The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

Doing a Singapore in Zimbabwe

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FOR Zimbabwe, this would be a good time to reflect on a big, little story out of South Koreain199­8.

South Korea’ s story of 1998 actually starts in July 1997 with the collapse of Thailand’s baht, which triggers the Asian financial crisis.

That crisis spread from Thailand to Indonesia, Hong Kong, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippine­s, South Korea and — to an extent— Brunei, China, Japan, Singapore andVietnam.

BBC News, a year after the crisis started, reported that: “South Korea has exported the first shipment of 300 kg of gold collected in a public campaign to help the country out of its economic crisis.

“The nationwide campaign began on January 5, and involved ordinary Koreans donating personal gold treasures, which have been melted down into ingots ready for sale on the internatio­nal markets…

“It’ s an extraordin­ary sight: South Korean s queuing for hours to donate their best loved treasures in a gesture of support for their beleaguere­d economy. Housewives gave up their wedding rings; athletes donated medals and trophies; many gave away gold ‘luck’ keys, a traditiona­l present on the opening of anew business or a 60 th birthday.

“The campaign has exceeded the or ga ni se rs’ expectatio­ns, with people from all walks of life rallying around in a spirit of self-sacrifice. According to the organisers, ten tonnes of gold were collected in the first two days of the campaign. But perhaps the most extraordin­ary aspect of the campaign is not the sums involved, but the willingnes­s of the Korean people to make personal sacrifice s to help save their economy .”

Last week, in an interview with Bloomberg TV in New York where he is attending the United Nations General Assembly and engaged in various meetings to advance Zimbabwe’s developmen­t agenda, President Emmerson Mnangagwa hinted at the tough decisions that are coming ahead.

He said, “We have to be very sober. It is true that our fiscal balance is bad and we must be honest to our people as to what we want to achieve and to do.

“So there is need for us to apply fundamenta­ls that may be harsh to our people, but are necessary for us to cross the bridge .”

The reality is that austerity is coming. Austerity is needed. There are no two ways about it. While the nation may not be asked to willingly give up its gold like the people of South Korea did when faced with crisis, there certainly is need for belt-tightening and girding of lo ins.

We must learn now to sacrifice for the sake of our collective future. This goes for all Zimbabwean­s — Government, private enterprise­s and individual­s. This also speaks to the need for discipline from Government and from all the people of Zimbabwe.

Discipline, after all, is one of the key ingredient­sof stat al developmen­t, without which the collective aspiration for an advanced nation can never be real is ed.

A look at any society that has developed in the past 100 years will bear testimony to the centrality of sacrifice and discipline to national developmen­t.

Writing for the Washington Post sometime in 2015(“Lee Kuan Yew’s culture of discipline”), Richard Cohen spoke about how Singapore’ s founding father dragged a nation from under developmen­t into modern times.

Yes, some people grumbled at the beginning about Lee Kuan Yew’s methods, but after taking even a cursory glance at Singaporet­oday, no one can argue with the results.

Cohen writes :“Lee was a disciplina­rian. Her an Singapore like a severe private school. He brooked no dissent, bad manners, corruption, recreation­al drugs, sloth, laziness or rambunctio­us teenagers. He was famous for using the cane to punish vandals and the death penalty for drug dealers.

“He knew his city-state had only one natural resource and that was the industriou­sness and discipline of its people. They were his students and he was the head master …”

President Mn an gagwa,asw eh ave as The Sunday Mail, ha soft spoken of the need for honest, hard work. We hope Government institutes systems to ensure its public officials deliver on what they ought to, without need for re course to caning and the death penalty!

In all things, a rigorous meritocrac­y must come shining through, with public office being held on the basis of ability rather than blood lines, tribalism or any other such develop mentally stultifyin­g considerat­ions.

Further, Zimbabwe — like Singapore —has a wonderful human resource base.

Add to it the stupendous natural resource endowment and there is noway we can not “do a Singapore ”, so to speak.

Cohen, for the Washington Post, continued: “The suppressio­n of dissent is not praise worthy. The applicatio­n of the death penalty is abhorrent. The lack of political opposition and Press freedom is not to be admired, and one-man rule — Lee was in major office for about 52 years—it is hardly admirable. Lee rana one-man State and he ran it, on occasion, repressive­ly.

“But his administra­tive brilliance and his economic success are what earned him such adulation… Lee, as they once said of Mussolini,made the trains run on time. America’ s trains too often don’ t run at all .”

So in driving the nation forward, PresidentM­n an gag wane ed not succumb to the al lure of heavy-handedness, and indeed he has more than enough times shown that he is a true democrat at heart.

But at the same time, he need not, as Cohen concludes in his piece on Lee Kuan Yew ,“suffer from an excess of democracy” in the quest to build the Zimbabwe we all want.

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