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Parastatal Reform in a New Zimbabwe

By Eddie Cross

Among the plethora of problems that will face the new Government when it is sworn in and starts work, is the urgent issue of reform of the 105 SOE’s (State Owned Enterprises) that are currently managed by line Ministries on behalf of taxpayers who are the owners or shareholders.

BULAWAYO South MDC legislator, Eddie Cross
Former BULAWAYO South MDC-T legislator, Eddie Cross

Few other issues will demand such attention and such urgency as these institutions in their present state are a constant drain on the fiscus and are failing to deliver the services they were started to provide to our people.

What will surprise most readers is the fact that there is a full time professional Agency already in existence whose sole job is to deal with this issue – it’s called the ‘State Enterprise Reform Authority’ and is part of the Ministry of Finance. I have never seen a single report from this agency, I have no idea what it is supposed to be doing and I see very little value in its existence at this time.

So what is needed. The first step in my view is the establishment of a small, highly qualified working Party in the Ministry of Finance, perhaps serviced by SERA to give them something to do and this working Party to be chaired by either the Minister of Finance or the Permanent Secretary. Its membership will vary from case to case and will involve the line Ministers directly involved or using the services of the SOE that they are dealing with at the time.

If I take one particularly urgent issue in that of the Railways. The NRZ is one of the most important SOE’s in the country. I would argue that we simply cannot compete as a country or raise the living standards of our people without an efficient and cost competitive railways system.

It is a vital cog in everything we do. The decision to privatise railway operations and retain state ownership of the track, was taken 8 years ago during the GNU. It was a sound decision and it was only after the MAT in November 2017, that the Government wrapped up a deal with Transnet and a group based on Diaspora interests.

Even now, this transaction is still not final – the July 2018 deadline has been missed and although there is progress it is far too slow and is being held up by bureaucratic obstacles and civil servants failing to make the required decisions to make progress.

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If such a working party of Ministers existed these issues could be dealt with quickly and on time and the necessary decisions taken and implemented.

Speak to anyone from the region about Zimbabwean decision making and without exception they will complain of poor decisions, no decisions and little progress. I have lost count of how many projects, essential to regional cooperation and progress, have been held up so long that alternatives have been implemented – the new bridge and road at Kazungula is a prime example.

The Government in the GNU era listed 10 SOE’s for full privatization – not one has been privatized in 8 years and they are all in a worst state than they were in at the time of the GNU and billions of dollars in assets and state expenditures lost in the process. At an accident the first order of business is to stop the bleeding – it’s no different in business.

I was partly involved in the privatisation of the Coke division of Zisco Steel in the past three years. This project was launched by the Minister of Industry two weeks ago. However, it was a small (4 members) informal committee of Ministers chaired by the Minister of Finance, that steered this project to success. At each key point the Minister could call his colleagues to a meeting to make decisions and these were then implemented by the line Ministry.

All too often such decisions are not made transparently and corruption is clearly involved – I am afraid the decision to privatise other parts of Zisco do not have the same characteristics as the Zimcoke deal. The Companies involved do not have the required background or the finance to make the assets they are trying to take over – at a fraction of their real value, a success.

Where the Board and Management of a SOE find themselves running a dying operation they often turn to stripping the SOE of remaining assets. They show little interest in protecting the assets or getting them back into operation but concentrate on getting as much out of the organisation as possible for their own benefit.

Irrational decisions such as maintaining employment at Zisco Steel for 12 years for thousands of workers who report to work every day and then go home is another example – building up a legal liability of over $200 million which is now being cleared by the Ministry of Finance.

A similar situation exists at Hwange Colliery where the State only has a 36 per cent stake but is carrying the liabilities in the form of State guaranteed $350 million in debentures. The Colliery faces a bleak future with less than a year’s reserves of open cast coal and thousands of employees who are under employed.

I was Chief Economist of the AMA when it ran four giant SOE’s – the GMB, CMB, DMB and CSC. The Group employed tens of thousands and generated exports valued at over a billion dollars a year. The SOE’s all made an operating surplus in most years and made Zimbabwe an African agricultural dynamo. Farmers were paid reasonable prices and always on time. The Authority could borrow very large sums of money, because all the Banks had total confidence in its management.

For me that showed that by definition, a SOE need not be a disaster waiting to happen. The inefficiencies of a State owned enterprise emanates from its management and poor decisions by the Ministry controlling the enterprise. The Board of the AMA and the individual subsidiaries were made up of powerful, competent people who would brook no corruption or unreasonable interference in operations by Ministry or Central Government.

I therefore am not someone who thinks that anything the State runs will automatically be a disaster – SOE’s can be managed and operated well to the benefit of the industries and communities they are meant to serve. But certain fundamental principles and policies have to be followed at all times. The Ministry of Finance as the main shareholder in all SOE’s is clearly in the best position to control this function on behalf of Central Government.

Whoever is sworn in as President after the 12th of August 2018, they will need to ensure that one of his priorities is that of ensuring that the crisis in the management and operations of virtually all SOE’s, receives immediate and comprehensive attention. If he does, the dividends could be huge and this would help us steer a new path to a more prosperous future.

Eddie Cross
8th August 2018

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