Transferring wealth to Zimbabweans
Our fear is that it will not be done properly by people who have the relevant expertise and experience.
Between 2004 and 2006 all but a few indigenous banks in Zimbabwe faced significant political problems. Their founders where hounded out of the country for nefarious accusations of externalizing foreign exchange. The financial services industry as a whole faced an inexplicable purge. The chief instigator of this entire disempowerment crusade was none other than Gideon Gono in his new role as the Governor of the Reserve Bank backed by his Excellency.
Indigenous banks had indeed started a massive transfer of wealth to black Zimbabweans by funding industry and coming up with quite innovative ways of mobilizing capital and creating access to that capital for black owned and managed indigenous businesses.
As a result, a large number of black entrepreneurs began owning their own companies after having gained valuable experience in the corporate sector. The trigger to all this new business activity was the fact that blacks now had access to bankers who understood where they were coming from and genuinely wanted to assist. It was a win-win situation.
If my readers can remember well, black owned banks even started to surpass established foreign owned banks in Zimbabwe in terms of assets and deposits under management, including profitability. This of course all fell apart as Gono arrived at the central bank and in partnership with ZANU (PF), decimated the sector as it was seen as a political threat. Many stories are abound on what really took place, but I shall not go into that unnecessary history here.