Moving Zimbabwe forwards despite the politics: If we are to see sustainable development of the Zimbabwean economy, we need to strengthen the generation of income and wealth within the second economy
I have had some rather remarkable responses to my last article dealing with my perspective on developments in the Zimbabwean economy. Some doubted that an economic solution can be found in Zimbabwe despite the politics, while others, dealt with the semantics around the term "second economy" and why it exists. For me the latter issue is really much of a muchness as we humans tend to choose what we want to see and at times, ignore or miss out on obvious opportunity because of how we label things. I guess that for me, the opportunity lies in that very fact that, others don't, or choose not, to see it. But I digress.
In November 2011 on this column, I wrote an article headed: "Black on Black Empowerment". In this article, I proposed that Africans, in general, have failed to harness their formidable spending power to direct economic change and empower their own communities. They have failed to manufacture their own goods and services but, have rather chosen to hand over their consumption power and purses to the benefit of conglomerates and capitalists. As a result, communities remain underdeveloped and dependent on consuming imported products and services that only benefit companies owned by capitalist elite, that counts in the minority. The result of this is that, income disparities between the rich and the poor continue to increase despite promises of economic empowerment. This has been one of the major sources of the recent revolutions thought-out the continent. We therefore need to think anew and realise that, per Albert Einstein, the problems we are faced with can never be solved at the same level of thinking as we were when we created them.
Capitalism has created wide spread poverty and I still insist that Africa must find its own economic models that serve the interest of the majority. I therefore agree fully with Mugabe's recent statement at the African Union's 19th ordinary session in Addis Ababa, where he said that, Africans must find African solutions to African problems. I shall deal with this very important subject thoroughly in the future.
I still hold these my views on the issue of "black on black empowerment", which I think are also clearly articulated by Dr Chika Onyeani, in his book titled: "Capitalist Nigger: The Road to Success, a Spider-Web Doctrine" where he says that, "We have become a sheep-like consumer race that depends on other communities for our culture, language, feeding, and clothing. We've become economic slaves in Western society".
In Zimbabwe, this still remains the case in what I described as the "first economy" in my last article. In the second economy, however, the penny seems to have dropped. We are beginning to see self reliance and the increased circulation of income within that sector of the economy. One only has to visit Mbare Musika, the Complex in Glen View, or Machipisa, in Highfileds or Makoni in Chitungwiza to realise that there is now significant economic activity within this second economy. Unfortunately, most of the products exchanged in this economy are imported. This means that, we will need to undertake the next phase of development which is: the local manufacture of goods and the localisation of service provision so that we create a virtuous cycle of wealth generation within these communities.