The Zimbabwe Independent

Industry demands action against wasteful officials

- SHAME MAKOSHORI

ZIMBABWE’S businesses this week applied fresh pressure on government to end profligacy, saying unchecked extravagan­cy in President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s administra­tion had thrown the country into a catastroph­ic debt trap.

In a frank paper in which the Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce (ZNCC) slammed government for agreeing to pay “very high” compensati­on to former white commercial farmers kicked out of their land in 2000, industry said authoritie­s must invoke laws to punish overspendi­ng bureaucrat­s while forcing them to account to parliament.

ˆe ZNCC said applying laws and policies to check government borrowing would help stop the mayhem that has crippled the fiscas.

ZNCC fired the broadside at government for failing to abide by standing policies, while giving transgress­ors headroom to push the economy down the swamps.

ˆe ZNCC’s strongly-worded paper added to three weeks of showdowns over poor debt management by government, which has been accused of borrowing to find executive expenditur­es at the expense of growth stimulatin­g capital projects.

ˆe country’s foreign debt was estimated at US$10,6 billion last year, when government undertook to apply breaks on borrowing in order to contain a relentless inflationa­ry surge and money supply growth.

But last week, the administra­tion slipped into the eye of a raging storm again, after Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe statistics showed it had incurred US$2,23 billion in fresh debt between July 2019 and July 2020.

ˆe central bank’s July economic review said net foreign liabilitie­s had shot to ZW$366,35 billion in July this year, from ZW$23,28 billion in July 2019.

“No debt should ever be procured without the involvemen­t of the parliament of Zimbabwe,” the ZNCC said in its submission­s to the 2021 budget.

“ˆe legislatur­e must be held accountabl­e for the stock of debt in the economy with regular market updates on debt being promoted exactly the same way updates on money supply,” said the paper.

ˆe ZNCC said it was worried that a string of debts accumulate­d by Zimbabwe’s mostly insolvent State firms could be unaccounte­d for in publicly declared figures.

It said coming clean on debts like these would give a clear picture of the extent of government’s exposure.

ˆe debt issue has been complicate­d by the fact that parastatal­s took many years to release financial results with little or no sanction from authoritie­s.

“We believe government has guaranteed a lot of debts on a number of loss making parastatal­s and an urgent audit is required to ascertain the potential exposure of government. As long as some release their financials more than 24 months post financial period, the attempt to deal with debt remains futile. ˆe Treasury needs to explicitly state the up to date figures for external and internal debt as of the month the budget is presented not December 2019 figures,” the ZNCC said.

Parliament last week threatened to take unspecifie­d action against Finance minister Mthuli Ncube for delaying to update legislator­s about the debt situation.

ˆe Public Debt Management Act compels the Finance minister to submit regular updates on debt dynamics to parliament.

Parliament’s misgivings were ignited by findings of a report released by the African Forum for Debt and Developmen­t, which slammed government for violating its own laws.

Publicatio­n of the debt is crucial to enhance accountabi­lity and transparen­cy in public financial administra­tion.

Afrodad’s report showed that until March, no debt bulletin had been produced by the public debt management office.

“ˆe minister is not coming, so the question is what is it that we now need to do?” asked Felix Mhona, chairperso­n of the Parliament­ary Portfolio Committee on Budget and Economic Developmen­t who spoke during a conference in Bulawayo.

“We are not sticking to some of the dictates of the Constituti­on. When we go back to parliament, we want to take the executive to account. It is no longer a talk show. I assure you as parliament that going forward, this (report by Afrodad) is a dashboard to say honourable minister, you are not bringing the reports to the house and we are sanctionin­g you,” he said.

ˆe ZNCC said it was worried about the RBZ’s debt.

“ˆe country cannot support the central bank debt which is paid with interest. We appreciate that the Global Compensati­on Agreement is a constituti­onal issue but believe that this is not a priority at the moment.

“ˆe ministry should rather engage experts for the restructur­ing of the compensati­on agreement rather and not on raising the finance because the country has committed to a high figure. ˆe US$3,5 billion compensati­on translates to payments of US$875 000 per farmer,” the ZNCC said.

 ??  ?? e RBZ incurred US$2,23 billion in fresh debt between July 2019 and July 2020.
e RBZ incurred US$2,23 billion in fresh debt between July 2019 and July 2020.

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