerlessn­ess of modern life. Socially, people felt increasing­ly isolated and atomised. Powerless to shape their own destinies, all too often living beside, but not knowing, even their neighbours, and with too little time for the things they knew really mattered. All what mattered was how to survive, how to put food on the table.

This is what I call the “crisis of disconnect­ion”. Disconnect­ed economy, politics and society.

On a positive note, the new political dispensati­on gives this country some sense of hope for a sustained and sustainabl­e recovery, and the new Government should use this crisis as the basis for embracing a profoundly different — more locally driven and more connected — model of economic growth and social and political reform — building a more connected model of political economy — both a practical and social reconnecti­on.

And to suggest that the economic situation and challenges that the new Government and political dispensati­on faces to build a more sustainabl­e economic recovery is an opportunit­y to rebuild something not just economical­ly sustainabl­e, but a model of economic growth which is more supportive of the wider society and local community, environmen­t, politics and values we cherish as a nation.

In conclusion, moving forward, the true ultimate stage that will determine Zimbabwe’s progressio­n forward is this coming election. It is to show the world that this is the new moment because if anything bad happens in this election, then it is over. In the 1980s, Zimbabwe was a good country and we had investors from all over, but afterwards, they all left, but I can tell you that they can come back.

Dr Bongani Ngwenya is based at the University of KwaZulu-Natal as a Post-doctoral Research Fellow and can be contacted on nbongani@gmail.com

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