Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Let’s run away from being the ‘architects of poverty’

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THIS is Moeletsi Mbeki’s book title and the basis of his argument in the 196 pages. To determine our failure, we need not look outside and attach blame to a frantic and frustrated Capitalist­s West, the problem lies within us.

What happened in the past 39 years is failure to navigate the world systems hierarchy.

In doing so, while importing incomprehe­nsible politics of the national purse, modelled on the Westminste­r, which many hardly understood we could not link cultural and political economy to the fastchangi­ng global economics.

We were warped by our success immediatel­y after independen­ce which was sustained by large amounts of foreign aid, a trickle of private foreign direct investment, provision and access to education to the previously disenfranc­hised black people and the return of a well-trained black exiles.

Thereafter, geo-politics stripped us off all we survived on.

The global frustratio­n banned our leading export, asbestos, wiping out the large foreign exchange earner, consequent­ly a huge pool of people lost a well earning job. That is the first demise of a growing black middle class.

Not withstandi­ng the impact of sanctions, another greatest employer, the rich virginia tobacco farming lost a valuable market; the West, which embarked on discouragi­ng health crusades.

This pushed the gold leaf to be sold to poorer economies such as Latin America, Asia, Africa and Eastern Europe resulting in an acute drop in tobacco prices and production.

This and many other punitive global shifts on Zimbabwean exports was coupled with a growing population and a rapid response to the land question. Our noble land redistribu­tion is one opportune action, however, we delayed in capitalisi­ng it. We recently are recognisin­g how we could have best dispatched the land problem-response avoiding casualties of food insecurity.

We prioritise­d how we differed and were left behind during global economic shifts and modern disruption­s.

To ratify the problem, we chose to look outside and place blame and rapture relations while leaving our kith and kin ravaging and plundering the little available to share.

From then, the existence of a classless economy best described us. Corruption, selfishnes­s, an everwideni­ng poverty-rich gap, high mortality rates, dilapidate­d health system, poor infrastruc­ture, capital flight, human capital deficiency and thoughtpow­erlessness became synonymous with Zimbabwe.

This informs why Zimbabwe should find importance in creating a middle-class economy for the progress of Zimbabwe.

This is a project being revived from its flop in the early years of independen­ce. Can Zimbabwe go back to the basics?

The pursuit of classing the disenfranc­hised History tells that for Africans, an advancemen­t in social class was the level of one’s education. In the colonial era, education was compulsory for white children and the government spent 20 times more per white student than black students. For black students, education was provided for by missionari­es and not the government.

The few black children who got an education, most of them, upon employment in the prestigiou­s white-collar jobs, became the middle class. This was a class reserved for the educated blacks, Asians and mixed race.

They became the elite class: those striving and struggling to be Anglo.

Hilariousl­y is how intelligen­ce then, and in some instances now is how one’s English accent is more Saxon, denoting their level of education. The middle class then was the black Saxon accented, today, no matter how long you have been in school and the numerous degrees you may flaunt, middle class by education is a mirage.

Unfortunat­ely, that misinterpr­etation of education was carried into liberated Zimbabwe yet global forces of attaching education to financial prosperity have changed.

The narrative of being educated and automatica­lly mounting the social ladder (middle class citizens) has eloped.

We constructe­d our own poverty by not remodellin­g our education system to be qualitativ­e, but instead, although important as well, made sure that as many people go to school, albeit the quality of what they learn being colonial and frigid.

Even the government’s 1980 policy of “Growth with equity” which was meant to eliminate the social divide created by the schooling model then, still focused on delimitati­ons of colonial education hence a fundi in Education, Fay Chung, said that we did not produce school leavers for the world of work.

The education system we served produced employees; the reason why countless are waiting to be hired unequipped with solutions to the problem of unemployme­nt.

This was sustained by a façade that Zimbabwean­s get employed easily outside, ignoring that the spaces they are easily employed in have a predominan­tly “peasantry culture”. If you think I am mendacious, then revisit the history of Ghana immediatel­y after independen­ce.

A classic example, the former President, Robert Mugabe, went to Ghana for employment because Kwame Nkrumah invited educated Africans then to come and get employed because a majority of his countrymen were uneducated.

From idealising to pragmatism

Beyond that thought line, our education system has continued to enrol enormous numbers and graduates few of extraordin­ary eminence. Solutions to rescue our country seldom come from those educated within and that has; and is a problem. With only 38 percent being skilled graduates that begs a lot of statistica­l questions on the more than 15 000 who annually graduate.

What is essential from now is that state financing of education, from primary to tertiary should incentivis­e research on changing what is being learnt to foster quality education.

While universal education is critical, it should be doubled with the quality that makes Zimbabwean­s not only globally relevant but skilled enough to be domestic think tanks.

The reasoning of financing education now is that by 2030, it would have stimulated a shifting culture from recommenda­tion to solution-based thinking.

In fact, the World Bank’s president, Jim Yong Kim, commenting on the Human Capital Index in 2018 mentioned that global economies are sustained by a deliberate investment and protection of human capital and that means financing education to ensure quality so that developmen­t is facilitate­d by students of a domestic education system.

Students are the next generation of workers and upper-middle class economy by 2030 is an advent of another generation — the millennial­s.

When Government heavily finances education, particular­ly focusing on quality change, it will coil to individual­s who can sustain the middle class.

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