I got this gem off of the A-list, a beaut of a bourgeois attack on
Mugabe/Zanu-pf for repudiating the IMF. The vitriol makes me think Mugabe must
be serious for this guy to have such absolute racist hatred for Zim.

Macdonald

Zim's Love/Hate Relationship with IMF
By Eric Bloch
Zimbabwe Independent
October 25, 2002

Ever since the International Monetary Fund (IMF) discontinued its funding
support of Zimbabwe, it has been a pronounced target for scathing verbal
attacks by the Zimbabwean governmental hierarchy, its bellicose media which
unhesitatingly abuses the fundamental precepts of journalistic ethic in
order to satisfy its masters, and those duped by such attacks into believing
that the IMF is all that its loud-mouthed critics allege it to be.

Almost immediately after Zimbabwe's Independence, the IMF was forthcoming
with considerable financial assistance for the young, new State that had a
desperate need to develop its infrastructure, rebuild and grow the economy
and source volumes of imports of capital and consumable goods. Much of the
funding flowed from the IMF and, possibly of greater importance, the fact
that Zimbabwe had a credible status with the IMF assuring it of public and
private sector loan funding from international monetary organisations, and
of vast aid from donor states.

Concurrently, the IMF, the World Bank and others, responding to requests
from Zimbabwe, gave advice as to how Zimbabwe could most advantageously and
expeditiously develop and strengthen its economy. Zimbabwe proved itself
very willing to accept those advices - when they accorded with the desires
of Zimbabwe's government - and especially so when they were accompanied with
monetary largesse.

Thus, when the IMF advised Zimbabwe on a programme for economic structural
adjustment, and provided much funding to facilitate and support the
programme, Zimbabwe readily implemented those facets of the programme (which
became known as Esap) which appealed to it, but either ignored the elements
of the programme which were counter to the ideologies, economic perceptions
and misconceptions, and the vested interests of those in power in Zimbabwe,
or at best implemented the measures half-heartedly.

As a result, the first three years of Esap were a marked non-event,
compounded by adverse climatic conditions. Belatedly, in 1994, the programme
was pursued with somewhat greater commitment and vigour, resulting in some
significant economic advances over the following three years. However, the
liberalised, deregulated economy did not conform with the political and
other aspirations of Zimbabwe's masters.

Esap represented freedom for the economy, but a straitjacket for the
Establishment. Eventually the authorities could bear the constraints no
more. They burst through the shackles that Esap represented to them (but not
to the economy), and progressively reversed all that Esap had achieved.

As the economic gains were increasingly reversed, as economic decline
accelerated, it was necessary to divert any possible criticism and blame,
and rapidly the IMF became a target. After all, Esap was founded upon
economic policies strongly advocated by the IMF, and it was essential for
the populace to be misled into believing that the economic recession was the
fault of Esap, which the state had therefore discontinued, in the alleged
best interest of Zimbabwe and its people.

In castigating Esap, instead of itself, government successfully convinced
many that the ills of the economy were not due to fault on its part, but to
that programme which it alleged had been imposed upon Zimbabwe by the IMF.
And then, the economy continued to worsen, despite repeated assurances by
government that its actions would soon restore well-being (after all, was it
not that "economy is the land, and land is the economy"?).

More and more victims to be the brunt of governmental verbal assault had to
be identified as the culprits for Zimbabwe's woes. Hence Britain in general
and Tony Blair in particular, the USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the
European Union, whites, commercial farmers, industrialists, political
opponents and numerous others were repeatedly accused of conspiring to bring
Zimbabwe's economy to its knees. But throughout, the IMF was identified as a
key villain, and more intensively so once it ceased to provide Zimbabwe of
critically needed foreign exchange.

The fact that Zimbabwe was in default in servicing prior debt was not
considered by government to be of significance. Zimbabwe is now indebted to
the IMF for US$153,4 million (which, at official exchange rates, amounts to
approximately $8,4 billion and, at prevailing parallel market rates, to
about $153 billion).

As recently as eight days ago, a state controlled daily newspaper was
emblazoned with a headline pronouncing: "IMF, donors destroying democracy in
Third World". This form of crass attack upon the IMF has become an almost
daily diatribe of vitriol.

In practice, it invariably is a matter of "the pot calling the kettle
black". It was President Franklin D Roosevelt who, in an address to the
United States Congress in 1941, suggested that the pillars of democracy are
four freedoms. "The first is freedom of speech and expression .... The
second is freedom of every person to worship God in his own way ... The
third is freedom from want ..... The fourth is freedom from fear ....".

Of these four freedoms, only the second prevails in Zimbabwe. Freedom of
speech only exists selectively, government having enacted draconian
legislation to curb free speech, unless such speech is acceptable to, or
emanates from, government and the ruling party. The third freedom, being
from want, is almost non-existent in Zimbabwe, with more than 80% living in
abject poverty. Millions are experiencing the pangs of hunger.

Many are the sufferers of malnutrition. The causes are incontrovertibly the
reversal of the economic policies which stimulated the economy's recovery
and growth from 1994 to 1997, that reversal being at the instance of
government, and the disastrous mismanagement of Zimbabwe's immense
agricultural resource by an ill-conceived, grossly inept and markedly
unjust, agrarian reform programme, also at the instance of government,
whereas a viable, practical, beneficial, internationally-supported agrarian
programme could readily have been pursued, except that such a programme was
not politically palatable to the ruling party.

And the fourth freedom is also almost non-existent in the Zimbabwe of the
21st Century. Fear abounds. Fear of starvation, fear of the alleged
guardians of law and order, fear of other arms of government such as the
CIO, fear of war veterans, and fear of many others who are clearly immune to
the prescriptions of law!

So, far from the IMF destroying democracy, it is the actions of some of
those in power in the Third World, and certainly so in Zimbabwe. (The latest
example of erosion of democracy by the state is the contemplated legislation
that executive mayors not be elected by those they are to serve, but be
appointed by Government!)

Amazingly, however, on the same day as that attack upon the IMF was printed,
the Minister of Finance and Economic Development reportedly stated, in an
interview with an independent newspaper, that a "task force" is drawing up a
macro-economic policy to be presented to the IMF and that talks with the IMF
will be opened as soon as that policy framework is complete.

He is quoted as saying that "we are cognisant of the fact that we cannot go
it alone without international partners" and that "Zimbabwe still values its
IMF membership". He acknowledged that the IMF recently signalled that it was
prepared to bail out Zimbabwe from its economic quagmire, although he also
said that "government wants first to steer the economy to a sustainable path
before seeking assistance from the IMF".

These statements fly in the face of oft-repeated contentions by many in high
office in Zimbabwe that "Zimbabwe can go it alone - Zimbabwe does not need
the IMF or anyone else". Perhaps belatedly an element of reality is setting
in and eclipsing the delusions that Zimbabwe does not need others, save
perhaps for those who are allegedly its friends, but whose friendship is
linked to their own enrichment at Zimbabwe's expense. The minister's
statements, deserving of much commendation and very courageous in the
context of being the opposite to the enunciation of others in authority, are
the first, very tentative, indications of a possible transformation of
Zimbabwean attitude to the IMF and, therefore, to restoration of a
constructive economic environment.

-------------------------------------------
Macdonald Stainsby
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/rad-green
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/leninist-international
--
In the contradiction lies the hope.
                                     --Bertholt Brecht



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