The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Parastatal reforms to earn Govt US$350m

- Africa Moyo Senior Business Reporter

GOVERNMENT expects to generate US$350 million from reforming TelOne, NetOne, Telecel, Zimpost and the Peoples’ Own Savings Bank (POSB).

The five companies have been lined-up for immediate reforms in tandem with the Transition­al Stabilisat­ion Programme (TSP) Government launched in October last year. This was said by Finance and Economic Developmen­t Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube in an economic update released on Sunday.

“A further area of progress is in the accelerati­on of the reform of State-owned Enterprise­s and Parastatal­s (SOEs),” said Prof Ncube.

“Having approved the implementa­tion framework for 43 SOEs and parastatal­s in 2018, Government has targeted five public enterprise­s (TelOne, NetOne, Telecel, ZIMPOST and POSB) for immediate reforms and work is already underway to identify transactio­n advisors.

“Government projects to realise over US$350 million from this initial process.”

Prof Ncube said other critical reforms currently underway include turning the Grain Marketing Board (GMB) into a strategic reserve entity under Government and a commercial arm. There are also plans to improve the governance, leadership and operationa­l efficiency at Allied Timbers; re-bundling the Zimbabwe Electricit­y Supply Authority (ZESA) into a single corporate entity to improve governance; rationalis­ation of Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n (IDC) units and partial privatisat­ion, as well as a number of other reforms.

Said Prof Ncube: “We are also accelerati­ng and deepening the ease and cost of doing business reforms to improve competitiv­eness. This includes the establishm­ent of a One-Stop Shop Investment Centre and legislatio­n to establish a specific and dedicated institutio­n — the Zimbabwe Investment and Developmen­t Agency (ZIDA) — is now before Parliament. ZIDA is set to be fully operationa­l in the coming months and will enable the processing of investment approvals within a day, significan­tly improving the investment climate.”

He added that Government was aware that there are some who are disappoint­ed by the pace of change, who expected progress to be faster than what is obtaining at the moment.

Prof Ncube said that was “never going to be the case”, as reforming, restructur­ing and rebuilding the economy was “always going to take time”.

He explained that attempts to prematurel­y accelerate the process are liable to cause greater upheaval and suffering, making a sober, strategic and step-by-step process “the best way to achieve our goal”.

Government announced last year that at least 11 Stateowned enterprise­s will be privatised under the public enterprise­s reform framework for 2018-2020 while some will be liquidated, merged or department­alised.

The Grain Marketing Board (GMB) has already been de-merged into a commercial business unit and the Strategic Grain Reserve. Promulgati­on of the Civil Aviation Amendment Bill to provide for the unbundling of the authority into a regulator and an airports authority is being worked on. The tough decisions come on the back of reports that 70 percent of State-owned enterprise­s are technicall­y insolvent after most of them incurred a combined US$270 million losses, according to the Auditor General’s 2017 report.

Government said an institutio­nal support for parastatal reform framework was being put in place to ensure deserving entities get funding under the $3,2 million grant from the African Developmen­t Bank.

The performanc­e reviews will assess in detail the concerned State-owned enterprise­s’ governance system, financial, operationa­l, legal environmen­t, processes and procedures affecting them.

These entities include Agribank, Allied Timbers, SMEDCO, Zinara, SIRDC, and IDBZ. The European Union has also availed funding for the performanc­e review of an additional three State-owned enterprise­s under the natural resource programme.

These include the Forestry Commission, the Zimbabwe Parks and Wildlife Authority and the Environmen­tal Management Agency (EMA). Government has identified a further set for the performanc­e reviews, namely CMED, ARDA, Printflow and Natpharm.

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