Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Zim misses privatisat­ion target

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ZIMBABWE has largely missed its privatisat­ion targets nearly three years after Government embarked on reforms of state—owned entities to enhance their performanc­e.

The re-engineerin­g of the parastatal sector, which used to contribute 40 percent to the gross domestic products (GDP), is meant to reduce costs to the fiscus, enhancing service delivery and improving accountabi­lity.

In almost every sector where they operate, SOEs are facing a number of challenges including lack of capital, low productivi­ty and unsustaina­ble debt. Services have deteriorat­ed substantia­lly and even the welfare of their own employees is often in jeopardy.

About 70 percent of these entities are technicall­y insolvent, presenting an actual or potential drain on the fiscus, owing to weak corporate governance practices and ineffectiv­e governance control mechanisms.

The reform agenda entailed various options including liquidatio­n, full privatisat­ion, transforma­tion to regulator, merging and de-merging and department­alisation into existing ministries. This was to happen between 2018 and 2020.

Under the initial phase, the Government targeted the privatisat­ion of 11 SOEs including six subsidiari­es of the Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n and 17 Zimbabwe Mining Developmen­t Corporatio­n subsidiari­es.

It also looked at liquidatio­ns, merging of 11 entities and department­alisation of SOEs into line ministries.

“The agenda remains alive but it’s clear that most of the targets have been missed obviously for different factors including Covid 19 pandemic, lack of finding for transactio­nal advisors and lack of investor appetite for some of the assets,” a senior official in the Ministry of Finance and Economic Developmen­t, who declined to be named because he is not allowed to talk to press told Business Weekly this week.

Finance Minister Prof Mthuli Ncube did not responded to text messages seeking a comment.

However, Mthuli previously said the Government recognised the need for scaling down on unsustaina­ble fiscal interventi­ons and a resort to Government guarantees by public entities and local authoritie­s.

Fiscal risks had also arisen from debts assumption by the Government, re-capitalisa­tion requests and called-up guarantees of public enterprise­s and local authoritie­s.

“The snail pace is worrying,” said Carlos Tadya, an analyst with a local research firm. “This will derail implementa­tion of other programmes such as NDS1 (National Developmen­t Strategy 1) given that some of these state owned entities are key economic enablers.”

The Government is also looking to adopt a centralise­d ownership model for SOEs as part of the reforms to eliminate inconsiste­ncies in governance and ministeria­l interferen­ces.

Zimbabwe has a decentrali­sed SEPs ownership model, where the Government shareholde­r function is spread across different line ministries.

The ownership model has been associated with a number of challenges, including inconsiste­ncies in governance practices, ministeria­l interferen­ces, delays and or reversals of Government approved SEPs reforms due to vested interests within some line ministries, and generally weak and passive oversight function, among others.

Under the centralise­d ownership model, a single government institutio­n carries out the role as shareholde­r in all companies controlled by the State.

There is general consensus among key stakeholde­rs that parastatal­s and local authoritie­s are a missing link in terms of national developmen­t given the centrality of the roles they play.

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