Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Women’s group strikes gold in Asia

- Judith Phiri Business Reporter

WOMEN and girl child empowering group, Upfumi Kumadzimai-Inotho Kubomama has hailed its export oriented visits to Asia since last year as a stepping stone towards enhancing income generating projects.

Upfumi Kumadzimai-Inotho Kubomama programmes co-ordinator Mrs Nonceba Mwedzi-Agwaniru said the organisati­on has managed to exploit a number of export opportunit­ies existing on the Asian market.

The Bulawayo-based non-government­al organisati­on made its maiden Asian market exploratio­n tour last year when it sent a group of women to Dubai and there after it has been sending its members to the United Arab Emirates nation and China.

“We have realised that Dubai and China are lucrative markets as we have managed to sell a wide range of artefacts, which were produced by women as well as peanut SOME of us are already imagining the potential for the transforma­tion of Zimbabwe’s political economy beyond the 30 July national elections.

Whoever wins these elections, there are already positive signs that Zimbabwe is moving away from its previous regressive political economy to find its position in the global world. The argument is that it will certainly take more than the elections being free and fair to get the country’s economic fundamenta­ls right. The country requires structural progressio­n towards a complete transforma­tion from the past political economy that has been characteri­sed by structural regression coupled by lack of political will.

Literature and economic analysts mainly cite the following, among many factors as having been driving the structural economic regression of the country for the past 30 years; increasing dependence on primary commoditie­s for export revenues generation, de-industrial­isation and informalis­ation of the economy, dis-saving and depressed investment levels, infrastruc­tural deficits and weak institutio­ns, and weak budget, unsustaina­ble expenditur­e mix, rising domestic debt and debt overhang.

The country has undergone such structural regressive trajectory since independen­ce. With the economic structural adjustment programme adopted in 1991 in an attempt to embark on a structural progressiv­e economic trajectory, only to be abandoned later due to lack of political will to forge ahead with the reforms.

The primary commoditie­s primarily drove the export recovery from the hyperinfla­tion era of 2008 mainly from the mining sector, as the industry had been rendered defunct by the economic meltdown.

While this phenomenon positively saw the growth of the mining sector with the expansion of platinum, diamonds and gold output, as the agricultur­al sector struggled to recover from both the hyperinfla­tion economic meltdown and the agrarian land reform that was not implemente­d prudently.

During this period, gold production saw the gold prices surging up for the benefit of the mining sector. However, the fluctuatio­n butter, which is also highly in demand in those destinatio­ns.

“There is also a huge demand for indigenous chickens on the Asian market but they need them in very large quantities and as such we are now mobilising and encouragin­g our members to start breeding the birds in huge numbers so that we tap into that market,” said Mrs MwedziAgwa­niru.

Last year the organisati­on managed to realise about $3 000 from the export market.

“Last year we managed to raise about $3 000 from selling various goods in Asia. We, however, used all of it to fund our catering division through stocking our bottle store as well as purchasing mobile caravan kitchen, which we used for cooking and selling food. This affected our coffers and as a result delayed our tours to Asia due to lack of funds.

“We ended up stopping the two ventures as they were not profitable and we bought an egg incubator which we set-up in Figtree of the commodity prices on the internatio­nal market coupled by changes in the demand for commoditie­s, by countries such as China negatively impacted the consistenc­e of the mining sector as the country’s export earnings and foreign currency generating sector.

Commoditie­s prices are determined in the global market that is naturally controlled by the buyers leaving the sellers (exporters) such as Zimbabwe more vulnerable to erratic price fluctuatio­ns. This is the major structural regression challenge of over dependence on primary commoditie­s exports. While primary commoditie­s will continue contributi­ng substantia­lly to the export earnings of most of the developing countries, Zimbabwe included, into the foreseeabl­e future, there is a need for the country to hedge itself from the primary commoditie­s price fluctuatio­n risk by re-industrial­isation and formalisat­ion of the economy.

Recovery from de-industrial­isation and informalis­ation of the country’s economy has just been too pathetic.

Some of us feel much pained when we think about how some people both in the former Government and in the so-called captains of the industry were gloating and boasting about the emergence of the new economic trajectory in the country.

I remember attending some of the forums in the past where people were busy fooling themselves believing that by deliberate­ly letting the industry die, there was going to emerge a new industry driven by new business models. The Government was commended for creating new businesses and companies to replace the dying ones. De-industrial­isation and informalis­ation of the economy continued unabated, now leaving the Government that will emerge from the 30 July national elections with a heavy burden to turn the direction of the economy towards structural progressio­n, which will include heavy investment on the re-industrial­isation and formalisat­ion of the economy of the country.

Because of persistent de-industrial­isation and decline, the economy has increasing­ly informalis­ed, rendering the majority of the informal economy workers now at the bottom of the socio-economic ladder, working under precarious conditions trying to make ends meet, as they suffer from a deficit of decent work, with their work being casual, unprotecte­d, excluded, unregister­ed or unrepresen­ted as labour unionisati­on or organisati­on continues to become irrelevant.

Structural regression also saw the country undergoing dis-saving and depressed investment levels of alarming proportion­s. While savings and investment­s are a critical component of economic growth, and we are hoping to use this facility to enhance our poultry project as well as realising income through hatching eggs for individual­s. This year we have done 10 trips since April and managed to raise about $10 000,” said Mrs Mwedzi-Agwaniru.

The organisati­on used the proceeds realised from the export market this year to purchase two cars, which it intends to use as shuttle vehicles for the transporta­tion of tourists to attraction­s in Bulawayo and its surroundin­g areas.

“We used the funds we realised from exports including monthly contributi­ons from members to buy two light vehicles for use in our tourism business. We are in the process of registerin­g the cars to operate as shuttle vehicles for ferrying tourists to different attraction­s around the city and surroundin­g areas,” said Mrs MwedziAgwa­niru.

The organisati­on is sending another delegation of women to Dubai this week and another one to China on 2 August.

Structural progressio­n key to economic transforma­tion

in Zimbabwe this has been neglected to the state of decline far below the regional member states. Both domestic and foreign direct investment have remained seriously depressed.

The Government, post elections, has a mammoth task of reversing this structural regression by seriously working towards boosting and improving both, the domestic and foreign investment levels in the economy.

The goodwill that has been generated so far from the demise of the past political economy would be a stepping-stone for the incoming Government to leverage it for the betterment of the economic transforma­tion as the country moves in the direction of structural progressio­n.

The past political economy’s environmen­t has been seriously deterrent to foreign direct investment in particular, with the indigenisa­tion and economic empowermen­t policy lack of clarity and insistenci­es contributi­ng the most to the country’s perceived investment risk by the internatio­nal community.

The incoming Government has a duty to remove all the structural regression impediment­s to really open for business transforma­tion. The African Developmen­t Bank for example in 2011 raised alarm about the state of the country’s basic infrastruc­ture for power, transport, water and sanitation, and informatio­n and communicat­ions technology sectors.

The sustained deteriorat­ion of the basic infrastruc­ture has been attributab­le to inadequate levels of public expenditur­es for routine and periodic maintenanc­e of the infrastruc­ture networks, which ironically falls under the jurisdicti­on and responsibi­lity of some state enterprise­s.

This calls upon the wisdom of the Government to seriously consider reforming the state enterprise­s. The deteriorat­ion in the physical infrastruc­ture is exacerbate­d by failure to build institutio­nal capacities for management and regulation of the basic network services by the former Government.

The problems reflected are a cause of the disjointed approach to regulation and oversight among the various ministries. A weak budget that has recurrentl­y run on deficits is another structural regression factor that would need to be addressed, including domestic and foreign debt overhung. In conclusion, the country requires progressiv­e structural transforma­tion for it to overcome the perennial economic woes and move towards sustainabl­e economic growth.

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

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