If there is anything Patrick Chinamasa, the Minister of finance, achieved yesterday, it was the acknowledgement of the fundamental problems faced by Zimbabwe today, the avoidance of introducing the Zimbabwe dollar and the clarification of the issues around indigenization.
Well done to the minister for at least sticking to the main issues and not being a maverick or boring us with the usual rhetoric.
However, the budget clearly avoided the contentious issue of addressing the fundamental issues faced by agriculture with regard to security of tenure and access to finance for new farmers. Zimbabwe cannot progress until we address this. We need a comprehensive policy that deals with the compensation for repossessed farms, the tenure of security and the production of food crops to achieve food security. Agriculture is the trigger to economic recovery and we can no longer continue to avoid this truth.
I am happy that indigenization has now been left to the market where the government will not play the "big brother" role but a facilitation one if needed. Zimbabweans must take advantage of this. Indigenization in the resource sector still needs some intelligent solutions we are all ready to offer our views. Overall, there is still clarity needed on who is indigenous and who is not.
The addressing of the structural issues in the financial services sector is a step in the right direction; particularly with regard to the role of the RBZ as the lender of last resort and the establishing of a vibrant interbank lending market. I however doubt that the USD 100 million availed for this purpose will be adequate. The adoption of the RBZ debt of about USD 1, 3 billion by cabinet releases the bank from unmanageable liabilities. However, it is imperative that the taxpayer knows how this debt arose and how the government intends to finance it.
With regard to international debt arrears, the minister insisted that this sits at about USD 6 billion and not USD 10 billion. This is much of a much-ness, our concern is that, as long as we are in arrears we are unlikely to access new money which we desperately need.