Title: THE ZIMBABWEAN ECONOMY
1THE ZIMBABWEAN ECONOMY
- BY GODFREY KANYENZE (Dr.), DIRECTOR OF LEDRIZ
- CRISIS COALITION ZIMBABWE
- BRONTE HOTEL, 17 JUNE 2014
2Introduction
- Since independence in 1980, Zimbabwe has
implemented no less than 14 economic blueprints - Growth with Equity (1981)
- Transitional National Development Plan
(1982-1985) - First Five Year National Development Plan
(1986-1990) - Economic Structural Adjustment Programme (ESAP)
(1991-1996) - ZIMPREST (1996-2000)
- Millennium Economic Recovery Programme (MERP) ,
2001-02 - Ten Point Plan based on Agriculture (2002)
- National Economic Revival Programme (NERP)
(2003) - Macroeconomic Policy Framework (2005-2006)
- National Economic Development Priority Programme
(NEDPP) (2007) - Zimbabwe Economic Development Strategy (ZEDS)
(2008)(aborted at Conception) - Short Term Economic Recovery Programme (STERP I)
(2009-10) - Short Term Economic Recovery Programme (STERP II)
(2010-12) - Medium Term Plan (2011-15).
3- Since ZIMPREST, the programmes became short-term
as Government was grappling with an emerging
crisis - MTP represents the return to medium term
planning - Experience suggests that Government has been long
on planning and short on implementation, with
regular changes to the programmes, policy
incoherence and inconsistency, and even
reversals. - With the adoption of Zim Asset after the July
2013 Harmonized Elections, the MTP has
effectively been unilaterally abandoned in
midstream - The rationale is that after the landslide victory
by the ZANU PF Party in the 31st July 2013
harmonised elections, the Party was given the
mandate to govern the country for a five (5) year
term - Hence this is a party and not a national
consultative position.
4SOCIO-ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
- Economic recovery since 2009 following a
decade-long decline during 1999-2008 a
cumulative decline of at least 51 (48 between
2000 and 2008), Zimbabwe declined from the 2nd
largest economy in SADC to 11th. - Economic stabilization and recovery anchored by
the formation of the Inclusive Government in
February 2009 - The adoption of a multi-currency regime and cash
budgeting, and discontinuation of the
quasi-fiscal operations of the RBZ killed off
hyperinflation and helped restore price
stability - Following a cumulative decline of GDP of 46.5
between 1998-2008, GDP expanded by 25.2 during
2009-2011. - Recovery in fiscal revenues from 3.1 of GDP in
2008 to an estimated 34 of GDP in 2012. - Modest growth in overall investment from 2 of
GDP in 2008 to 9 of GDP. Investment levels
remain subdued with only few firms investing at
very low levels - poor access to finance, while
profitable investment is not taking place.
5- Recovery anchored by mining and agriculture
- Real average GDP growth of 8.5 during 2009-13
- Recovery buoyed by the mineral sector, due to
high global prices. - The mining sector became the leading export
sector, largely due to high mineral prices and
expanded platinum, diamonds and gold output. - Mining has surged to become the most dynamic
sector, replacing the role of agriculture in the
pre-crisis Zimbabwe. - The average share of GDP of mining grew from an
average 10.2 in the 1990s to an average 16.9
from 2009-2011. - Strong external demand for primary commodities
(in particular platinum and gold) supported
higher production levels, which recovered the
pre-2000 levels in terms of value.
6- There has been a marked change in the structure
of sectors. - While in the past the mining sector was dominated
by gold and small-scale production of over 40
minerals, it is now led by large platinum
operations, with diamonds emerging quickly since
2010. - Export recovery is driven by primary commodities
such that of the export receipts of US14.1
billion generated during the period 2009 to
September 2013, US9.2 billion (65.2) emanated
from the mining sector, with agriculture,
horticulture and hunting weighing in with US4
billion (28.3) and the manufacturing sector
contributed the balance of US0.9 billion (6.4).
- Implies primary commodities (mining and
agriculture) accounted for 93.5 of export
earnings during the period 2009-13.
7Mining drives export recovery post-2009
(contribution to export growth - ) - one
cylinder is firing (mining)
8- In terms of mineral exports, the data shows a
high concentration ratio, with the top 20
exporters accounting for 92.7 of the sectors
export receipts. - Mining exports are also concentrated on two
commodities (platinum and diamonds), with the top
five exporters contributing more than 60 of the
export receipts (ZIMPLATS-platinum
Mimosa-diamonds Mbada-diamonds ZIMASCO-chrome
and Unki-diamonds), implying that the economy is
more exposed to commodity cycles and is
increasingly in a more capital-intensive mode. - Potential for further output growth in gold,
diamonds, nickel, ferrochrome and platinum and,
and in the longer term, coal and iron ore. - However, the economic rebound experienced since
2009 is moderating as growth declined from 11.4
in 2010 and 11.9 in 2011 to 10.6 in 2012 and a
projected 3.4 in 2013 against a Medium-Term Plan
(2011-15) target of 7.1 - Slow down in recovery due to a poor rain season,
lack of capital, revenue under-performance,
structural bottlenecks, including power
challenges and deteriorating infrastructure,
corruption and a volatile and fragile global
financial environment.
9(No Transcript)
10(No Transcript)
11(No Transcript)
12Performance of the Zimbabwe Economy, Selected
Economic Indicators, 1986-2012 (Periodical Annual
Averages)
13- In 2014, the economy is projected to grow by
6.1, premised on an active Zim-Asset programme
policy scenario anchored on strong recovery of
agriculture and improved performance of mining
and construction sectors. - In 2014, agriculture is projected to grow by 9,
mainly driven by growth in maize (62.8), cotton
(27.8), soya beans (26.7), and groundnuts
(56.8), among other crops. - The improved state of preparedness, sustainable
planned financing arrangements and inputs
availability, among others, will support the
above anticipated growth. - These growth projections are not in sync with
global commodity trends and do not logically
derive from the current situation analysis. - In 2014, the mining sector is projected to grow
by 11.4, on the back of planned investments and
largely driven by strong performance in gold,
diamonds, nickel and coal. - Again, projections are not in sync with projected
commodity price trends.
14(No Transcript)
15Comparative GDP Figures (Source J. Wade 2014, CZI
Breakfast Meeting)
16(No Transcript)
17(No Transcript)
18(No Transcript)
19(No Transcript)
20AGGREGATE DEMAND SLOWDOWN (From Joseph Mverecha,
2014)
21(No Transcript)
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24(No Transcript)
25(No Transcript)
26Distribution of GDP by Industry - (Periodical
Averages 1980-2012) (current prices)
27Growth in Real GDP and Employment (1980-2012)
28Sectorial Distribution of Employment, Selected
Periods, 1980-2011
29(No Transcript)
30Major Capacity Constraints (CZI Surveys)
31Factor-floor productivity and unit labor costs
remain competitive, but the sector is hampered by
high cost of business (World Bank, 2012)
32(No Transcript)
33Trade
- Total exports for the period January to October
2013 stood at US2.8 billion, against US3.2
billion realised during the same period in 2012. - By the end of 2013, exports are projected to
reach US4.430 billion. Projected at US5 billion
in 2014. - Imports continue to grow faster than exports,
totalling US6.6 billion by October 2013, against
US6.1 billion realised during the same period in
2012. - Total imports for 2013 projected at US7.682
billion, while forecast at US8.321 billion in
2014. - As a result of the fast growth in imports against
the sluggish growth in exports, the current
account deficit continues to widen to US3.8
billion, above the original projected deficit of
US2.5 billion for 2013.
34- A competitiveness gap is emerging - Appreciation
of the real exchange rate suggests that the price
structure of the economy has shifted against
tradable products. - The distribution sector has filled the gap ,
supplying imported goods, keeping prices of
tradables at low levels and contributing to a
current account deficit. - Contributing to the continued de-industrialisation
in the economy. - Short-term protectionist measures could lead to
short-term gains at the expense of medium-term
recovery. - Measures aimed at reducing costs of business
(including reducing the country risk premium to
facilitate access to finance), and supporting
public services (energy, water, transportation)
are more likely to be effective in the
medium-term. - Stronger policies in mining and agricultural
sectors would also stimulate international demand
for manufactured goods and the establishment of
new horizontal and vertical linkages with the
manufacturing sector.
35Exports Imports Surge Post-2009
36(No Transcript)
37Current Account Balance (Proj.)
38Exports by Destination
39Imports from South Africa surge
40Export portfolio is less diversified
41Zimbabwes falling diversification contrasts
starkly with other African countries
42Increasing dominance of resource-intensive exports
43(No Transcript)
44(No Transcript)
45(No Transcript)
46(No Transcript)
47(No Transcript)
48Cost of Exporting Importing a Container, 2013
49Receipts from Tourism
50- Official Development Assistance (ODA) inflows for
the period January to September 2013, amounted to
US259.1 million against a combined annual
projection of US642.7 million. - In 2013, support under ODA was largely channeled
towards humanitarian and social programmes in
agriculture, health, education, social
protection, and governance sectors. - The disbursement rate as at end June 2013 was
26.9 a significant decrease from the 2012
disbursement rate of 52 for the period under
review. - Official Development Assistance for 2014 is
projected at US580.3 million in support of
humanitarian and social programmes in
agriculture, health, education, social protection
and governance sectors.
51Trends in Grants-to-GDP Ratio, 1980-2013 ()
52Average Annual IMF Disbursements (USM)
53Average Annual World Bank Disbursements (USM)
54Average Annual AfDB Disbursements
55Net Capital Flows (USM)
56External Loan Inflows (USM)
57Grant Inflows
58- Negligible reserves heighten vulnerabilities.
-
- Low external reserves and lack of a
lender-of-last-resort mean Zimbabwe faces
downside risks with minimal buffers. - With usable international reserves covering only
6 days of imports by end of December 2013, the
country has no cushion against external shocks. - At least three months of imports in reserve
coverage is deemed necessary.
59Unsustainable expenditure mix
- Unbudgeted for adjustments of January and July
2011 saw the employment costs rise from 45 of
the budget in 2009 and 2010 to unsustainable
levels of 63 in 2011 and 69 in 2013, crowding
out public investment and service delivery. - Implies 69 of the national budget and taxes is
used to engage civil servants which account for
less than 3 of the population. - The Wage Bill at 75 of the 2013 Budget continues
to account for a disproportionate share of
overall budget expenditures. - The disproportionate share of the wage bill in
the total Budget implies that we are only living
under 25 of Budget resources for both Operations
and the Capital Budget. - Yet the Medium Term Plan (2011-15) (MTP) singled
out infrastructure rehabilitation and expansion
as the foundation for economic growth and
development. - Resource envelop of US2 billion a year over a
5-year period is required. - A cash deficit emerged since 2010 financed mainly
by SDR sales and non-concessional loans.
60- For the whole year (2013), total revenue
collections are now estimated at about US3.72
billion, which is below the original budget
estimate of US3.86 billion. - Results in revenue projection shortfall of about
US140 million. - Cumulative expenditures to November 2013 amounted
to US3.526 billion against a target of US3.396
billion, resulting in expenditure overrun of
US130 million. - For the period to November 2013, employment costs
amounted to US2.429 billion accounting for 68.9
of total expenditure, against a target of
US2.284 billion giving an overrun of US145
million. - During the period under review, operations and
maintenance amounted to US744 million,
accounting for 21.1 of total expenditures,
against a target of US601 million giving an
over-expenditure of US143 million. - The expenditure overrun was mainly necessitated
by the Constitutional Referendum and Harmonised
General Elections at US178.4 million,
outstanding obligations for the holding of the
2012 National Census US12.4 million, and hosting
of the UNWTO Conference, US7.6 million.
61(No Transcript)
62(No Transcript)
63(No Transcript)
64(No Transcript)
65(No Transcript)
66(No Transcript)
67- Investment is hampered by a poor business
climate, uncertainties over the implementation of
the indigenization policy, and political
uncertainty, while domestic investors may face
difficulties accessing long-term credit. - At US10.7 billion (77 of which are arrears),
Zimbabwes external public debt is unsustainable - In fact, Zimbabwe is in debt distress with debt
accounting for 88 of GDP at end-2012- is likely
to worsen further as resolving external payments
arrears through a comprehensive arrears clearance
framework underpinned by strong macroeconomic
framework is likely to be a protracted process - Non-concessional borrowing could complicate
future external arrears clearance - Debt overhang remains a serious impediment to
macroeconomic stability, sustainable growth and
development - Zimbabwe faces these risks with thin buffers
foreign exchange reserves are very low at 0.3
months of imports at end-2011 against a minimum
level of 3 months - Based on rebound effects and in the absence of
strong policies to promote growth, recovery is
therefore fragile.
68FDI Inflows
69FDI Inflows
70Foreign Direct Investment Inflows (USM)
71(No Transcript)
72(No Transcript)
73FDI By CountryBrazil India
74(No Transcript)
75(No Transcript)
76Competitiveness, Ease of Doing Business etc
World Economic Forum (WEF) Global Competitiveness Rankings World Bank (WB) Ease of Doing Business Rankings World Economic Forum (WEF) Global Enabling Trade Rankings Heritage Foundation Index of Economic Freedom Transparency International Corruption Perception Index
2007/08 129 / 131 154 / 183 150 / 179
2008/09 118 / 121 160 / 183 112 / 118 145 / 147 166 / 180
2009/10 132 / 134 156 / 183 118 / 121 175 / 179 146 / 180
2010/11 136 / 139 157 / 183 122 / 125 178 / 179 134 / 178
2011/12 132 / 142 170 / 183 - 175/177 154/183
2012/13 132/144 172/185 129//132 175/184 163/176
2013/14 131/148 170/189 176/178 (repressed since 1995) 157/177
77(No Transcript)
78- Deteriorating international competitiveness with
a ranking of 132 out of 144 countries on the
Global Competitiveness Index (2012/13). - Strength in terms of soft factors such as
female participation in labour force, reliance on
professional management, quality of education
system, low inflation, protection of minority
shareholders and taxation, that however have low
weighting in enhancing competitiveness (ranked
61st). - Low ranking in hard factors such as national
savings, breadth of value chains, property rights
observance, venture capital availability, quality
of electricity supply, number of days to start a
business and soundness of banks whose presence or
lack thereof determines the level of an economys
competitiveness (rank ranged from 135 to 143). - The Global Competitiveness Report (2012/13)
survey also came up with six most challenging
factors for doing business in Zimbabwe. - As with the 2012 CZI Manufacturing Survey, the
factors undermining doing business in Zimbabwe
were policy instability, lack of funding,
corruption, inefficient government bureaucracy
and inadequate infrastructure. - Surprises, however, arise not from the rankings,
but rather from the policy disconnect
specifically the unwillingness of policymakers to
tackle the challenges identified, opting rather
to focus on soft factors which do not necessarily
add value in lifting competitiveness rankings.
79Zimbabwes competitiveness Action points -
Message from Davos 2013
- Austerity measures with regard to the Zimbabwean
case relate mainly to management of the wage bill
and allocation of resources focusing on capital
formation. - Policymakers may also work on innovation and
technological advancement rankings, especially in
upgrading industry equipment as Zimbabwe declined
from 119 in 2011 to 128 in 2012. - The direction of the movement is worrisome with
de-industrialisation of the economy, implying a
slipping backwards in structural terms.
80Topic Rankings DB 2014 Rank DB 2013 Rank DB 2012 Rank Change in Rank (2014 v 2013)
Starting a Business 150 143 145 -7
Dealing with Construction Permits 170 170 169 0
Getting Electricity 157 157 165 0
Registering Property 93 85 84 -8
Getting Credit 109 129 127 20
Protecting Investors 128 128 124 0
Paying Taxes 142 134 127 -8
Trading Across Borders 167 167 172 0
Enforcing Contracts 118 111 112 -7
Resolving Insolvency 156 169 155 13
81Zimbabwes Services Policy Among the Restrictive
(Services Trade Restrictiveness Index)
82Price of mobile call per minute (Average/Mean,
US, 2011
83Average price of 1 MB of 3G broadband, 2011
84External Debt
- Resolution of Zimbabwes debt overhang is key to
normalising our relations with the international
financial institutions and bilateral creditors.
Somalia, Sudan and Zimbabwe are the only three
African countries with arrears to the
international financial community. Zimbabwe is
regarded as a fragile state. - One of the serious impediments to the countrys
developmental agenda. - Continued accumulation of external debt payment
arrears is seriously undermining the countrys
creditworthiness, and severely compromising the
countrys ability to secure new financing from
both bilateral and multilateral sources. - In November 2010 Government approved the Zimbabwe
Accelerated Arrears Clearance Debt and
Development Strategy (ZAADDS), as a basis for
negotiating the clearance of arrears and debt
relief for the country. - The key tenets of ZAADDS are as follows (i) the
establishment and operationalisation of a Debt
Management Office in the Ministry of Finance
(ii) undertaking a validation and reconciliation
exercise of Zimbabwes public and publicly
guaranteed external debt database with all
creditors (iii) negotiating with creditors and
the Development Partners for arrears clearance,
debt relief and new financing and (iv)
leveraging Zimbabwes natural resources in
pursuit of debt relief.
85- The Zimbabwe Aid and Debt Management Office
(ZADMO) was established in December 2010, in the
Ministry of Finance. - The validation and reconciliation exercise of the
external debt data base which commenced in 2011
has now been completed. - Total external public and publicly guaranteed
debt (excluding Reserve Bank and private sector
external debt) as at 31 December 2012, stood at
US6.077 billion, (49 of GDP). - The stock of accumulated arrears accounted for
US4.72 billion (78 per cent of total debt
stock). - Total multilateral debt stock as at 31 December
2012, stood at US2.49 billion (41 of total
debt), of which arrears amounted to US1.96
billion. - The breakdown of the arrears is as follows World
Bank, US1.4 billion African Development Bank,
US632 million European Investment Bank, US302
million International Monetary Fund, US125
million and Other multilateral creditors, US117
million.
86(No Transcript)
87- Total external debt to bilateral creditors stood
at US3.59 billion (59 of total debt), of which
the stock of arrears amounted to US2.75 billion
or 77. - Of the total bilateral debt, as at 31 December
2012, US3.02 billion is owed to the Bilateral
Paris Club creditors, and US572 million to the
Non-Paris Club creditors which include China. - Of the total external debt amounting to US6.077
billion, penalty charges accounted for US1.026
billion (17 of total external debt).
88(No Transcript)
89(No Transcript)
90Structural Changes in the Economy
- Informalisation of the economy and, the
structural change in agriculture in view of land
reform. The reallocation of jobs across sectors
is central to the process of structural change
and productivity upgrading. - Growth in labour productivity arises either from
changes in labour productivity within sectors
for instance through the implementation of new
machines and innovative technologies that allow
more output with the same amount of labour input
or from the reallocation of jobs across sectors
(structural change) when workers move from low-
to high-productivity sectors (e.g. from
agriculture to industry or services) - At the same time, structural change is central
and necessary to increase living standards
durably and equitably by allowing ever more
people to benefit from higher productivity levels
in more advanced parts of the economy.
91- Structural change is the most effective driver of
growth to bring down rates of vulnerable
employment in developing economies, both in the
short and in the long run. - It is the across-sector labour productivity
component of growth that is associated strongest
with the speed at which vulnerable employment
decreases, compared with other growth components.
- Zimbabwe is experiencing a structural regression
increasing dependence on natural resources,
de-industrialisation informalisation (84 of
employment 85 of MSMEs). - The Finscope Survey Report of 2011 revealed that
40 of the population is financially excluded and
that only 24 is banked. - In addition, only 13 of the population uses
savings products - in excess of US2 billion
circulating outside the formal banking system. - The share of the manufacturing sector in GDP
peaked at 26.9 per cent in 1992 before collapsing
to 7.2 per cent by 2002 and 10.8 per cent by
2003, 15.5 per cent by 2009, 15.9 per cent (2011)
and 15.6 per cent by 2012. - Industrial capacity utilization declined sharply
from 35.8 in 2005 to only 18.9 by 2007, and
below 10 by 2008, before improving to 33 in
2009, 43.7 in 2010, 57.2 in 2011, and climbing
down to 44.2 in 2012 and 39.6 in 2013.
92- Inequality and Poverty
- High levels of unemployment and decent work
deficits 72 of the population below the poverty
line by 2003, up from 55 in 1995 - The Poverty, Income, Consumption and Expenditure
Survey (PICES) 2011/12 Report suggests that 62.6
of Zimbabwean households are poor whilst 16.2
are in extreme poverty (76 of rural households
are poor compared to 38.2 in urban areas), up
from 42 of households in 1995 and the same level
of 63 of 2003 - 77 of the employed persons in Zimbabwe earn
gross monthly primary incomes of less than US350
compared to the Poverty Datum Line (PDL) of
US514.24 for a family of five in 2011, resulting
in households selling financial assets more than
they were buying them (dissaving) to fund current
expenditures since incomes fell short of current
consumption expenditures. - Per capita GDP declined from US720 during
1997-2002 to US265 by 2008, rising to US370 by
2012
93- Growing informalization as reflected by the
increase in informal employment from 80 in 2004
to 84 in 2011 - Inequality worsened the gini-coefficient
increased from 0.53 in 1995 to 0.61 in 2003 - The disappearance of a middle class the missing
middle - The results of the 2011 FinScope Survey launched
in May 2012 revealed that only 38 of Zimbabweans
are served by formal financial institutions and
that 40 of the population is financially
excluded from both the formal and informal
financial products/services - HIV and AIDS (adult prevalence rate of 15.9)
the re-emergence of diseases that had been
controlled (malaria, TB, cholera).
94(No Transcript)
95Poverty Situation in Zimbabwe, 1995, 2003 and
2011 PASS I II, and PICES (2011/12).
96Indicator 1990 2000 2006-08 2011
Human Development Index (Rank) 121 128 151 173
Human Poverty Index (Rank) 60 91
Net Primary School Enrolment () 99 82
Adult Literacy 67 89 89 92
Infant Mortality (per 1 000) 61 73 81 90
Maternal Mortality Rate (per 100 000 births) 330 700 880 960
Life Expectancy (Years) 63 43 41 51.4
Population Using Improved Water () 78 85 81 75.8
GDP per Capita US644 US338 376
Poverty Rate 42 Over 70 72
Brain Drain Over 3m
97Zimbabwes HDI trends based on consistent time
series data
98Budgetary Allocations for Health, Education,
Defense and Social Protection, 1980-2013
(Percentage of Total Expenditures)
99Key Economic Challenges (2014 Budget Statement)
- High consumption, leading to negative domestic
savings and, hence, exposing the country to rely
on external savings - Liquidity constraint reflected in declining
money supply growth, low financial intermediation
and resulting in weak aggregate demand - High debt overhang resulting in limited and
highly priced lines of credit - Limited external inflows in the form of foreign
direct investment, lines of credit and grants
linked to high country risk premium resulting in
low confidence by investors - Food insecurity owing to low productivity, low
investment, as well as climate change induced
droughts and erratic rainfall distribution
pattern
100- Lack of industry competiveness due to obsolete
equipment and out-dated technology as well as
dumping and smuggling imposing unfair playing
field with external competitors - Infrastructure deficits, in particular transport,
energy and water, resulting in high cost of doing
business and, hence, lack of competitiveness - Financial sector vulnerabilities stemming from
weak governance, low interbank market activity,
high non-performing loans (15.9 on average), low
capitalisation and poor asset quality in several
banks - Lack of transparency and accountability in the
exploitation of our mineral resources - Widening current account deficit due to faster
growth of imports than exports leading to
haemorrhaging of the economy.
101Way Forward Unchanged Policies (Business as
usual) Scenario
- The economic rebound is projected to moderate up
to 2017 - Compared to other African countries, the
Zimbabwean economy remains highly differentiated,
with a broad-based potential for recovery in all
sectors, from mining to agriculture,
manufacturing and services. - In this current phase of recovery, the mining
sector is emerging as the main sector capable of
autonomous growth. - The restructured agricultural sector also has
potential of supply-response to improved
conditions, as well as tourism. - However, growth in the manufacturing sector
appears more dependent on the internal demand
generated by the two main driving sectors
(agriculture and mining). - Hence, the quality of policy in the mining and
agricultural sector will in the main be the major
determinants of the rate of growth of the
economy.
102Schematic illustration of linkages in the
post-crisis Zimbabwean economy (World Bank, 2012)
103- The externally driven recovery of mining growth,
based on the intensity of external demand, is
evident from the dynamics of the recovery, which
started around 2005 with the development of big
operations in platinum, while the economy was
still in the midst of economic turmoil. - In spite of the strong recovery, the mining
sector has not yet recovered the pre-crisis
peak-volumes due to unfavorable legal and
taxation regimes that stunt levels of investment.
- Thus, the baseline scenario (unchanged policies)
estimates that level of exports in the mining
sector will reach US 5 billion in 2018, below
the potential of existing projects. - Stronger policies in the mining and agricultural
sector will ultimately have positive downstream
effects on the manufacturing sector, and on
services. - Furthermore, development of minings potential
requires transfer of technology and FDI, both in
the medium-term, and the longer-term (to support
the process of discovery).
104- Without stronger policies, recovery of the mining
sector may remain stunted and limited to a
temporary rebound due to stronger external
demand, with limited permanent downstream effects
on the rest of the economy. - Besides, an approach seized with short-term
maximization of rents-extraction from temporary
favorable external conditions may present adverse
effects on the countrys overall competitiveness
and lead to worsening of economic governance. - Hence Zimbabwe is at risk of sliding into the
resource curse. - Zimbabwes manufacturing sector remains one of
the most diversified in Sub-Saharan African,
albeit with very limited entry of new firms
following the 2009 stabilization. - The remaining large firms in the sector, the
survivors, rely on imported inputs that used to
be sourced mostly locally. - Their current stress levels are extremely high
and are suffering more from supply-side than
demand-side constraints to capacity utilization. - Lack of competitiveness stems mainly from the
consequence of the decade-long crisis, and
hyperinflation - Firms are operating obsolete
machinery, there is limited availability and high
cost finance, power outages, higher input costs
due to loss of domestic linkages, lack of access
to exports markets due to unreliable
supply-chain, and overall uncertainty.
105- A sustained supply-response requires development
of infrastructure, in particular energy sources
and a sound management of water. - In the absence of policy reforms, fiscal revenue
growth will stagnate and expenditure will be
heavily tilted towards employment costs - The resulting cash balance will fail to provide
appropriate buffers against external shocks and - Despite the stabilization of the current account,
external debt will remain unsustainable.
106Sustaining Pro-poor Growth, Restoring
Sustainability Active Policies Scenario
- Sustaining growth requires a commitment to
reform business-as-usual will not work. - Active policies (reforms) are needed to raise
competitiveness, underpin confidence, reduce
vulnerabilities, and unleash pro-poor and
inclusive growth, especially targeting
agriculture. - This entails dealing with the most binding
constraints to growth (doing business reforms)
and rebuilding and strengthening commodity value
chains and cluster initiatives to facilitate
pro-poor and inclusive growth.
107- Stronger policies can turn the mining sector into
the turnkey for longer-term sustainable
development. - Mineral windfalls can mitigate external
vulnerability, facilitate infrastructure
investment, higher domestic saving, reduced
banking sector vulnerability, and lower cost of
capital for investment in the manufacturing and
agricultural sectors. - According to a World Bank study (McMahon et. Al,
2012), under improved business conditions where
all major bottlenecks, including infrastructural,
are removed by 2018, existing mining projects
could absorb up to US12 billion of investment by
2018, with an export potential of more than US11
billion per year. - Development of the agricultural sector is
critical to achieving long-term broad-based
growth. - Hence higher productivity in agriculture can
leverage a broad-based process of economic
transformation and long-term growth with
agriculture resuming its role as a supplier of
savings, labour, and inputs to other sectors, and
contributing to food security and exports.
108- In the context of dollarization, liberalization
and high international prices of commodities, the
new agricultural structure with many smaller
farms presents a high potential for long-term
growth and employment creation - Apart from favorable incentives, the supply
response needs to be supported by agricultural
services and technical change. - In addition to maintaining the strong improvement
of incentives since 2009, policy-makers should
also pay attention to improving competition in
input and output markets, contract farming,
rehabilitation of infrastructure and
agro-processing facilities, resolution of
remaining uncertainties regarding land tenure and
resolution of conflict on land rights.
109- Strengthening the macroeconomic framework, start
rebuilding reserves, and implement key structural
reforms. - Regulation and supervision of the banking system
to deal with financial sector vulnerabilities is
necessary. - Finalization of RBZ restructuring is critical as
well as restoring the lender-of-last resort
function as highlighted in the 2014 budget. - Strengthening fiscal management and improving the
expenditure mix - Better planning and control of spending and more
transparency on diamond revenues to avoid
slippages that necessitate large mid-term budget
reviews. - The spending mix is unsustainable, with
employment costs taking up a very large share of
government resources. - Over the medium term, containing wage bill growth
would create fiscal space to improve public
services, raise infrastructure investment, and
build buffers. - Improve public financial management (PFM).
- The government should reinforce expenditure
control, and strengthen the human resources and
payroll management system to help contain the
wage bill. - Other key reforms to restore fiscal
sustainability include improving financial
monitoring and oversight, strengthening the
governance of public enterprises, and developing
a medium-term expenditure framework.
110- Addressing structural bottlenecks such as the
rehabilitation and expansion of power stations,
rehabilitation and construction of road networks,
and upgrades to water and sewer infrastructure. - Restructuring of Public Enterprises
- Issue has been on the policy agenda since ESAP.
- The 2013 restructuring programme focused on 18
public enterprises identified by Cabinet which
are also in the Mid-Term Plan. No progress
recorded. - The public enterprise and parastatal reforms also
target the implementation of Results-Based
Management (RBM) which entails concluding
performance agreements between the responsible
Minister and the parastatal Boards, who in turn
will establish performance contracts with Chief
Executive Officers of public enterprises.
111- Zimbabwes debt overhang remains an impediment to
medium-term fiscal and external sustainability. - A debt-resolution strategy is therefore critical
to resolving external payment arrears and
re-engaging the international community to unlock
international credit lines. - Addressing this issue will require a
comprehensive arrears clearance framework
underpinned by a strong macro policy framework. - DEBT RELIEF through the Zimbabwe Accelerated
Arrears Clearance Debt Development Strategy
(ZAADS) of March 2012 to deepen engagement with
both creditors and development partners - Being implemented through the Zimbabwe
Accelerated Re-engagement Economic Programme
(ZAREP) which will contain detailed policy
measures to be agreed with the multi-lateral
institutions based on - The establishment of a good track record of
implementing sound macro-economic policies (Staff
Monitored Programme), giving scope for unlocking
new financing - Containing and managing the public sector wage
bill to sustainable levels and - Securing strong support from development partners
for arrears clearance and debt relief, including
closing the financing gap in support of sustained
and inclusive economic growth. - Commendable progress has been made in
operationalizing the Debt Management Office
(DMO), which has been reconciling and validating
debt data with creditors with the assistance of
UNCTAD and MEFMI.
112- Need for a Social Contract Implementation of
Agreed Positions - In view of the trade-offs in policies (e.g.
containment and reduction of the share of
revenues taken up by employment costs), there is
need for Zimbabwe to negotiate and implement a
Social Contract. - A Social Contract helps restore good faith
(trust) amongst the social partners make them
accountable to each other help parties
subordinate sectarian interests to national
interests develop and share a common vision and
inculcate a smart-partnership win-win mind-set. - Furthermore, there is an urgent need to implement
the agreed TNF protocols such as the Kadoma
Declaration, the Principles of the TNF and the
National Productivity Institute launched in
February 2003 to spearhead the promotion of a
culture of productivity.
113- According to the IMF, if corrective measures are
implemented, given the same trajectories for
commodity prices, ... - the economy is projected to grow faster, driven
by higher FDIs and a better business environment - Fiscal revenues will strengthen and a more
balanced expenditure mix will be achieved - The positive cash balance will provide a greater
reserve buffer against external shocks and - The economy will have a smaller debt stock.
114- CASE STUDY OF THE MINING SECTOR DRAWN FROM
ZIMBABWE From Economic Rebound to Sustained
Growth - GROWTH RECOVERY NOTES
- NOTE IV ZIMBABWE CURRENT POTENTIAL FOR MINING
GROWTH - December 2012
- Gary McMahon (World Bank) Rene Hochreiter and
Robinn Yale Kearney (Allan Hochreiter) and
Brandon Tracy (World Bank)
115- Forecast 2018 production of gold in the current
policy framework is 957,000 ounces but could
rise be 2,648,000 ounces with more investment
stability. - Employment in the gold sector is estimated at
8,600 but could rise to 15,200 in 2018 in the
current policy framework or 27,600 in the more
investor friendly framework. - With respect to the kimberlite diamond mine at
Murowa, production in 2011 was 367,000 carats and
expected production in 2012 is 565,000 carats.
With no major investment, production is expected
to remain at the level of 565,000 carats by 2018.
In more favorable policy conditions, an
investment of US100 million could result in
production of 1 million carats per year.
Employment would then increase from 433 to 800
persons. Investment in the sector is expected to
reduce operating costs from about US100 per
carat to US60 per carat. - From the four ZMDC controlled mines in Marange,
production in 2011 was 9 million carats and
expected production in 2012 is 11 million carats.
The value of these alluvial diamonds is much
less on average than in the kimberlite pipes,
averaging about 25 percent of the value per
carat. However, operating costs are also very low
at about US4 per carat. - Production is expected to peak at 12 million
carats over the next few years, and an investment
of US150 million could increase production to
15.2 million carats per year by 2018. - Employment in the Marange area is about 1,000
persons and expected to remain at that level.
116- In the optimistic case where policies are more
investor friendly and there are significant
infrastructure improvements, using average 2011
prices, by 2018 gross revenues and fiscal
revenues of the mining sector increase by 309
and 344, respectively, compared to 2011. - The increase in gross and fiscal revenues
compared to the base case projections for 2018
are 119 and 112, respectively. - There are increases across the board, with the
most important new developments being the large
expansions in gold and coal mining and the
opening of the iron ore mine. - The gold sector is projected to provide almost
half of fiscal revenues from the mining sector. - Projected employment is 56,200, excluding
artisanal miners. - Projected investment over the period is nearly
US12 billion, dominated by coal. - Once what is in the ground is known, three main
factors can enhance or constrain the development
of a mine (i) availability of transport
infrastructure, (ii) access to power, and (iii)
the policy and fiscal regime impacting the mining
sector.
117(No Transcript)
118- Most of Zimbabwes mineral output is of the high
value per volume type and hence is not greatly
affected by the general lack of or poorly
maintained transport infrastructure, particularly
rail and access to adequate port facilities. - Diamonds, gold, platinum, and ferro-chrome can
all easily be flown out or taken by road at low
costs relative to value. The only bulk commodity
being produced is coal, most of which is consumed
locally. - While historically human capital has not been a
major constraint, as missing skills could be
imported, given the global mining boom, there are
severe shortages developing around the globe and
Zimbabwe could be - Affected if its mining sector had a major boom
beyond rehabilitating what currently exists. - A recent survey placed the global mining skills
shortage second after resource nationalism as
major constraints facing the mining industry. - If the coal and iron ore mines are producing in
2018, as in the optimistic scenario, the
situation will change radically there will be a
need for both rail links and access to ports and
a satisfactory road network.
119- Transport Infrastructure
- The quality and capacity of infrastructure has
declined tremendously in Zimbabwe since 1995 due
to low levels of maintenance and little
investment in new infrastructure. - It is estimated that to rehabilitate the existing
road and rail network would require about US4
billion. - The main new investments would be railway of
approximately 250 km from the Sengwa coal field,
at a cost of approximately US750 million, and
smaller lines linking the Lubimbi coal field and
the iron ore deposits in the east to existing
lines. - Access to Power
- According to the African Development Bank (2011)
report, the situation in the power sector may be
even more dire than in transport infrastructure. - The Chamber of Mines of Zimbabwe reports that
average power prices from the grid recently
became the regions highest tariffs at 10.6
cents/kWh, almost double the average of its
neighbours. - Mining operations are paying on average 17
cents/kWh. - Full rehabilitation of the public system from
2011-2020 would cost about US2.2 billion and
another US2.1 billion of private investment in
the power sector would be needed in order to
provide the country adequate power by the end of
the decade. - These estimates do not include a large expansion
in mining operations, as projected in the
optimistic scenario.
120- Mining Sector Policies and Fiscal Regime
- Economic and political instability aside, the
policy aspects of Zimbabwes mining sector,
including taxes, were considered favorable by
international standards. - The present Mines and Mineral Act is considered
satisfactory by mining operators as was the
fiscal regime. - A new draft Act has been produced, which is also
considered satisfactory but it has not been
tabled, leading to uncertainty in the sector. - However, royalties have been increased
substantially recently as well as various fees
associated with exploration and exploitation. - While most of these fees are bearable for an
operating mine, they are not for exploration
companies where no income is forthcoming. - What little exploration that is taking place will
mostly be scared off if these fees, which are
likely the highest in the world, are not reduced.
Newcomers are unlikely to come in.
121- The biggest uncertainty concerns the policy of
indigenization, where foreigners must cede at
least 51 of a mining operation to indigenous
persons. - While for existing operations, the owners have
been making different deals with the Government
as how to make the transfer, very little of this
51 is going to be paid for with cash upfront. - Except for very lucrative known deposits, it is
unlikely that new greenfield investments or major
expansions are likely will take place. - In the base case scenario, the expansion is
mainly due to revitalization of many gold
operations in response to the continued very high
prices, the recapitalization of Hwange, the
reopening of the nickel mine, and the increase in
diamond production at Marange. - The policy uncertainty and political instability
are freezing-out on new exploration with the
exception of diamonds and some known deposits. - In the 2011-12 Fraser Institute survey of mining
companies, Zimbabwe was ranked 73 out of 93
jurisdictions with respect to policy
attractiveness for exploration before the
indigenization policy was implemented. - When prices remained at very high levels and tax
receipts often did not follow suit, this has
witnessed increased resource nationalism in which
softer countries are demanding revised
contracts with higher tax rates and harder
countries are demanding partial ownership of
operations, or some combination of both.
122- Mining Linkages
- There are three main forms of linkages from the
mining industry backward, forward, and
horizontal (or sideways). - For low and low-middle income countries, the
third linkage has the potential to be the most
important. - While there are opportunities in surveying and
related fields for backward linkages, the main
activities and expenditure are on sophisticated
large equipment and plant installations. - There are also some forward linkages through
refining and beneficiation in general, but again
the main activities are the manufactured goods
that use steel, aluminum, nickel, etc., dominated
by sophisticated and/or low cost economies. - Most of these opportunities are not be taken
advantage of in a low-income or low middleincome
country without an active effort by the
government, the mining companies, and the local
business community. - Industrial mining operations tend to rely heavily
on long-established contacts abroad and buy in
bulk, particularly those with operations in
several countries. - Domestic businesses are often not capable of
providing the quality that these operations need. - The level of employment created through domestic
procurement is often far higher than employment
in the mines themselves a study of the Newmont
gold mine at Ahafo in Ghana found 2.8 direct
supplier jobs for each mining job.
123- McMahon and Tracy (2012) estimate that the
Kansanshi copper mine in Zambia creates about 3.5
jobs in mine supplier companies for every job in
the mine. - These figures do not include employment in
supplier of suppliers or standard multiplier
impacts of the expenditures of the employees or
owners of these firms. - Countries (such as Chile), that has increased
domestic procurement by mining companies across
the board, have made directed efforts to increase
the capacity of domestic firms to meet the high
standards demanded by mining companies,
introduced training programs to increase the
relevant skills of the labour force, and built
adequate infrastructure so local companies can be
competitive. - Zimbabwe has put considerable emphasis on
increasing the downstream value added of its
mineral production, although outside of platinum,
ferrochrome, and tolling of nickel from Botswana,
beneficiation has been rather limited. - Processing of gold and diamonds into jewelry is
not taking place in the country to any
significant extent. - While historically, Zimbabwe had very strong
institutions in developing the human capital for
some of the capital light upstream
industriese.g. geologists, surveying, mineral
analysismore and more the country is relying on
external agents for such activities given the
drain of human capital in the industry and the
almost total deterioration of tertiary level
schooling in the area. - The geology department at the University of
Zimbabwe, for example, currently has one
permanent member of staff and one contract staff
member versus the 24 staff that the curricula
calls for (Chamber of Mines, 2012).
124- While information is limited, it seems likely
that historically Zimbabwe fared better with
respect to domestic procurement of the mining
industry than most Sub-Saharan African countries
other than the Republic of South Africa due to
its stronger industrial base and better
infrastructure. - In 2009 the Chamber of Mines estimated that local
procurement was US150 million and projected an
increase to US300 million in 2010. - Zimplats and Mimosa, who combined were likely the
largest input purchasers in the Zimbabwean mining
industry in 2011, reported an increase in local
procurement from 20 of the total to 40 from
2010 to 2011 (Implats 2012). - The strategy followed by these two companies
includes - --- Toll manufacturing of products such as
protective clothing, roof support and bulk bags - --- Encouraging local suppliers to partner with
foreign OEMs who offer specialized backup
service - --- Outsourcing of non-core business activities
to local suppliers - --- Working as guarantor for credible local
suppliers to bankers and - --- Working with suppliers to support the
governments look east policy. - Ian Saunders of New Dawn, one of the larger gold
mines, notes that while most of their every day
consumables are procured locally, he estimates
that about 5 are actually produced locally. - The issue of horizontal linkages or domestic
procurement is likely to be a key issue in
Zimbabwe in the near future as it is in most
mining countries.
125- Once the worst aspects of the economic crisis in
Zimbabwe had passed, the mining sector quickly
moved to its historic position of a leading
producer and generator of foreign exchange and
fiscal revenues in Zimbabwe. - Due to the economic and political instability,
the country was not able to take anywhere near
full advantage of the global boom in mining
prices. - However, while prices are moving lower (excluding
gold and diamonds), they are still well above
historic trends for most commodities, so there is
still an opportunity to significantly expand the
sector. - With a relatively investment friendly mining
policy, taxes and fees set at average global
levels, and improvements of transport and power
infrastructure, there could be very large
increases in production and value added, more
than double the projected increase in the status
quo (base) case. - The value of production would increase by 293 by
2018, exports by 287 and fiscal revenues by 344
in this optimistic scenario. - Until the policy and fiscal changes of the last
two years, mine operators were reasonably
satisfied with the sector specific policies,
laws, and taxes. - The two biggest impediments to new investment and
exploration are the indigenous ownership
requirements and the very large application and
registration fees for prospecting and
exploration. - While a return to the former mining sector
legislation is unlikely, a situation somewhere in
the middle that is internationally competitive
could greatly help the sector move closer to the
optimistic scenario described above (fees have
been revised downwards). - Policy reforms that address the difficulties of
legitimate exploration companies in obtaining
access to claims of adequate size for adequate
lengths of time, also provide security with
respect to the rewards for new discoveries, could
go a long way to building up the pipeline of new
projects in the medium-term.
126