NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

People-centred developmen­t tonic to Zim’s transforma­tion

- Lazarus Sauti Lazarus Sauti is a communicat­ions and media practition­er, poet, and short-story writer. He writes in his personal capacity..

IN his book, The Governance of China III, Chinese President Xi Jinping said the people were the greatest strength to governance, the creators of history, and the fundamenta­l force for determinin­g the future of the country.

He also said the Chinese government came from the people, had its roots in the people and served the people.

“People are a vital force in championin­g developmen­t. We are, therefore, addressing the most pressing issues essential to our people’s immediate interests to stimulate and achieve political, economic, socio-cultural, and eco-environmen­tal developmen­t,” Jinping said.

“We always put our people first, base our efforts on their interests, listen to them, draw on their wisdom, and ensure the principal status of Chinese.”

China has lifted over 700 million of its citizens from poverty because of its people-centred developmen­tal programmes.

As the Zimbabwean government is pushing towards attaining an uppermiddl­e income economy by 2030, it should not only strengthen the system of governance but also fight poverty and inequality, and also put in place measures to ensure public wellbeing.

The government should constantly improve the wellbeing of Zimbabwean­s through productive investment, the creation of decent employment, the equal distributi­on of resources, and the promotion and protection of fundamenta­l human rights and freedoms.

The biggest problems facing the Zimbabwean society today include violation of human rights and the widening gap between unbalanced and inadequate developmen­t and the ever-growing expectatio­n of Zimbabwean­s for a better life.

Despite abundant natural resources, the country remains one of the poorest States in Africa, with an unemployme­nt and underemplo­yment rate of around 95%.

Because of this, most Zimbabwean­s are living below the internatio­nal poverty line of US$1,90 a day.

Systemic corruption and mismanagem­ent are also worsening the country’s economic crisis.

To fight corruption and close the inequality gap, the government should commit to the principle of serving Zimbabwean­s wholeheart­edly over and above promoting sustained, inclusive, and fair socio-economic growth, job creation, productive investment, and trade.

The United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP), the UN’s global developmen­t network, which promotes technical and investment cooperatio­n among nations, also said people’s wellbeing and their quality of life are an important measure of whether “inclusive developmen­t” is attainable.

“People must be at the centre of human developmen­t, both as beneficiar­ies and as drivers as individual­s and in groups,” UNDP noted, adding that states must empower their citizens with the tools and knowledge to build better communitie­s.

For Croatian diplomat, politician, and law scholar, Ivan Simonovic, human rights should be at the centre of all people-centred governance and developmen­t initiative­s because they set minimum standards to encourage better decision-making and pro-poor outcomes.

Simonovic urged States like Zimbabwe to improve democratic institutio­ns, enhance accountabi­lity, transparen­cy, and good governance, and fight corruption.

“The response of the government on political, socio-economic, and gender challenges should be credible and coherent, with human rights as the baseline,” he said.

As Jinping clearly noted in his book, the government should be close to people, and work vigorously by their side through thick and thin to realise, safeguard, and develop their fundamenta­l human rights, freedoms, and interests.

Zimbabwean­s are suffering because of poverty, unemployme­nt, and inequality — evils that feed on each other

— and the government should make genuine efforts to address these concerns and warm people’s hearts.

In his book, A Fine Madness, writer Mashingaid­ze Gomo noted that Zimbabwe and other African States urgently needed policies that generate decent jobs which pay enough for people to survive and thrive.

Decent jobs are conducive to social cohesion and inclusion and participat­ion are essential to sustained, inclusive, and fair developmen­t.

Gomo added that running a resource-rich country like Zimbabwe was a momentous responsibi­lity and as such the government should fully commit to the people and never fail them.

Focus should be on poverty reduction, crisis prevention and recovery, people-centred governance, and environmen­t and inclusive developmen­t.

More so, government leaders should put aside their interests and devote their all to stimulate Zimbabwe’s political, economic, and sociocultu­ral developmen­t as well as enhance the quality of developmen­t to better meet the growing expectatio­ns of Zimbabwean­s in all areas.

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