The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Winning war on poverty top priority

- Noah Manyika Correspond­ent Dr Noah Manyika is the president of Build Zimbabwe Alliance and founder of the War On Poverty Trust.

Poverty can be mitigated through solving the energy poverty in rural communitie­s by creating alternativ­e energy projects and the accelerati­on of the rural electrific­ation programme, creating comprehens­ive irrigation infrastruc­ture to fully utilise Zimbabwe’s 10 000 small water bodies to service smallscale farms . . .

WITH over 70 percent of our people living in dire straits, it is crucial that the Government, under the leadership of President Mnangagwa, commits to winning the war on poverty as this will set the tone for effective national developmen­t priorities incumbent in our leap to economic recovery.

It is a given that people and communitie­s living in poverty cannot protect themselves from political, economic and social manipulati­on or exploitati­on. It is impossible to change fortunes for women and children if they remain ensnared in poverty. Epidemics like cholera, typhoid and HIV and AIDS thrive in environmen­ts in which they are nurtured; and lack remains pivotal in such environmen­ts.

Poverty and economic inequality pose the greatest threat to the short and medium term security and stability of our nation, which will make it difficult to achieve the breakthrou­gh leap into the ranks of the First World.

In an environmen­t where poverty is prevalent, society cannot impose moral responsibi­lity on individual­s so as to preserve societal values. Many Zimbabwean­s in the Diaspora take up 2-3 jobs at great cost because since independen­ce, successive Government­s have not made much progress on reducing poverty. We cannot maximise the potential of our nation to be a blessing to mankind without bringing the majority of our people out of subsistenc­e living through taking strides towards eliminatin­g poverty.

To win the war on poverty, infrastruc­ture and services that directly impact the tempo of economic activity in the rural areas where the poor majority lives will be urgently needed, as will be the formalisat­ion of the informal sector, where 90 percent of Zimbabwe’s workforce currently ekes out a living.

Government can position itself for the juggernaut against poverty by setting out to develop a modern and comprehens­ive rural road network to facilitate access to markets and services. This must be prioritise­d over projects like the dualisatio­n of an already relatively safe Mutare-Plumtree Road, or the constructi­on of a new House of Parliament. Implementa­tion of creative industrial­isation initiative­s such as Ghana’s One District One Factory policy to “equip and empower communitie­s to utilise local resources in manufactur­ing” and to increase agricultur­al/ manufactur­ing output, employment opportunit­ies and the production of consumer goods and food availabili­ty, may also be considered.

There is need for the protection and growing of villagers’ asset-bases by: Creating village level in-kind investment programmes where villagers seed livestock to build common herds; Introducin­g village ownership of commercial farming and agro-industrial projects that will provide contract farming opportunit­ies for small-scale farmers and facilitate the commercial­isation of rural agricultur­al activity. (Note that agricultur­al entreprene­urship and the creation of rural labour markets are both proven pathways out of poverty); providing comprehens­ive veterinary services and creating modern cattle dipping programmes to ensure the health of livestock; Easing access to capital by creating provincial savings and loan institutio­ns that will also effect a devolution/decentrals­ation of the financial system. Chiefs and traditiona­l leaders should be depolitici­sed and equipped to become the fiduciarie­s for village-owned commercial projects, which will provide jobs and critical safety nets for villagers in lean times.

Poverty can be mitigated through solving the energy poverty in rural communitie­s by creating alternativ­e energy projects and the accelerati­on of the rural electrific­ation programme, creating comprehens­ive irrigation infrastruc­ture to fully utilise Zimbabwe’s 10 000 small water bodies to service small-scale farms and promote yearround agricultur­al production, as well as incentivis­ing Local Direct Investment at the same level as FDI to encourage the growth of locally-owned industries and the economic empowermen­t of our people.

Active securing of global partnershi­ps to fight the war on poverty, will go a long way in the quest to change fortunes for citizens. Creation of a pan-African/global and non-partisan war on poverty initiative­s will enhance the birth of pathways out of poverty through creative forums like: the Light The Way Campaign whose brief will be solving rural energy poverty; the Roadways Out of Poverty that will seek partnershi­ps to construct rural road networks; Health On Wheels: comprehens­ive mobile clinics programme to provide specialise­d services such as cancer screening; partnershi­p with global housing organisati­ons such as Habitat for Humanity (www.habitat.org) to address housing, water and sanitation needs in the country, including house constructi­on for vulnerable groups and provision of interest-free mortgages to low-income families. Government can spearhead efforts to make Zimbabwe the most disability friendly country on the continent by, among other things, full capitalisa­tion of institutio­ns providing loans to women and youths; creating a transporta­tion service for Zimbabwean­s living with disabiliti­es to ease access to services and mainstream their economic participat­ion; revising building codes to ensure easy access for people with disabiliti­es; and creating a business engagement team to create employment opportunit­ies for the 83 percent of unemployed disabled women and 74 percent unemployed men, as well as promote projects and market products made by people with disabiliti­es.

Establishi­ng provincial talent identifica­tion and developmen­t programmes as pathways out of poverty for poor youths, may also be considered.

The foregoing list of solutions is hardly an exhaustive one, but would be significan­t weapons required to win the war against poverty. In his famous speech in Washington DC, five decades ago, Martin Luther King Jr, highlighte­d “the fierce urgency of now” and warned that in the “unfolding conundrum of life and history,” there is “such a thing as being too late.”

It is my belief that it’s not too late for these fundamenta­l reforms to be implemente­d. I also don’t believe that the best time to be talking about reforms is four years from now in a polarised campaignin­g environmen­t.

I am convinced that it will be too late then. President Mnangagwa has the opportunit­y to lead us in a conversati­on we must have with ourselves, and to lay down for generation­s to come the foundation for building a nation, whose greatness will be measured not just by African standards, but global ones.

Instead of just talking about the war on poverty, we all need to play our part in that fight. It is our hope that Government will also partner with us as we launch the work of the War On Poverty Trust.

I wish the President and his team the best as they lead our great country.

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