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: Zimbabwe
IMF tightens the screws on Zimbabwe
By Jean Shaoul
18 August 1999
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After months of withholding finance, bringing Zimbabwe to the
brink of collapse, the International Monetary Fund has finally
agreed to provide a 14-month standby loan of US$193 million. This
is to enable the country to resume its repayments to its international
creditors. For the first time since independence in 1980, Zimbabwe
is $20 million a month behind in its foreign debt payments, resulting
in a $190 million deficit for 1999.
The standby loan is merely bridging finance until a more comprehensive
Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility is worked out. Even so,
the stringent conditions imposed by the IMF are truly staggering.
They constitute nothing less than economic, social and political
terrorism against a country already ravaged by poverty.
* President Mugabe's government must slash money supply growth
from 52 percent to 10 percent (equal to a cut of more than $5
billion), reduce the budget deficit to 6.3 percent of Gross Domestic
Product, and cut inflation to 30 percent from 50 percent within
the next five months.
* The central bank must end its control of interest rates (already
an astronomic 40 percent) and the exchange rate, and allow them
to adjust freely to the dictates of the markets.
* The government must sack 14,000 public employees and strictly
control wages by the end of the year.
* State-owned enterprises must be privatised and a Value Added
Tax introduced.
* The government must not divert funds to the military budget
to fund its 9,000 troops fighting in the Congo civil war at a
cost of US$3 million a month.
* Price controls must cease. The price of petrol, fuel and
electricity must be reviewed quarterly and allowed to rise in
line with inflation. Price controls on maize meal, already at
an all-time high with famine threatening, must be removed.
* Last year's increased import duties and surcharges, introduced
in an attempt to reduce the balance of payments deficit, must
be revoked.
* Ailing banks must be allowed to go to the wall.
* Some of the large landholdings must be bought up and redistributed.
In effect, Zimbabwe is in the hands of the moneylenders who
are laying claim to everything in sight. These standby credits
will ensure a huge transfer of wealth from one of the world's
poorest nations to the international bankers and transnational
corporations.
Catastrophic interest rate hikes, bankruptcies, sackings and
social devastation will follow. Removing the power of the government
to raise or even maintain the standard of living for its people
must lead, in turn, to the growing political destabilisation of
Zimbabwe. The military might of NATO rode roughshod over the national
sovereignty of Serbia. The IMF and the World Bank are doing the
same throughout Africa on behalf of world capitalism.
For months, Mugabe sought finance elsewhere for Zimbabwe's
balance of payments deficit to avoid the outrageous demands of
the IMF. The economy is in a state of collapse. Half the workforce
is unemployed. People stand at street corners begging for jobs.
Children cannot go to school because their parents cannot afford
the charges. Roads, phone lines and the basic infrastructure are
crumbling. Cholera has reached the outskirts of the capital Harare.
Other countries, such as Sudan and Zambia, have tried to ditch
the IMF before but found themselves reeling under plunging currencies,
burgeoning balance of payments deficits and desperate economic
conditions. They were later forced to restore ties with the IMF
after the West threatened to freeze aid. Mugabe too has had to
succumb.
Organisations such as the European Union, the European Investment
Bank, the African Development Bank, the PTA Bank, and other important
financial institutions work closely with the IMF. If a government
breaks with the IMF, it finds that all the other banks slam their
doors in its face.
Economic destruction of Zimbabwe
The present wretched situation in Zimbabwe is itself the product
of the IMF's structural adjustment programmes. Unlike other developing
countries, Zimbabwe was not suffering from an unsustainable foreign
debt crisis when it turned to the IMF for help with its budget
deficit in the early 1990s. But far from helping Zimbabwe's economic
development, the aim of the structural adjustment programme (SAP)
outlined in the Framework for Economic Reform (1991-95),
written by the IMF and World Bank, was to remake Zimbabwe's economy
in the interests of the transnational corporations.
Its first step was to insist that the government halve the
fiscal deficit to 5 percent by 1994 through cutting taxation.
Between 1989 and 1995, the top rate of tax was reduced from 60
percent to 45 percent, and corporation taxes from 50 percent to
37 percent. Huge tax breaks were given to the commercial farming
sector producing for the international market. The net result
was to reduce government revenue as a share of GDP by 5 percenteven
more than envisaged in the original targets.
The IMF's SAP has wrought untold havoc on economic and social
conditions in Zimbabwe. It struck at the very heart of the political
and economic programme followed by Mugabe's government since independence.
This was to expand social and public services while leaving the
white settler community's share of the country's land, wealth
and income intact. By cutting social provision, structural adjustment
removed the very limited safety net for the nation's people at
the same time as increasing the overall level of poverty.
By 1994, the cost of financial liberalisation,
devaluation, hikes in interest rates and the other measures that
come with SAPs, meant that the cost of government debt more than
doubled from 13 percent of domestic revenue in 1989 to 27 percent
in 1994. Since the payment of this debt to the international banks
could not be avoided, and tax revenues had fallen, the burden
of adjustment fell on non-debt expenditure.
These factors taken together led to a massive contraction,
equal to 15 percent of GDP between 1992 and 1995 in order to meet
the IMF's fiscal targets. In absolute terms, the fiscal deficit
actually increased over the period.
Impact on social conditions
The cuts in public expenditure triggered a collapse in public
investment and the disintegration of the basic infrastructure.
It has led to the re-emergence of diseases such as cholera, malaria
and yellow fever, and the spread of new ones such as HIV/AIDS.
With 25 percent of those aged 15 to 49 infected with the HIV virus,
Zimbabwe is the worst affected country in Africa.
Social services suffered deep cuts. A recent Oxfam report,
Education No Break the Cycle of Poverty, showed that
the effects on education were catastrophic. Over the period 1990-94,
there was a 20 percent decline in real spending on primary education.
Taking into account increased enrolment, real expenditure per
pupil fell by about 40 percent. Teachers saw their jobs, wages
and conditions go. School fees were introduced in 1992 for all
urban primary schools. Although rural schools were supposedly
exempt, in practice even before the SAP schools were resorting
to all sorts of charges for uniforms, books and levies for building
funds. In 1992, the average cost of sending a child to a rural
school was $11 per pupil per annum. The more school budgets came
under pressure, the more the charges rose.
Not surprisingly, there was a 5 percent drop in primary school
completion rates in the early 1990s. The transition rate for girls
into secondary education fell by 30 percent, with the dropout
rate increasing by the same amount. Less than 4 percent of pupils
entering secondary schools now graduate with a leaving certificate.
The deterioration in social provision and rising costs went
along with increasing poverty, especially in rural areas. Even
before the 1991-92 drought, one of the worst in recent history,
an estimated 2.6 million out of a population of just over 10 million
could not meet their basic needs. Communal farm areas accounted
for over 75 percent of this poverty.
During the first half of the 1990s, poverty increased dramatically
in rural areas. At the same time, urban poverty intensified as
real wages fell by one third due to raging inflation. Remittances
to rural areas, an important source of income for the rural poor,
dropped sharply. The misery this created is reflected in child
malnutrition rates of 30 percent.
None of this was acknowledged in the IMF's Policy Framework
Paper or the World Bank's Country Assistance Strategy.
Yet the IMF tacitly conceded, even before the implementation of
Zimbabwe's SAP, that its policies do not promote economic growth.
"Although there have been a number of studies on the subject
over the last decade, one cannot say with certainty whether 'programs'
have worked or not.... On the basis of existing studies, one certainly
cannot say whether the adoption of programs supported by the Fund
led to an improvement in inflation and growth performance. In
fact it is often found that programs are associated with a rise
in inflation and a fall in growth rate" (Mohsin Kahn,
The Macroeconomic Effects of Fund Supported Adjustment Programs,
IMF staff papers, vol. 37, no. 2, 1990, pp. 196 and 122, emphasis
added).
Mounting political unrest
Growing poverty has given rise to mounting political protests
and strike action, as wages fail to keep up with inflation and
only 11 percent of the population are formally employed. Real
incomes are now lower than they were 20 years ago. Last year,
food price increases sparked off the worst riots in Harare since
independence.
Mugabe has illegally arrested, jailed and tortured journalists,
imposed bans on the media, outlawed strikes and stay-aways,
and allowed the military and Central Intelligence Organisation
to arrest and detain civilians. He has openly flouted court orders.
The government's brutal suppression of any opposition, the war
in the Congo and the failure to distribute land to the rural poor,
has brought it into conflict with all sections of society.
At the height of the economic and political crisis at the beginning
of the year, the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU), itself
closely allied to the Mugabe government, stepped into the breach.
It announced the formation of a new political party, the Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC), as a political safety valve. There
had been growing calls from business, the press, members of the
ruling ZANU-PF party and parliament for a strategic change
in economic and political direction.
Far from proposing any alternative programme to resolve the
economic and social problems facing workers and the rural poor,
this strategic change is nothing more than a call
for the implementation of the IMF's structural adjustment programme.
According to MDC General Secretary Morgan Tsvangirai, the problem
is that "we are not living within our means".
Despite their opposition to the colonial order, and their present
demagogic denunciations of the IMF, Mugabe and his ZANU-PF party
that had fought for independence are organically incapable of
carrying out the most basic measures to satisfy the needs of the
oppressed masses. Mugabe has been forced over the years to abandon
his own national programthe protection of Zimbabwe's domestic
economygo cap in hand to the IMF and deliver the country
up to the international banks and corporations.
The evolution of ZANU-PF demonstrates the incapacity of the
bourgeois national liberation movements to exert the slightest
independence. Operating in a world capitalist economy characterised
by global integration and transnational production, these movements
have been transformed into the direct instruments of finance capital.
Mugabe's latest capitulation has not resolved the political
and economic crisis. The Financial Times has clearly lost
patience with him, saying, "Robert Mugabe is a lucky man.
The International Monetary Fund decision to provide a 14-month
$193m loan to Zimbabwe is part of a bail-out he does not deserve,
on terms he is unlikely to implement, offered by lenders who should
know better. While it may provide a respite for President Mugabe,
it does a disservice to Zimbabwe and makes the Fund look foolish."
This is a clear indication that Mugabe's days are numbered,
for politicians in Africa today rule under licence from the world's
bankers.
See Also:
Zimbabwe
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