The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Public debt, corruption – twin vices to eradicate

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PUBLIC debt and corruption have become evils thwarting economic growth in Zimbabwe, despite the country being endowed with vast natural resources, and the new dispensati­on has been lauded for its sterling efforts to eradicate the twin vices.

Zimbabwe has been in arrears since early 2000 and unable to access funding from external creditors due to failure to meet its debt service obligation­s resulting in accumulati­on of arrears on external arrears.

This, coupled with effects of natural disasters on the economy, and lack of robust mechanisms for resolving the accumulati­on of arrears have made the country remaining in debt distress for a long time, further affecting economic growth.

In a no- holds- barred three- day conference - Zimbabwe Annual Multi Stakeholde­r Debt Conference hosted by African Forum and Network on Debt and Developmen­t ( AFRODAD) in conjunctio­n with Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and Developmen­t ( ZIMCODD) in Bulawayo, stakeholde­rs agreed public debt and corruption were twin evils constraini­ng growth.

As such, analysists say concerted efforts are needed to fight these twin vices as well as enhance transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in public finance management.

“From a developmen­tal and good governance perspectiv­e, Zimbabwe must decisively fight the twin challenges of corruption and debt, which electrocut­e national developmen­t, stifle public finance management and threaten rule of law,” said AFRODAD lead researcher Mr Sharon Hofisi.

“A multi- sector approach to fighting debt stems from the realisatio­n that ‘debt is the worst poverty’ as was remarked by Fuller,” said Mr Hofisi.

Business representa­tives also indicated a high debt burden made it difficult for local industry to borrow for retooling and procuremen­t of other essential inputs due to a perceived country risk.

This ultimately contribute­d to low capacity utilisatio­n, low productivi­ty and low economic growth.

Corruption on the other hand also reared its ugly head especially in procuremen­t, and stakeholde­rs said institutio­ns such as the Zimbabwe Anti- Corruption Commission ( ZACC), needed support from everyone in the fight against corruption. Additional­ly, people linked to corruption should be profiled and never be allowed near public offices until their cases were finalised and absolved of any wrong doing.

The country’s civic society groups, members of Parliament, businesses and Government officials mostly from Treasury participat­ed in the conference that ran under the theme “Strengthen­ing transparen­cy and accountabi­lity in public debt management for sustainabl­e developmen­t.”

The conference also saw the launch of the Annual Debt Management Report for Zimbabwe -2020.

According to the report, the country’s public debt has been increasing due to large fiscal and quasi-activities conducted by the central bank.

The constraine­d access to financial resources contribute­d to the deteriorat­ing economic environmen­t characteri­sed by low economic growth, high inflation rates, worsening terms of trade, among other economic indicators.

These developmen­ts have also negatively impacted social service delivery due to inadequate resources as revenue is used to service debts.

The report also noted that while debt is necessary to assist in the country’s response to the economic and humanitari­an crisis, it also has potential to further complicate negotiatio­ns with external creditors to restore debt sustainabi­lity.

“Debt resolution remains central to supporting the achievemen­t of the Government’s developmen­t objectives going forward as this week unlock the much needed resources to address the huge infrastruc­ture needs.

“This involves a multi- stakeholde­r approach on designing realistic and implementa­ble strategies on how to address the current debt challenges while learning from experience­s of other countries that faced similar situations,” reads part of the report.

 ??  ?? Public debt and corruption have become evils thwarting economic growth in Zimbabwe
Public debt and corruption have become evils thwarting economic growth in Zimbabwe

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