The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Budget must support economic growth: CZI

- Golden Sibanda Senior Business Reporter

FINANCE Minister Mthuli Ncube’s 2021 Mid-term Budget should carry measures that continue to support growth and prevailing stability, chief among them access to foreign currency, electricit­y and infrastruc­ture, industry says.

The Confederat­ion of Zimbabwe Industries ( president Henry Ruzvidzo said this in an interview ahead of Minister Ncube’s presentati­on of the 2021 National Budget review to Parliament tomorrow afternoon.

He said the country’s largest industrial lobby group, had noted positive growth numbers from the majority of sectors in Zimbabwe, which pointed to good prospects for the economy.

Minister Ncube projected in November last year the economy would grow by 7,4 percent this year, after a straight two-year downturn, largely driven by agricultur­e and mining, while inflation was forecast to end the year at 9 percent.

Economists are also in agreement with assessment­s made by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund ( and the World Bank, which predicted growth of 6 percent and 3,9 percent respective­ly.

Zimbabwe’s economy is forecast to grow, despite the long shadow of the Covid-19 pandemic, driven by a stellar agricultur­al season, commodity price boom on global markets, constructi­on and electricit­y sectors.

“We expect the budget (review) to support the growth by continuing to ensure foreign currency availabili­ty, adequate electricit­y and other supporting infrastruc­ture,” Mr Ruzvidzo said.

He said production required adequate working capital and a conducive business environmen­t. Mr Ruzvidzo said it was therefore critical that monetary and fiscal discipline be sustained to maintain mac

ro-economic stability.

“Currency reform continues to be carefully calibrated whilst addressing market distortion. We expect all subsidies will be fully provided for in the budget with some considerat­ion for stimulatin­g the hardest hit sectors by Covid-19,” he said.

The president said efforts by the Government to establish external lines of credit, following decades of hurtful illegal western embargo, must continue to sustain the growth momentum.

Analysts said they expected policy measures to cushion the economy and citizens from the pummelling of the third wave of Covid-19 and expect to prominentl­y feature in Minister Ncube’s budget review.

Economist Professor Gift Mugano said amid the surge in Covid-19 cases which saw Zimbabwe relapsing in a relaxed mode of Level Four Lockdown, the Minister should announce a supplement­ary budget to double efforts at containing the pandemic.

Prof Mugano said when the Minister first presented the 2021 budget; he expected threats from the respirator­y disease to be much less than the rampage by the virus under the third wave.

Further, Prof Mugano said apart from measures to stymie an ungoverned spread of the Covid-19 pandemic, Minister Ncube should also prescribe fiscal measures to support, cushion or bail out industry and commerce.

Another economist, Persistenc­e Gwanyanya said Minister Ncube should pronounce fiscal incentives that could include tax cuts, tax holidays and duty exemptions on key imports like agricultur­al equipment and capital goods.

Mr Gwanyanya said there was a need to come up with policy interventi­ons to foster a structural shift that brings permanent solutions to challenges facing the economy while ensuring better yields, increased productivi­ty and stronger value chains.

Minister Ncube last year presented a $421 billion National Budget Statement, premised on the assumption that the cumulative revenue collection­s for the 12 months to December 2021 would total $390,8 billion. Overall, he predicted a 2021 National Budget balance of minus $30,8 billion while the current account was expected to close the current financial year at $73,8 billion.

 ?? ?? Minister Ncube
Minister Ncube

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