LAST week
Chinese chairman of the Council for Promoting South-South Cooperation, LV
Xinhua and his delegation visited Zimbabwe to assess the country’s business
environment and investment opportunities. The Chinese met Vice-President
Emmerson Mnangagwa, who was acting president, to discuss investment issues.
Chinese
Ambassador to Harare Lin Lin, Chinese embassy economic and commercial adviser
Li Yaohui, Finance minister Patrick Chinamasa, Samuel Undenge (Energy), Mike
Bimha (Industry and Commerce), Obert Mpofu (Transport), Walter Chidhakwa
(Mines), Joseph Made (Agriculture), Christopher Mutsvangwa (War Veterans) and
the 18-member delegation exchanged notes frankly on investment matters.
Mnangagwa briefed the Chinese on Zimbabwe’s social and economic situation to
give them insight from a government perspective.
He said Zimbabwe was keen on Foreign Direct
Investment (FDI), especially from China. After Mnangagwa’s remarks, the Chinese
with LV in charge thanked government for welcoming them and indicated they were
looking for investment opportunities across a wide range of economic sectors,
including but not limited to mining, construction, pharmaceuticals and
manufacturing. Subsequently, LV tackled the elephant in the room: Zimbabwe’s
hostile business environment and ease of doing business. He made it clear even
if the Chinese want to invest in the country government must first improve the
business climate and ensure barri ers to commerce are removed to retain their
vast investments locally and to attract new capital.
The
Chinese also said Zimbabwe must remember it is competing with its neighbours
and other countries for investment. This was interesting, coming as it did from
the Chinese — Zimbabwe’s “all-weather” friends as officials say — because all
business delegations and investors have been giving government the same
message. Whether it’s the Americans, the British and other Europeans, Russians,
South Africans or Chinese, the mantra is the same: Create an enabling business
environment if you want serious investment. In fact, recently Zimbabwe’s own
state investment agency demanded urgent policy and legislative reforms to
attract FDI, which has remained stagnant at USS$400 million annually compared
to billions for neighbouring countries in the past two years.
The World
Bank has ranked Zimbabwe 171 out of 189 countries on its 2014 ease of doing
business index, something attributed to negative perceptions about the
country’s disastrous policies, especially the land reform and indigenisation
programmes. Bad policies and inconsistencies have widely been blamed for
keeping investors at bay. Retrogressive politics and leadership failures have
also been cited as responsible for economic regression, poverty and suffering.
Zimbabwe
Investment Authority CEO Richard Mbaiwa recently told a parliamentary committee
that the country continues to lag behind its regional peers such as Mozambique
and Zambia whose FDI inflows have risen to US$5 billion and US$2 billion
respectively because of poor policies and lack of reforms. Political stability,
policy consistency and investor-friendly reforms are critical to ensure
investment, recovery and growth. That’s what the Chinese also said. Authorities
must now listen, at least for once for a change.Zim ind.
LAST week Chinese
chairman of the Council for Promoting South-South Cooperation, LV Xinhua
and his delegation visited Zimbabwe to assess the country’s business
environment and investment opportunities.
The Chinese met Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who was acting
president, to discuss investment issues. Chinese Ambassador to Harare
Lin Lin, Chinese embassy economic and commercial adviser Li Yaohui,
Finance minister Patrick Chinamasa, Samuel Undenge (Energy), Mike Bimha
(Industry and Commerce), Obert Mpofu (Transport), Walter Chidhakwa
(Mines), Joseph Made (Agriculture), Christopher Mutsvangwa (War
Veterans) and the 18-member delegation exchanged notes frankly on
investment matters.
Mnangagwa briefed the Chinese on Zimbabwe’s social and economic
situation to give them insight from a government perspective. He said
Zimbabwe was keen on Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), especially from
China.
After Mnangagwa’s remarks, the Chinese with LV in charge thanked
government for welcoming them and indicated they were looking for
investment opportunities across a wide range of economic sectors,
including but not limited to mining, construction, pharmaceuticals and
manufacturing.
Subsequently, LV tackled the elephant in the room: Zimbabwe’s hostile
business environment and ease of doing business. He made it clear even
if the Chinese want to invest in the country government must first
improve the business climate and ensure barri
ers to commerce are removed to retain their vast investments locally and
to attract new capital.
The Chinese also said Zimbabwe must remember it is competing with its
neighbours and other countries for investment.
This was interesting, coming as it did from the Chinese — Zimbabwe’s
“all-weather” friends as officials say — because all business
delegations and investors have been giving government the same message.
Whether it’s the Americans, the British and other Europeans, Russians,
South Africans or Chinese, the mantra is the same: Create an enabling
business environment if you want serious investment.
In fact, recently Zimbabwe’s own state investment agency demanded urgent
policy and legislative reforms to attract FDI, which has remained
stagnant at USS$400 million annually compared to billions for
neighbouring countries in the past two years.
The World Bank has ranked Zimbabwe 171 out of 189 countries on its 2014
ease of doing business index, something attributed to negative
perceptions about the country’s disastrous policies, especially the land
reform and indigenisation programmes. Bad policies and inconsistencies
have widely been blamed for keeping investors at bay.
Retrogressive politics and leadership failures have also been cited as
responsible for economic regression, poverty and suffering.
Zimbabwe Investment Authority CEO Richard Mbaiwa recently told a
parliamentary committee that the country continues to lag behind its
regional peers such as Mozambique and Zambia whose FDI inflows have
risen to US$5 billion and US$2 billion respectively because of poor
policies and lack of reforms.
Political stability, policy consistency and investor-friendly reforms
are critical to ensure investment, recovery and growth. That’s what the
Chinese also said. Authorities must now listen, at least for once for a
change.Zim ind.
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Read More at www.sunrise2all.com/2015/06/03/china-told-mnangagwacreate-an-enabling-business-environment-if-you-want-serious-investment-in-z/ © http://www.sunrise2all.com
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