Zimbabwe Renewal - Labour, Productivity and Competitiveness
We talk glibly about a globalised world without really understanding just what it means. In Zimbabwe we are emerging from a century of controlled market policy and harsh exchange controls that gave near total protection to local industries. The result was a small but tough and resilient economy that pursued self sufficiency like a religion and was able to slowly raise living standards until the delinquency of the Zanu PF regime in the first decade of this century destroyed the system. We now have to face the harsh reality that we have to rebuild our economy almost from scratch.
Not only has Zimbabwe woken up from a century of managed growth and destruction, but it has done so well into the 21st Century which is going to be the first century of globalised markets and near free competition. This is compounded by the fact that we no longer have a managed and tightly controlled economy but one in which enterprise and initiative are the main driving forces and a market driven economic system without exchange or significant import controls.
The harsh reality is that the majority of our industry, agriculture, and services are simply not globally competitive. The painful fact is that only those segments that are, are going to survive. Our manufacturing sector, already down to about 20 per cent of its traditional role, is shrinking at the rate of about 50 companies a month. Our agriculture is a shadow of its former self, but all remaining farmers report the same thing, how on earth do we make a living, doing what we do?
Last month the Ministry of Agriculture announced a producer price for maize of $395 a tonne. The farmers had demanded a price above $400. The import parity price of maize from the region is about $250 a tonne and the GMB simply does not have the money to sustain its offer of $395. The result, farmers are unable to sell their maize locally to anyone except the millers and they are offering a price below $200, take it or leave it. A similar crisis grips the tobacco and the cotton industries.
We have to recognise that if we are to survive in this globalised world, we have to be able to meet competition head on. In the last election I had the job of buying T shirts for our campaign. Our budget was a million dollars. I called local players and got a price of just over $5 a shirt, delivery over six months but we had to buy the material in bulk and have it dyed. We called South Africa - price quoted delivered Harare $3,80 and delivery in three months after payment up front. We then e mailed China, had a reply in 5 hours, samples in three days and a price of $1,50 per unit delivered Harare, half of the price on order, the balance on delivery, delivery in one month. How on earth do you compete with that!