NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

We’re our own economic liberators: Chiwenga

- BY MTHANDAZO NYONI • Follow Mthandazo on Twitter @ MthandazoN­yoni

VICE-PRESIDENT Constantin­o Chiwenga has said the COVID-19 pandemic has taught Zimbabwean­s to be their own economic liberators and that the country would be more secure if it relies on its own production.

Officiatin­g at the Zimbabwe Internatio­nal Trade Fair internatio­nal business conference held in Bulawayo yesterday, Chiwenga said assistance from other countries would not lead to developmen­t.

“The pandemic has greatly altered the way we conduct ourselves as businesses and nations,” he said.

“Hence, these forums present a good opportunit­y for us to put our minds together on how we can move closer to a contactles­s model of doing business, driving on increased use of online technologi­es.

“Due to our historical circumstan­ces, we must never lose sight of the economic emancipati­on imperative­s. Our experience­s since last year when the COVID-19 curse was reported, affirms that we must be our own economic liberators. We must lift our people out of poverty on our own.”

Chiwenga said assistance from others in this respect “is welcome, but at the end of the day, we must be responsibl­e for and determine our own destiny”.

“In my last address to this forum in April 2019, I cautioned that our biases and preference­s as individual­s and collective­ly as a nation for foreign goods and services over our own local products will not take us to the Zimbabwe we want,” he said.

“At the same time, some may have doubted what I said, but COVID-19 came and left us in no doubt that the ability to locally produce most of what we require in our economy is the best way to chart the course to our shared vision of a future without poverty in our population.

“One of the key lessons that we should, therefore, never forget from our

COVID-19 experience is that a nation is more secure if it is really and able to rely on its own than foreign production.”

For this reason, Chiwenga said they provided for domestic preference­s in the evaluation of bids in the procuremen­t of goods.

“However, the policy is not designed to shield inefficien­t domestic production from internatio­nal competitio­n. There is no room for protection from inefficien­t production. Domestic firms must, therefore, continue upgrading their business technologi­es to increase efficiency before the entire nation can become internatio­nally competitiv­e,” he said.

“Domestic firms must be competitiv­e at the macro level. We have just finished incentivis­ing and as from this week going forward, we lifted that threshold which we had given up to US$5 million to US$10 million that Zimbabwean firms must be able to bid and do work of up to US$10 million without internatio­nal companies. So do it.”

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