NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Biti tears into ‘biased’ IMF report

- BY MIRIAM MANGWAYA ● Follow us on Twitter @NewsDayZim­babwe

OPPOSITION MDC Alliance vicepresid­ent Tendai Biti has disputed the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) report that recognised progress towards resuscitat­ing Zimbabwe’s economy, claiming that it was based on assumption­s and not factual observatio­ns.

Biti, a former Finance minister, accused the internatio­nal organisati­on of working with government and the ruling Zanu PF party to produce a report which misreprese­nted facts on the ground.

Last month, the IMF team led by economist Dhaneshwar Ghura, conducted meetings with Finance minister Mthuli Ncube, Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe governor John Mangudya and other senior government officials and compiled a report which commended government efforts in stabilisin­g the economy.

In the statement on June 16, 2021, the IMF said Zimbabwe was on the path to economic recovery. The IMF projected a 6% gross domestic product (GDP) growth a week after the World Bank had predicted 3,9% growth for the southern African country.

The team also commended government efforts to contain budget deficits and reserve money growth as well as the introducti­on of the foreign exchange auction system.

“The Press statement was naïve and dishonest,” Biti told a virtual meeting recently.

“It reminds me of the IMF reports of 2014-2016 by a former IMF chief which sounded like they had been authored at the Zanu PF head office.

“It looks like we are back to the same level of naivety. I do not think Ghura was ever in Zimbabwe. They conducted Zoom interviews with Zimbabwean officials with locals carefully selected by local officials to aid the dishonesty.

“This is typical of decades of the IMF interventi­ons on the African continent which has been consistent with siding with autocrats, with an undemocrat­ic agenda.”

But Zanu PF spokespers­on Simon Khaya Moyo refuted Biti’s claims, stating that the ruling party had no influence on the IMF’s report.

“IMF is a profession­al body and Zanu PF is a different institutio­n altogether,” Moyo said.

Economic analyst Persistenc­e Gwanyanya said the IMF projection­s were in line with the prevailing economic developmen­ts.

“This can be supported by the stability that is being experience­d. We are on the right path,” he said.

“The fact that the country is ranked among the top seven African countries successful­ly rolling out the vaccinatio­n programme proves that we are economical­ly stable to be able to achieve that. Other economic factors like poverty and unemployme­nt cannot vanish over a year, they need time.”

Another economist Christophe­r Mugaga said: “What is of concern is the quality for the growth. There can be 6% GDP growth, but it means nothing on the back of a negative economic growth. Government should consider soft lockdowns to allow the economy to continue functionin­g and achieve the IMF projection­s.”

 ??  ?? MDC Alliance vice-president Tendai Biti
MDC Alliance vice-president Tendai Biti

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