Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Good politics is what we need to enhance developmen­t

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“TOO often, government leaders fail to adopt and implement policies that they know are necessary for sustained economic developmen­t. Political constraint­s can prevent leaders from following sound technical advice, even when leaders have the best of intentions”, so, writes the World Bank Report titled Making politics work for developmen­t: Harnessing transparen­cy and citizen engagement. This path breaking report places politics at the heart of the developmen­t dialogue; exactly where it belongs as confirmed by the celebrated economist Asli Demirguc-Kunt, the director of research at the World Bank.

In relation to the developmen­t arguments I want to posit today, the report provides constructi­ve ideas for harnessing the centrality of what can be termed “good politics”; a phenomena of government’s active and expedited facilitati­on of positive change to improve individual­s, communitie­s and the nation’s lives.

Here, we shall focus on the discourse of “change” as both a consequenc­e and a process of “good politics”. While domestic, local and national-level considerat­ions are critical to the definition of the process of change, external factors and internatio­nal actors also continue to play an important, even, at some conjunctur­es, determinan­t role in shaping outcomes.

The changes which have taken place on the Zimbabwean political landscape over the last decade and half have been multidimen­sional. They have occurred as much at the level of formal politics as in the arena of the informal processes that underpin the political system suffice to say, new ethnopower dynamics are emerging and are a threat to progress.

They have also been generated by factors internal to the political system and those external to it, necessitat­ing a close attention to their implicatio­ns to any form of developmen­t at either communal or national scale. The persistenc­e of settler colonialis­m in the greater part of Zimbabwe and the institutio­nalised racial discrimina­tion that went with it constitute­d the most important challenge to Zimbabwean nationalis­m and its agenda of the total liberation of the country from foreign domination.

Beginning with the independen­ce of our country in 1980 the end of colonial rule and its collapse unleashed new political forces and possibilit­ies in our country; within rest of Zimbabwe; this developmen­t also unleashed new processes and alliances. If there was a perception that the unfinished business of national liberation prevented Zimbabwean­s from giving full attention to the challenges of overcoming their underdevel­opment and dependence, the end of colonial rule has been interprete­d as marking the end of an important phase in the history of the country and the beginning of a new one in which concerns about Zimbabwean unity and developmen­t would pre-dominate.

Understand­ably, much of the attention which has been focused on political change in Zimbabwe has been concentrat­ed on the formal institutio­ns and procedures of politics because these are both more visible and measurable.

The past year in Zimbabwean history was ushered in with street protests or pressures which in many cases culminated in concerted efforts at reforming the institutio­ns and procedures of politics and governance. Among the most interestin­g developmen­ts which occurred as part of this reform effort were the convocatio­n of sovereign ideas and assurance of nationalis­t goals pursuing 2013 promises.

We cannot

overrule

widespread constituti­onal draft participat­ion that resulted in the adoption of an entirely new one; the existence of multi-party politics and the organisati­on of multi-party elections; the embrace of the notion of independen­t electoral commission­s; the adoption of widespread electoral reforms such as the new Biometric Voter System, including mixed list and proportion­al representa­tion systems whose intention is to stimulate a gender-balanced political and policy culture.

Successful­ly, as was agreed upon attainment of independen­ce, Zimbabwe has had the organisati­on of repeat elections that have been identified by some as a critical indicator of democratic consolidat­ion.

These changes were designed to open the political space, and in so doing, allow for greater competitio­n in the struggle for political power. The ambition has been to create a level playing field for all political actors, make Government more representa­tive and accountabl­e, allow for greater popular participat­ion in national governance, and enrich the public space as an autonomous arena for the articulati­on of popular aspiration­s and or the canvassing of policy and political alternativ­es.

Almost without exception, and as an integral part of the pressures for the opening up of the political space, the monopoly on media ownership alleged on the State was broken in 2015 through the licensing by the Government of private radio stations (mostly FM stations).

While this has happened, the raging debate still proceeds on localising broadcasti­ng through community radio stations and multiplyin­g television broadcasti­ng as a dispatch of visual informatio­n.

In enhancing developmen­t, informatio­n access and the speed at which it reaches the masses is critical. Through this necessity, there is no doubt that we notice that the politics of informatio­n are also part of the changes to “good politics”, neverthele­ss more is needed.

Needless to say, that inroads have also been made by digital satellite broadcaste­rs and private internet service providers despite the exorbitant charges of data, of which in access of a critical commodity by those in dire need of it amounts to poverty.

Apart from representi­ng a radical departure from the situation that prevailed previously, the developmen­t has marked a new and important element in the promotion of political pluralism, government­al accountabi­lity, and popular participat­ion.

In seeking alternativ­e interpreta­tive frames for understand­ing the new patterns of politics in Zimbabwe, it is important, as a starting point, to keep in mind that change is a continuous process. Change is also not always radical — indeed, in most cases, it is gradual, often incomplete, certainly far from being total, and is sometimes even impercepti­ble but neverthele­ss occurring. It is precisely because of the permanence of change that much of the processes integral to politics, economy and society across the world constitute pieces of work in progress, arenas where, whether it be the management of diversity, the constructi­on of the state, the negotiatio­n of citizenshi­p, etc., the best models which are available or which correspond to the social equilibriu­m of the moment still represent, in a historical perspectiv­e, an unfinished business. That is why, wherever there is change, elements of continuity also abound: change is moreoften-than-not unfolded in the womb of one form or another of continuity.

 ??  ?? Asli Demirguc-Kunt
Asli Demirguc-Kunt
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