Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

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Zim empowerment plans worry IMF

Zim empowerment plan worries IMF

http://www.zimonline.co.za

by Tobias Manyuchi     Saturday 02 April 2011
SAVIOUR KASUKUWERE . . . Indigenisation Minister

HARARE – The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has raised concern at 
Zimbabwe’s controversial drive to force foreign-owned mining firms to sell 
majority stake to local blacks, ZimOnline learnt on Friday.

Government officials said an IMF team that left Harare on Thursday after a 
three-week consultation mission also expressed worry at plans by the 
government to raise salaries for public workers when state coffers were near 
empty.

The IMF has during previous consultation missions to Zimbabwe warned 
President Robert Mugabe and Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai’s unity 
government to put a tight lid on rising wage demands in the public sector 
and to ensure its economic empowerment programme does not scare away 
badly-needed foreign investors to damage the nascent economic recovery.

“They (IMF) appeared to have been rattled by the indigenisation laws which 
gave the mining firms up to September to comply with the law. The gazetting 
of the law was ill-timed and nobody saw it coming this fast,” a ministry of 
finance official, who declined to be named because he had not been cleared 
by his superiors to discuss the matter with the Press.

“During their visit the delegation had also raised concerns about the wage 
bill as there appeared to be pressure to raise salaries yet the fiscus 
cannot afford,” said the official.

The drastic economic empowerment laws announced last Monday give 
foreign-owned mining companies 45 days to submit to Indigenisation Minister 
Saviour Kasukuwere details of how they plan to transfer controlling stake to 
locals by next September.

Firms that fail to disclose their share-transfer plans within the stipulated 
period face prosecution, according to the regulations that have thrown the 
mining sector — the economy’s largest – into turmoil.

The empowerment plans are being pushed by Mugabe’s wing of the coalition 
government and opposed by Tsvangirai’s MDC party that favours a gradual 
approach, fearing that wholesale indigenisation could wreck a fragile 
economy.

Analysts say Mugabe maybe intent on putting pressure on foreign miners to 
pay more in taxes.

Miners will be torn between pulling out and risk losing rights to the 
massive platinum reserves and other minerals to Mugabe’s preferred investors 
from China or negotiate revised deals that will see the government getting 
more from the country’s resources.

The resource rich southern African nation boasts the world’s second largest 
reserves of platinum, has discovered alluvial diamonds which experts say 
could generate $2 billion a year and has large gold, chrome and coal 
deposits. — ZimOnline

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