A presentation to the Zimbabwe Coalition on Debt and
Development (ZIMCODD), Debt and Extractives Dialogue Series
By Takura Zhangazha*
By Takura Zhangazha*
20 November 2013, Jameson Hotel Harare
Cde Chairman, comrades, colleagues, students, ladies and gentlemen,
Let me begin by expressing my gratitude to ZIMCODD for
inviting me to this important meeting. It is one of the few meetings where I
know I would not be out of order for referring to participants here present as
comrades. Mainly because we not only share the same ideals and principles
around debt and development, but also because of general ideological persuasions
which I assume see us regularly being labeled as those of the Zimbabwean ‘left’.
The topic I have been asked to share some thoughts with you
on is an important one in the context of Zimbabwe’s contemporary political
economy. The organizers have phrased
this topic, ‘The Indigenization and Economic Empowerment Act and the struggle
for Social and Economic Justice in Zimbabwe,’.
It is a phrasing that correctly
assumes a co-relation between indigenization and social and economic justice. But
for the purposes of clarity it would be important to put indigenization in its
political context.
Unlike the general reference of indigenous people’s rights
in global discourse around land rights or the environment, Zimbabwe’s indigenization
programme is evidently more political. This particularly because its narrative
seeks to address what it refers to as colonial injustices and makes direct
reference to any person who was historically economically disadvantaged on the
grounds of their race before independence in 1980 as being ‘indigenous’.
So it refers to both an historical injustice, as well as a
racial identity, namely, the black majority. There are many other interpretations of this,
but there is little reason to doubt that indigenization definitely talks to
issues of social and economic justice. It is however not a revolution or a
revolutionary moment policy in relation to social and economic justice. It is
an incremental step forward which, in as much as it is implemented generally, remains
fraught with challenges.
The main emphasis of
the indigenization programme as established in terms of the law is primarily
that of establishing majority shareholding in companies or corporations operating
in Zimbabwe by indigenous citizens in terms of the definition described above.
It is not necessarily to change the structural
nature or the reasons for an already established business, let alone invent new forms of entrepreneurship.
It is largely about enhancing indigenous participation in already existent sectors
of the national economy. This is a good
thing only in so far as it relates to the politically charged nature of
indegeneity. It however misses the mark
where and when it comes to achieving through its processes, social and economic
justice.
This latter point relates to two main issues. The first
being that of the porous nature of the ideological framework informing the indigenization
policy. Generally spoken for the main
ideological premise of indigenization as envisaged in the enabling act is a nationalism
that has no problems with the structural challenges of blunt capitalism. It is also a nationalism that seeks primarily accommodation within the
global capitalist framework of extractive and consumerist production.
Or to put it more straightforwardly, a
nationalism that wants a piece of the pie. Not necessarily for the majority but
more for the elite few.
I make the latter point in full knowledge of the fact that
the enabling act also establishes Community Share Ownership Trusts (CSOTs) which have largely been established through the indigenization
of mining concerns. These CSOTs do not represent either the full 51% indigenous
share ownership nor are they necessarily guaranteed a reasonable return of the
profit made from the going concern back into the community.
What has since occurred with these trusts is an initial
flurry of activity around building basic infrastructure without a holistic public
explanation of the transparency of the CSOTs. Or whether they will not function
in collusion with the corporate concern in handing out peanuts of their overall
profits.
Furthermore, the leveraging of CSOTs in the Zim Asset
government blueprint as investment tools into social service delivery is an unfortunate
attempt at outsourcing the primary functions of government without
demonstrating why government has failed dismally on the same front.
The second observation I wish to make in relation to the subject
matter is how it does not address the issue of innovation or invention. Taking over key aspects of the economy goes
beyond physical presence. It also requires application of national intellectual
creativity in order to meet the social and economic justice requirements of a people
centered and social democratic national economy.
This is both in relation to the short and
long term. While there is a National Indigenization and Economic Empowerment Charter,
which addresses some issues of knowledge transfer, the policy however remains
bereft of propositions on how to promote innovation and creativity not only
with entities indigenized but also within the context of a holistic approach to
innovation in our society.
The enabling act let alone the politics surrounding it
rarely address this particular challenge. The best that has come out of government
pronouncements even at the highest level has been referred to as ‘beneficiation’
of raw materials.
This is all well and good were it not for the fact that we
neither have the technological capacity to embark on this in the short term and
we have concentrated on critiquing the exportation of raw materials without addressing
our exportation of intellectual capacity to other countries. It would be remiss if we were to isolate indigenization
to specifically production related entities.
In order to utilize whatever we have there is need for a
holistic investment in knowledge production that extends beyond the newly established
‘psychomotor’ ministry or to be isolated to borderline colonial era reminiscent
understandings of knowledge production where we label social sciences as
retrogressive. The innovation that is
lacking in the indigenization project is not so much about a lack of natural
science experts as it is a lack of a society that embraces new ideas with
organic and democratic consciousness as opposed to repression or mimicry.
Comrade Chairperson, in my brief presentation I have
underscored the reality that indigenization as a broad idea speaks to social and
economic justice. In Zimbabwe’s case, the policy’s grounding in seeking to
address the effects of colonial social and economic injustices cannot be faulted.
What has been faulty is its ideological premise which does not address structural
questions about the economy and increasingly appears to be characterized by a ‘replacement’
and not a revolutionary or even transformational framework. It is also imperative
that indigenization does not happen in isolation of all other aspects of
Zimbabwean society, particularly the promotion of innovation. In order for it to succeed, it must as of
necessity embrace technology, innovation or else it will remain as it is, a
project inclined to serve more the elite than the masses.
Thank you.
*This presentation was made in Takura Zhangazha's personal capacity. Please attribute it to takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com
*This presentation was made in Takura Zhangazha's personal capacity. Please attribute it to takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com
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