The Zimbabwe Independent

SecZim calls for speedy implementa­tion of laws

- MTHANDAZO NYONI Zimbabwe Independen­t with

THE Securities and Exchange Commission of Zimbabwe (SecZim) acting chief executive officer Gerald Dzangare on Wednesday said the country’s legislativ­e framework was making it difficult to attract capital.

e SecZim chief, who presented a paper during the inaugural Annual Investor Forum organised by the and PiggyBankA­dvisor under the theme "Capital Markets for Zim’s Sustainabl­e Developmen­t", also bemoaned lack of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity regarding statistics in the country.

“e key issue that is required for sustainabl­e developmen­t especially when you are looking at the issue of capital markets is we need legislativ­e agility,” Dzangare said.

“One of the constraint­s that we have as a nation is that our legislatio­n is not agile. It does not catch up with time,” he said.

“We need legislatio­n to move fast developmen­t.

"A legislatio­n that is passed a year later is a law that is unsustaina­ble. e environmen­t would have changed, the bus would have gone and the boat would have sailed. We are competing for global capital. We are not the only ones and those we are competing with (have agile) legislatio­n,” he said.

Dzangare said by the time the country enacts a piece of legislatio­n, it would already be behind. He said global standards were key for sustainabl­e developmen­t.

“Capital market laws need to follow global standards. You will realise that because we are becoming a global village, if as Zimbabwe our laws are not changing fast enough, it means we are behind global standards. Investors will go to a destinatio­n that has global standards,” he said.

“Technology is the new frontier and as a country we need to have our capital markets up to speed with what is happening globally. Bear in mind that the others are developing. We are just trying to play catchup but as it is, we are behind and we need to move fast.”

Dzangare said the key to sustainabl­e developmen­t was a conducive environmen­t for sustainabl­e investment.

“How do we have this environmen­t? It is based on trust. e trust is based on two pillars; that's transparen­cy and accountabi­lity. So one of the things we need to do as a country for sustainabl­e developmen­t is to be transparen­t. Transparen­cy in statistics and transparen­cy in everything we have,” he said.

“Transparen­cy will lead us to accountabi­lity which is a key enabler for sustainabl­e developmen­t. We must be accountabl­e to the resources that we have; we must be accountabl­e for the performanc­e of the resources that we have. Accountabi­lity and transparen­cy are very key,” Dzangare added.

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