Democracy in Zimbabwe will not necessarily lead to economic prosperity: We need revolutionary ideas and people to take Zimbabwe to the next level
If there is anything we must be taught from South Africa, it is the fact that democracy will not necessarily result in economic prosperity and the amelioration of life conditions of the masses. Despite a good infrastructure, a sophisticated financial sector, a diverse industrial base and the largest GDP in Africa, 70% of black South Africans remain poor while 60% of youth remain unemployed. South Africa's democracy is failing to deal with the economic imperative of black empowerment and the eradication of mass poverty. It is clear therefore that, democracy and economic prosperity are in fact mutually exclusive.
We in Zimbabwe must be circumspect, and realize that the best constitutional framework needs to be supported by the creation of appropriate political and socio economic structures designed to deliver economic value to all Zimbabweans; otherwise we will be the architects of our own future problems and most probably fail to move the country forward.
Our new economic program must be inclusive in nature and must reject racism and partisan politics that have decimated Zimbabwean pride and potential. Our politics have deliberately marginalized a significant part of the country's productive population and as a result, we have failed to reap the education dividend that the country invested so much in immediately after political independence.
If there is anything the last 32 years has achieved, it is the obliteration of both our human capital and national assets especially in agriculture and, to a large extent, in mining. Zimbabwe has the potential to rise again, but only if we create space for new thinking and new leadership. The results of the last 32 years of negligence must be clinically reversed as we move into a new era of democracy underpinned by national pride and economic development.
For me, the development of institutional managerial capacity is more urgent if we are going to see any economic development and prosperity. We are very educated in Zimbabwe, with a large number of doctors and professors in almost every field of endeavour and yet, we cannot even supply clean water to our people.