Mugabe lauds Zimbabweans for enduring economic hardships 

Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe arrives to deliver the state-of-the nation address at the parliament in Harare, Zimbabwe on December 6, 2016. PHOTO | JEKESAI NJIKIZANA | AFP

What you need to know:

  • Mr Mugabe said Zimbabweans had suffered tremendous economic hardships since the country embarked on the land reform programme in 2000.
  • After its currency was wiped by hyperinflation, Zimbabwe in 2009 introduced a multi-currency system that stabilised the economy.
  • Mugabe said his government was accelerating implementation of policy reforms to rejuvenate the ailing economy and reduce poverty.

HARARE

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe on Wednesday paid tribute to Zimbabweans for peacefully enduring economic hardships over the last 16 years.

Delivering his state of the nation address in parliament, Mr Mugabe said Zimbabweans had suffered tremendous economic hardships since the country embarked on the land reform programme in 2000.

“I wish to commend them for their resilience, and urge them to cherish the peace and tranquility that continues to be the envy of many,” Mr Mugabe said.

“Let us continue to find national pride in our core values of unity, hard work and freedom,” he added. Mr Mugabe spoke as the nation grapples with a severe cash crunch which started early this year, forcing monetary authorities to introduce bond notes last week to ease the cash shortages.

Although they initially faced resistance from businesses and members of the public, the notes, backed by a 200 million US dollar facility from the African Export-Import Bank, have gained public acceptance.
Zimbabwe has been in the throes of an economic crisis since 2000 when the European Union and the United States imposed sanctions on the country after it embarked on the land reform programme meant to redress colonial land imbalances.

STABILISED THE ECONOMY

After its currency was wiped by hyperinflation, Zimbabwe in 2009 introduced a multi-currency system that stabilised the economy and ensured real positive growth until 2013 when growth started to taper off.

Growth has been on a slow down since then, with government revising downwards its growth projections for 2016 to 1.2 per cent from the initial 2.7 per cent due to an El-Nino induced drought.

The International Monetary Fund forecasts a negative growth rate of -0.3 percent in 2016, marking the first time that Zimbabwe slides back into recession after seven years of positive growth from a decade-long recession.

Foreign direct investment has remained low over the years, hovering around 500 million US dollars due to unfriendly policies. Mugabe, however, said his government was accelerating implementation of policy reforms to rejuvenate the ailing economy and reduce poverty.

He said the recently promulgated Special Economic Zones Act should provide greater impetus to the country’s economic turnaround by facilitating foreign direct investment inflows, industrialization, technology transfer, employment creation and increased export earnings.