Just where are we going?
Zimbabwe is an enigma to many. The country presents itself as a clean, modern State with friendly people, little crime and small pockets of prosperity and wealth. A small country blessed with a great climate, an abundance of natural resources that put us in the top league of countries In terms of the ratio between our population and our resource base.
Underneath the veneer, is a less attractive Zimbabwe; we are a country caught in a time warp – so little has changed since Independence in 1980, no major new roads or railways, no growth in air traffic, factories still in good condition but largely silent, banks on Main Street but no money in them. A population whose life expectancy has halved since 1960, incomes have also declined – especially in the past two decades. Hunger is widespread and all services are in dire straits. As a result we have seen a third of our population flee the country as economic migrants, death rates have trebled and in a country where we should have a population approaching 20 million, we have less than 13 million actual residents.
Our government system has devolved into a quasi military regime with many centers of competing power. Mugabe has been in control for 35 years – twice as long as Ian Smith and is now over 91 years old and increasingly frail. His wife is half his age, ambitious and ruthless. She wants greater things for herself but has been ambushed by her body which is suffering from cancer of the colon. The refusal of this duo to relax their grip on power here and who refuse to allow any fundamental changes means that the country is largely on auto pilot and without a destination.
Since 2013, this nasty mix of geriatric leadership and military war lords has taken back full control after 4 years of shared power with the MDC in the GNU. In response the economy has gone backwards. 40 per cent of all banks have failed; billions of dollars in savings and investment has fled the country, the budget deficit has spun out of control as revenues shrink but the “Old Man” refuses to countenance any cuts in expenditure. Employment rates have fallen to a tiny percentage of our population – non civil service employment could be as low as 6 per cent of all adults.
The country desperately needs change, a change of leadership, changes in policy, changes in direction and there are absolutely no signs of any of this coming out of the regime in power. Hope that the Mnangagwa bid for power would start to signal change have faded as Mugabe has deliberately held him back. Much needed changes in the Cabinet have not materialized and corrupt and incompetent Ministers remain in their portfolios despite abject failure.