By Takura Zhangazha*
It is worth repeating until enlightenment. Zimbabwe’s
current government is keenly intent on neoliberalism. And it is increasingly arrogant about it. Note
the language of the minister of finance Mthuli Ncube on CNN talking about how
‘Zimbabwe is Africa’s best buy’. Or
alternatively the acting minster of public services, labour and social welfare,
Kazembe reading out a statement threatening ‘politcal’ NGOs with bans just
after a cabinet meeting. Or when the
ruling Zanu Pf’s party war veterans and women’s wings almost casually announce
an intention to raise the minimum presidential age limit from 40 years to 52.
Even when motorists are stuck for long periods at a time in
fuel queues, the government has not panicked.
They believe in the market even though they are quite literally bailing
out a number of private suppliers by giving them priority access to US$. (Yes that’s austerity for you, ‘ringfencing
private capital’ while praising the ‘free market and deliberately passing on escalating
living costs to the poor).
And expect more of this arrogance as Zanu Pf holds its
annual 2018 conference to demonstrate not
only a firm grip on power but commit itself internally and externally to
neoliberalism.
It is this commitment that has many opponents to Zanu Pf in
happy denial that it can pull it off.
And their most favourite saying is that ‘you cant rig the economy’. The latter being a fair point if you too like
the Zanu Pf leaders are a believer in ‘free market’ economics.
Those that support this ‘free market’ economic
template both from an ideologically informed bias or just a perusal reading of motivational
books on ‘how to get rich quickly’ do not think the market will respond in Zanu
Pf’s favour. The only setback to their hope
is that private capital appears to be favouring this neoliberal policy fundamentalism
of the ruling party. Not for political
reasons in the strictest of senses but in order not to miss an opportunity of a
government that is essentially placing state/public capital on the global auction
floor, i.e to the highest and risk averse bidder.
So directly political questions of the governments legitimacy
are of limited domestic consequence. And
by domestic I mean both in country as well as on the African continent and to
the global east. It becomes a dangerous combination of private capital and a
colluding state political leadership that once it sees that the myth of ‘there
is no alternative’ is publicly accepted, then they can quite literally weather
any other political storm. Especially if its one that comes in-between
elections. And that once done, they can have the establishment of a very real 'revolving door' between the state personnel and owners of private capital.
While their presidents new found maxim of ‘no pain, no gain’
is being only painfully felt by many Zimbabweans, their aim with it is to assuage
private capital that they will not abandon ‘austerity’. And this includes ensuring that there’s a
newfound commitment to private capital and protecting its private property
rights while allowing it a regular look-in as to what to nitpick from state
capital via privatization.
And this is what is fortifying Zanu Pf. An assumption that if they follow the
dictates of private capital or the free market, at least at macro-economic
policy levels, then they will stay their own version of a political
course. The only catch is that the pain element
may also occasionally extend beyond the economic and back to the political if
they meet organic and people centered resistance to the neoliberal economic
order that they want to fortify in Zimbabwe.
The much more difficult proposition as to how to challenge
this under construction hegemonic project.
Backed as it is by global capital. The suggestions are many but the
actions of those that would be in opposition and challenging for state power
need to be clearer on how they are an organic ( ideologically grounded to the
left, people centred and intra/internally democratic) alternative to the ruling Zanu Pf establishment.
And this fact must regrettably be repeated because not only
is it relevant but it would be currently the only alternative to counter the
abstract and ahistorical rhetoric of there’s no alternative except to cozy up
to global capital. Even if for now the national consciousness is currently
crippled by personality driven political awareness and an urgent concern for
the immediate. The latter being even
still crippled by the inverse relationship between incomes and lifestyle
(expectations).
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)
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