President Mnangagwa recently held a consultative meeting
with Zimbabwe’s business sector. This,
against the backdrop of a national economic crisis largely caused by a new
monetary policy that sent commodity prices and informal exchange rates on a wild spin. Reports on the outcomes of the
meeting have not had much detail. It
however turns out that government and business came to some sort of mutual
agreement about keeping commodity prices at what they would consider to be
realistic levels. And also agreeing on business being more circumspect when requesting
foreign currency from the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe.
The latter policy pointing to a government that is
potentially acting to bail out business by distributing foreign currency in the vain hope that private capital will
eventually have a modicum of ethics to not profiteer from the assistance. We
would all be well advised to learn from the 2008 global
financial crisis and the bailing out of big banks by governments/reserve banks in the global north and wince at how that has turned out in reality.
financial crisis and the bailing out of big banks by governments/reserve banks in the global north and wince at how that has turned out in reality.
In the same week, the majority shareholder of Econet Wireless
Zimbabwe, Strive Masiyiwa gave his strongest approval yet of the economic policies
of Mnangagwa’s government. Insisting that he is of the view that the
government should be given a chance, he also to the surprise of some opposition
activists, called for sanctions on Zimbabwe to be removed.
In both examples cited, government and business are clearly
intent on becoming good bedfellows. And
they agree on certain fundamentals that should be adhered to in relation to
economic reform. With the key agreement
being that free market economics are supreme beyond dispute. And that whatever government does, even if
temporary, should be with the clear intention at allowing the ‘ease of doing
business.’ Or alternatively, prioritizing the needs of private capital (both
domestic and global).
And for both government and private capital this means only
one thing: austerity. The latter basically being a term that refers to the
cutting of government expenditure and allowing the free market and private capital
to be the primary factors of economic policy.
Never mind the fact that most governments in the global north who have
implemented this type of economic policy are increasing skeptical of it (for
example the United Kingdom's prime minister Theresa May recently pledged to end
austerity, while Labour opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn is popularly calling
for the return of the welfare state and reigning in of private capital).
But this appears not to be a cautionary tale for Mnangagwa
or private business. Instead they appear
to be firmly persuaded that the neo-liberal mantra of ‘no pain, no gain’ is the
only course of action they can take to gain the favor of the ‘market’.
Of course they will not readily explain to whose pain
they are referring to. For the avoidance of
doubt, it is most certainly not their own pain. Physically or emotionally. From our own domestic experience of the early
1990s version of ‘austerity’ that we came to know as the Economic Structural
Adjustment Programme (ESAP). And for all the pain we suffered, we still
remained jobless and lacked access to basic social services. Even if we blamed the politics of Mugabe’s
long duree rule, the fundamentals were very clear around the fact that Zimbabwe
was no longer anywhere near being the welfare state that it was in the first
ten years of independence. And those who benefitted the most were the ones with
links to private local and global capital as well as the ruling party. (Remember all those celebrity businessmen who
were part of indigenisation outfits, buying fancy cars, paying workers in
shoes? Some of them are now very rich politicians and football administrators).
But even if government claims that this is a different path,
the framework speaks a different language. It's Transitional Stabilisation Program (TSP) to be fortified when the 2019 national budget
is presented to Parliament later on this month, is framed as private sector led
economic growth. That means private capital
and its intentions are governments number one priority. With the hope that trickle down benefits (for
example, cheaper labour) will suffice to retain a modicum of political
stability.
The new marriage of business and government is therefore a state-private capital contract made for the elite. And
Mnangagwa probably knows this only too well. His primary guarantee to capital
is that he will provide the necessary political cover for capital's profit motivated forays. This cover will include
suppressing unionism and direct popular opposition to his economic policies by
social movements. (He is rather lucky that the opposition agrees with his economic template. In fact it occasionally claims it as its own.) Mnangagwa intends to try and reinvent the Zimbabwean state. Almost as a private corporation that houses other private corporations for a profit. In return, capital simply needs to do what it
does. That is to worship at the altar of the free market and neo-liberalism no matter the economic rights concerns of a poor majority in the country. The only catch is that capital, like global
international politics, only knows permanent interests and has no permanent friends. A matter that Masiyiwa is also probably all too familiar with.
*Takura Zhangazha writes here in his personal capacity
(takura-zhangazha.blogspot.com)