Zimbabwe's economy is showing no signs of recovery after adverse
weather, low exports and election year uncertainty shattered growth
prospects, the International Monetary Fund said Friday.
The economy of the troubled southern African country "is at a crossroads," the IMF said.
"The economic situation remains difficult," it said laying out the path Zimbabwe could take towards recovery.
The
global lender said the government needs strong macro-economic policies
and debt relief along with a strategy to clear arrears in order to
overcome its economic challenges.
It had indicated in September that Harare could not get fresh financial aid until it services its old debts.
Until
two years ago, Zimbabwe's economy had shown signs of recovery from a
decade-long downturn which saw runaway annual inflation peaking at 231
million percent.
But that "post-hyperinflation rebound has ended," the IMF said in a statement.
The
economy registered 10.5% growth in 2012 after the government trashed
the local currency which had been rendered worthless by hyperinflation
only to decelerate to 4.5% growth in 2013, the fund said.
"The
external position is precarious with low international reserves, a large
current account deficit, an overvalued real exchange rate and growing
external arrears," the IMF said.
"Credit and deposit growth have slowed down sharply, liquidity conditions are tight and the banking system remains weak."
Zimbabwe's
economy has been in a tailspin for more than a decade, only able to
manage slow growth at best that has done little to reduce high
unemployment.
Elections last year exacerbated the economic woes as
the government was forced to borrow to fund the elections and
businesses adopted a wait-and-see stance while foreign investors stayed
away.
Despite election campaign promises to fix the economy, the government of veteran President Robert Mugabe appears out of sorts. It
had at the start of the year forecast 6.4% economic growth this year
but later revised the figure downwards to 3.1%, citing depressed mineral
output. Fiscal pressures arose early this year following
higher-than-budgeted wage increases and revenue shortfalls as the
economy weakened.
The country owes domestic and foreign creditors
$10bn and a controversial law limiting foreign ownership enacted by
Mugabe in 2007 has spooked international investors.
The
90-year-old president has argued that the law forcing foreigners to hand
over majority stakes in companies empowers black Zimbabwians who were
disadvantaged by discriminatory colonial laws.
But critics
complain that the law and the frequent amendments to it have been a key
factor in hobbling the country's once vibrant economy.
Fin24
1 comment:
Good for them
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