The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Why is economy on road to recovery?

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ZIMBABWE’S economy is on a recovery trajectory and for the first time in many years, the country is clawing back to solid growth, having exhibited higher resilience to recent unforeseen shocks, including the latest outbreak of Covid-19.

According to official estimates, the country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth, a major global economic indicator, is expected to hit 7,8 percent by the end of this year, slightly above earlier estimates of 7,4 percent.

This will be mainly driven by the recovery in the agricultur­e sector, which recorded a bumper harvest in the last season, and is set to grow by up to 34 percent, the Treasury has said.

There has also been a steady performanc­e of the mining sector, coupled with noticeable recovery in the manufactur­ing sector, whose capacity utilisatio­n rose from 36 percent in 2019 to 47 percent last year and 54 percent in the second quarter of 2021, CZI statistics show.

Amid the raging Covid-19 pandemic and subsequent lockdown measures, the health sector and ICT sectors have shown strong resilience, while the Government and private sector have also been able to drive general investment in key infrastruc­ture projects.

“These sectors are the ones that are leading the charge in terms of economic recovery and the results speak for themselves,” said Finance and Economic Developmen­t Minister, Professor Mthuli Ncube in an exclusive interview in Bulawayo this week.

“You then look at the whole macro-economic environmen­t, and that progress can only happen in an environmen­t of stability. Macro-economic stability has been engendered, we can compare where we are now to the last quarter of 2018 when we came into Government, right through into 2019.”

However, the tourism sector has taken a huge plunge due to the pandemic as key global source markets adopted tight travel restrictio­ns, resulting in closure of borders and suspension of flights.

Government has vowed to enhance support to the sector through various incentives such as Value Added Tax waiver for domestic tourists and the available stimulus financing.

Zimbabwe withstands external shocks

Prof Ncube has said the resilience being exhibited by the country must be understood on the background of unforeseen shocks, which affected the country and entire global economy.

“The first shock was cholera. When we came into Government there was a cholera outbreak and the first thing we dealt with, in my first day in office was to say how are we going to mobilise resources to deal with this,” he recalled.

“Before we knew it there was Cyclone Idai, which devastated us as Zimbabwe and then after that we had the issue of the drought and that meant the agricultur­e sector could no perform. We had water shortages and so forth and then power outages.

“While the economy was reeling under that, in came the pandemic - Covid-19. So, we have gone through different types of shocks and for us to be recording and saying we are on a recovery phase is truly remarkable.”

Economic reforms pay dividend

The strong economic recovery has also been attributed to the comprehens­ive reform drive being undertaken by the President Mnangagwa-led Government. Prof Ncube said the reform factor has played a critical role in bringing about desired macro-economic stability in the face of all the highlighte­d shocks.

“We didn’t have monetary policy in the country before February 2019, what we had was fiscal policy only. So, we were walking on one leg and by introducin­g a domestic currency and the monetary policy committee in 2019, we introduced a second and necessary leg for macro-economic policy,” he explained.

“As I speak, we can do monetary targeting, we can even eventually do inflation targeting. We have a proper policy and…but that needed to occur within an environmen­t of a balanced budget, fiscal stability and discipline, which was the first order of business in 2018.”

While acknowledg­ing public outcry over price escalation amid parallel market exchange rate distortion and erosion of incomes, Prof Ncube said the future was bright, and assured citizens that authoritie­s were taking necessary steps to arrest speculativ­e indiscipli­ne and enhancing the value of the local currency to restore consumer purchasing power.

Budget surplus and vaccinatio­n success

When Prof Ncube first spoke of a budget surplus, the news has been received with cynicism by many Government critics, as it did not sound logical for a country coming out of a battered economic background.

“Colleagues, the surplus works. If we didn’t have the surplus we would have been in deep trouble. We had US$100 million ready to procure vaccines in January 2021. So, whenever you think of the surplus, think of the vaccine that went into your arm,” said Prof during an address to ZITF Expo delegates on Wednesday.

“Stability has been key to a point where at the end of 2020, we were able to record a surplus, which is where the US$100mln for vaccines came from and that was very good. When the Covid-19 shock came we were ready for it. So, that is where the economy is.”

Increased infrastruc­ture focus

Infrastruc­ture developmen­t and rehabilita­tion is receiving increased attention under the Second Republic, which is implementi­ng several key projects across the country, said Prof Ncube.

“We are investing into various infrastruc­ture projects and they are also part of the economy. This is a key pillar in the economy in terms of the National Developmen­t Strategy (NDS1), the successor to the TSP, which is focusing more on developmen­tal issues and certainly infrastruc­ture is key,” he said.

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Prof Mthuli Ncube

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