By Takura Zhangazha*
It is always going to be a hard ask for Zimbabweans to forget the economic meltdown that began in earnest with the advent of (neo)liberalisation of the economy in the mid 1990s and reached an inhumane apex in 2007-9. The brief interlude to the crisis overseen by the inclusive government brought into being new expectations of economic performance legitimacy for any future government (including this current one).
It is always going to be a hard ask for Zimbabweans to forget the economic meltdown that began in earnest with the advent of (neo)liberalisation of the economy in the mid 1990s and reached an inhumane apex in 2007-9. The brief interlude to the crisis overseen by the inclusive government brought into being new expectations of economic performance legitimacy for any future government (including this current one).
That interlude however also gave the false
impression that as long as no one touched the US$ and related free market fundamentals,
everything would be fine. It sort of
ushered in a default new normal. It was
however underpinned by a rampant neo-liberalism that has morphed into a much
more rabid state capitalism under the current government.
So when ‘news’ broke out on social media about bond notes printing
and selling the reversion to serious mistrust of government by the public was
to be expected. So was the panic buying by the relatively well-heeled of the
cities (you have to already have some money to panic buy).
For poorer working classes of our society there has been no
panic buying. Just shock and awe at how
sudden the upward change in prices of some goods and services or lack of their affordability can be. And in this there is the fear of a return to
the tumultuous years of 2007 largely in relation to livelihoods but with less
of the political partisanship. (Fewer Zimbabweans are looking to the mainstream opposition for economic salvation).
But because the currency that a majority of Zimbabweans have come to value dearly (US$) is not ours nor are our leaders (political, economic/business, social/religious) able for various reasons to live by its 'free market' dictates, these part real/part wished for incidences are set to become a recurrent part of our national economic existence.
But because the currency that a majority of Zimbabweans have come to value dearly (US$) is not ours nor are our leaders (political, economic/business, social/religious) able for various reasons to live by its 'free market' dictates, these part real/part wished for incidences are set to become a recurrent part of our national economic existence.
What then comes into vogue again, is the fact that there are
classed based perceptions and realities of the current but long duree economic crisis.
Regrettably this angle of analysis will be
drowned up by the dominant neo-liberal narratives as they are carried out by
private capital (including church related capital) and state actors. The latter will want to give the impression
they are people-centered when in fact they remain committed to what they now
refer to as the ‘ease of doing business’ and sharing the spoils of what should
be public capital and public wealth.
Be that as it may in Zimbabwe, public sentiment is exactly what it is, a
mixture of a dire economic reality which is also motivated by wishful (political) thinking.
The general mood of distrust of the central government is pretty much everywhere (even among ruling party supporters). It’s a mood that has been spurred on by the medium of social media (augmented by mainstream media) and its sometimes true and oft times exaggerated content. It is also highly binary or partisan.
It will be reduced to either opposition politics or eventually a strenuous (and oft times illogical) defence of the ruling establishment. Including blaming sanctions and saboteurs. A familiar government line since the turn of the century.
The general mood of distrust of the central government is pretty much everywhere (even among ruling party supporters). It’s a mood that has been spurred on by the medium of social media (augmented by mainstream media) and its sometimes true and oft times exaggerated content. It is also highly binary or partisan.
It will be reduced to either opposition politics or eventually a strenuous (and oft times illogical) defence of the ruling establishment. Including blaming sanctions and saboteurs. A familiar government line since the turn of the century.
I would however hazard a couple of key considerations around
the recent fuel shortages for those with a keen eye on the political economy of
the country and or its now multiple political dramas as they relate to either the
incumbent ruling party and those that politically oppose it.
The first is that emotions over and about the state of the
economy are good. In fact they are
helpful especially if they allow you to catch the attention of the government. They will however not topple it before an
election. Not least because of the
example of 2007-2008 but more because of the structural complicity and shared interests
between private capital and state capital in our country. So the state of the economy is not about a
feel good or bad moment. It is about
understanding how we got here and what we should really be up in arms
against.
And from my own perspective its not so much the fuel queues
or the panic buying or the susceptibility to memory (2007) alone that should
get us to this holistic understanding of what is troubling our national
economy. Its about understanding, especially
at leadership level the ideological underpinnings of the national economy and the profiteering collusion between
private capital and those that are in charge of government/state.
This also includes a firmer realisation that the culture of consumption as opposed to the questioning of the structural dimensions of our national economy may lead
to ephemeral ‘victories’. But even these on their own tend to be drawbacks than
the beginning of an economic future that gives every Zimbabwean fair and equitable livelihoods.
So there is an urgent need to move beyond the understandably class based reactions such as panic buying (middle classes), artificial shortages
of fuel and even the attendant crisis in our national politics (comprador bourgeoisie) or a majority's wait and see attitude (working class/communal farmers).
Instead we must strive for a people centered economic
narrative that transcends ephemeral crises such as the recent/current one. And in order
for that to happen the labour unions (even if they are struggling), organic
social movements (urban and rural) and social democratic businesses must take
center stage. Together.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blgospot.com)