Wednesday, March 21, 2012

(NEWZIMBABWE, REUTERS) US$14bln needed to revive economy - Biti

COMMENT - Being a neoliberal, I Biti's answer is to give away the diamond mines, in exchange for the IMF's artificial debt being cancelled. That is how HIPC works - before $7 billion is scrapped, you give away $70 billion or much more in natural resources, land and utilities companies.

US$14bln needed to revive economy: Biti
21/03/2012 00:00:00
by Reuters

ZIMBABWE needs at least $14 billion to revive the economy following a decade-long downturn, Finance Minister Tendai Biti said on Wednesday. "We require $14 billion to get our economy back to 1990 levels," Biti told a seminar organised by the government and Euromoney conferences to try to lure foreign investment to the country. "We have a foreign debt of $9.1 billion. We have defaulted as far back as 1999."

[1990 being the year before the World Bank's ESAP and it's austerity started to destroy the achievements that ZANU-PF's social spending policies created. In effect, he is saying that they should turn away from exactly the types of programs the MMD wants to implement - pro-FDI, anti-local business, anti-spending on education and healthcare, anti-supporting the Zimbabwean farmers. - MrK]


Zimbabwe's economy is showing signs of recovery since the formation of a power-sharing government three years ago by long-time political rivals President Robert Mugabe and Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai.

Tsvangirai has attacked the government's implementation of the controversial indigenisation policy, forcing foreign firms to surrender 51 percent of their shares to local people, saying it would discourage investors.

Platinum miner Zimplats, a Zimbabwe division of Impala Paltinum, the world's second-biggest platinum producer submitted its compliance plan last week.

Biti said he was angered by the manner in which authorities were implementing the law.

"The challenge is the way we are doing it and it makes me very angry," Biti said adding that "a law must be consistent and non arbitrary."

The government has vowed to nationalise companies which fail to comply with the equity law and which Mugabe said was meant to benefit blacks disadvantaged by colonial laws.

Biti warned last week that a short fall on new diamond sales from the controversial Marange fields, the country's major source of revenue could force the government to shut down.

Zimbabwe anticipated $77.5 million from diamond sales during the first two months of the year, but received only $19.5 million, Biti said, attributing the shortfall to the fact that there had not been any diamond auction since the beginning of the year.


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