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Fiscal transparency panacea to Zim socio-economic problems? – Zimbabwe Independent

Zim economy

ZIMBABWE is expected to hold harmonised elections in August 2023. Major political parties have already concluded or are at the final stages of primary elections to select their candidates.

There are 210 constituency seats and over 1 000 wards up for grabs for parliamentary and local authorities’ representatives respectively. The government also indicated that preparation for this occasion is now at an advanced stage.

The major aspect of elections is access to public resources through an electoral victory hence the reason they are often the object of fraught competition and conflict.

This is more pronounced in developing nations where fiscal transparency is not a big deal despite it being a prerequisite for good governance. In anticipation of increased opaque fiscal activities during the election season, this week’s columnis,therefore, highlighting the importance of fiscal transparency and accountability (T&A) in government.

Fiscal transparency apprises citizens of how tax revenues are used by the government by providing them a window into Treasury budgets and in turn, those citizens will be able to hold  their government accountable.

Thus, underpinning market confidence and sustainability. In the same vein, fiscal accountability entails compliance with stipulated laws and regulations, consistency with suitable principles of accounting, accuracy, and fairness of financial statements, and enforcement of the legitimacy of fiscal expenditures.

In other words, accountability is the acceptance of responsibility for honest and ethical conduct towards others.

According to Zimbabwe’s constitution, financial management must be responsible, fiscal reporting must be clear, and public borrowing and all transactions involving the national debt must be carried out transparently and in the best interests of Zimbabwe.

All public funds must be used transparently, prudently, economically, and effectively. There should also be accountability and participation to ensure that the government and all other public institutions are accountable in theexercise of their PFM functions.

In addition, there should be formal and increased opportunities for the public including disadvantaged groups and marginalised communities to engage in all national and local budget processes.

The constitution further highlights that all public oversight institutions including the Office of the Auditor-General (OAG), Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission (Zacc), Parliament, and other bodies with oversight functions concerning PFM should be adequately resourced and be independent to provide effective oversight of the executive branch’s financial management processes.

This must be buttressed by the responsibility principle which entails that all public bodies and officials assigned to PFM-related processes are expected to regard their responsibility to exercise their functions in the interest of the public.

Furthermore, there must be fiscal equity where all PFM systems are directed towards national development, and in particular the burden of taxation is shared fairly; revenue raised nationally is shared equitably between the central government and provincial and local tiers of government; and expenditure is directed towards the development of the nation, and special provision is made for marginalised groups and places.

Generally, fiscal transparency and accountability (T&A) are the major building pillars for governing democratic nations. Fiscal transparency serves to open the government to those it serves, that is, allowing the public to participate and to keep informed of the government’s budgets, spending, and projects.

It is also a powerful weapon against corruption because when government processes become transparent, there will be limited scope for public officials to engage in corrupt activities.

In an ideal world, there is a full implementation of PFM-related legislation, which is key in bringing maximum efficiency in all financial management.

If this holds, one would expect the presence of all budget (fiscal) transparency indicators. For example, the government would be ensuring that budget documents and data are open, transparent, and accessible through the availability of clear, factual budget reports which should inform the key stages of policy formulation, consideration, and debate, as well as implementation and review.

Also, all the budgets and government spending will be approved only by the Parliament. In the same vein, the Parliament will be awarded adequate time to scrutinise budget proposals and approve them after extensive public parliamentary debates.

At the same time, the citizens will be provided with equal opportunities to directly participate in public debates and the design of fiscal policies. This mainly includes budget consultations and the publication of simplified citizens’ budgets.

Furthermore, there will be unlimited access to all public information, adequate resources, and maximum statutory independence of oversight and control institutions such as the Office of Auditor-General (OAG).

There will also be maximum integrity in public sector procurement.

This largely entails the opening up of the entire public procurement cycleincluding openness in the procurement system (procedures, regulations and institutional frameworks), competitive tenders, bidding documents, contract documents as well as evaluation reports.

Nevertheless, the reality shows that there is a lot to be desired in Zimbabwe’s quest for fiscal transparency. For instance, the parliament follows a whipping system where MPs are whipped/coerced to vote according to their party’s given positions rather than according to their ideology or the will of their constituents.

This helps to explain why over the years Treasury is realising budget overruns even without parliamentary blessing knowing that the same Parliament will approve the request for condonation without any repercussions whatsoever.

For instance, despite budget surplus rhetoric, Treasury incurred cumulative budget overruns of ZW100,7 billion during the period of the Transitional Stabilisation Programme (TSP) (2019-2020).

It also reportedly spent more than what was planned (US$10 billion) during the 2015-18period. In the upcoming electoral season, Treasury is likely to incur budget overruns again as spending pressure continues to mount.

The dismal performance of the ZWL against the US dollar year-to-date attests to excessive spending and increased liquidity.

Also, underfunding of parliamentary businesses like the Parliamentary Budget Office (PBO) over the years has fuelled the brain drain.

The massive exodus of experienced PBO employees is nowconstraining a more informed engagement between the legislative branch and its executive counterpart.

A weak legislature is a free window for Treasury to propose and implement fiscal policies and budgets that are unsustainable. The longevity of Parliamentary underfunding has degenerated into severe capacity issues thereby inhibiting it to perform its crucial oversight function.

More so, there is a clear disregard for public audit requirements as shown by the continuous late submissions of accounts by public institutions for auditing by the Auditor-General.

For instance, the latest 2021 OAG report shows that 71/92 local authorities had not submitted their accounts for auditing as of May 2022.

The OAG recommendations are also being ignored as out of 141 findings reported in the 2021 report, only nine were fully addressed.

The nation is also characterised by procurement scandals associated with tenderprenuership deals.

These closed deals, such as the US$60 million Drax Covid-19 scandal and the over US$300 million Pomona Waste to Energy deal for Harare fail to ensure a fairer and equitable treatment of all potential government suppliers and eliminate competition thus contributing to poor value for money for citizens.

In addition, the nation is failing to account for revenues and expenditures in natural resources mostly due to escalating cases of mineral smuggling.

For example, government statistics show thatforex-strapped Zimbabwe is losing approximately US$100 million of revenue per month(US$1,2 billion per year) to gold smuggling alone.

All this is undermining fiscal transparency and accountability and breeding corruption and abuse of public resources.

The foregoing shows that Zimbabwe has weak fiscal transparency and accountability systems, a situation that keeps deteriorating.

This, coupled with other election transparency issues such as election procedures, the voters’ roll, and election results counting andtabulation processes poses great risks to theeconomy and Zimbabwe’s Vision 2030.

Sibanda is an economic analyst and researcher. He writes in his personal capacity. — bravosibanda@gmail.com or twitter: @bravon96

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Global stocks sink before US Congress votes on deal to avoid debt … – The Zimbabwe Mail




BEIJING (AP) — Global stock markets sank Wednesday ahead of a vote by the U.S. Congress on a deal to avert a government debt default, while a downturn in Chinese factory activity deepened, adding to signs that the world’s economic activity is weakening.

Markets in London, Shanghai, Paris and Tokyo retreated. Oil prices declined.

Wall Street’s benchmark S&P 500 index edged up less than 0.1% on Tuesday as President Joe Biden and Speaker Kevin McCarthy of the House of Representatives tried to line up votes to raise the amount the government is allowed to borrow. Officials warn the Treasury will run out of money as soon as next week, which would roil the economy and financial markets.

“Any upcoming obstacle to a smooth pass-through of the deal could still trigger some de-risking,” Yeap Jun Rong of IG said in a report.

On Wednesday, an official Chinese survey of manufacturers found activity contracted in May on weak global and domestic consumer demand.

In early trading, the FTSE 100 in London lost 0.1% to 7,514.18 and the CAC 40 in Paris sank 0.4% to 7,178.13. The DAX in Frankfurt retreated 0.3% to 15,868.35.

On Wall Street, futures for the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average were off 0.2% ahead of a vote by the full 435-member House on raising the government debt limit. Some legislators object to spending cuts in the plan while others want bigger reductions.

On Tuesday, the Dow slipped 0.2% and the Nasdaq composite rose 0.3%.

In Asia, the Shanghai Composite Index lost 0.6% to 3,204.56 and the Nikkei 225 in Tokyo fell 1.4% to 30,887.88. The Hang Seng in Hong Kong tumbled 1.9% to 18,234.27.

China’s economic recovery has been weaker than some businesspeople and investors hoped.


A monthly purchasing managers’ index issued by the national statistics agency and an industry group declined to 48.4 from April’s 49.2 on a 100-point scale in which numbers below 50 show activity declining. Manufacturers have been hurt by weak global demand and a slower-than-expected recovery in Chinese consumer spending.

The Kospi in Seoul retreated 0.3% to 2,577.12 and the S&P-ASX 200 in Sydney fell 1.6% to 7,091.30.

India’s Sensex lost 0.7% to 62,514.88. New Zealand advanced while Southeast Asian markets declined.

Uncertainty about U.S. government debt adds to market anxiety over signs global economic activity is slowing following interest rate hikes.

Even without a default, all the partisan brinkmanship in Washington could erode faith in the U.S. government. That could trigger another downgrade to its credit rating, following Standard & Poor’s rating cut in 2011.

Traders are bracing for another possible increase in the Federal Reserve’s key lending rate at its next meeting in two weeks but hope that will be the last in this cycle.

A report Tuesday showed confidence among American consumers is falling and is well below where it was before the pandemic.

In energy markets, benchmark U.S. crude gained 36 cents to $69.10 per barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The contract fell $3.21 on Tuesday to $69.46. Brent crude, the price basis for international oil trading, shed 44 cents to $73.32 per barrel in London. It sank $3.53 the previous session to $73.54.

The dollar declined to 139.81 yen from Tuesday’s 139.87 yen. The euro retreated to $1.0663 from $1.0719.


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Zimbabwe summons US deputy ambassador over meddling election tweets – Zee Business

Zimbabwe’s foreign ministry has summoned the United States’ deputy ambassador over a series of tweets the embassy sent calling for a peaceful election in a country that has a history of violent and disputed votes.

The ministry accused the embassy of election-related social media posts bordering on activism and meddling in Zimbabwe’s internal affairs.

Deputy Ambassador Elaine French was called to a meeting with Zimbabwe foreign affairs acting permanent secretary Rofina Chikava on Tuesday following the posts on the U.S. Embassy’s official Twitter account.

The Zimbabwe foreign ministry said it had a particular issue with a May 26 tweet that called for Zimbabweans to Register to vote and make sure your voice is heard. Another tweet from the embassy said Zimbabwe’s constitution grants citizens the right to choose their representatives in legitimate, credible, & peaceful elections.

The foreign ministry said the tweet urging people to register to vote was against diplomatic protocols.

We stand by our recent social media posts calling for peace during the election season,” U.S. Embassy spokeswoman Meg Riggs said in a statement. Elections are a part of a functioning democracy.

Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa has said the elections will take place in August, although he hasn’t announced a specific date.

But campaigning has started, with opposition parties already alleging violence and intimidation against their supporters by ruling party activists and security forces. Mnangagwa’s ZANU-PF ruling party and the government have denied the allegations but human rights groups have said there is intimidation and Mnangagwa’s government is suppressing criticism amid a currency crisis and a sharp rise in food prices.

Zimbabwe has been under U.S. Sanctions for two decades over human rights abuses, which started under the regime of former president Robert Mugabe, who led Zimbabwe from independence from white minority rule in 1980 until he was removed in a coup in 2017 and replaced by Mnangagwa.

Zimbabwe has had a series of violent and disputed elections since 1980 and this vote is expected to be closely contested.

Catch the latest stock market updates here. For more news on sports, politics follow Zee Business 

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Zimbabwe summons US deputy ambassador over meddling election tweets – Zee Business

Zimbabwe’s foreign ministry has summoned the United States’ deputy ambassador over a series of tweets the embassy sent calling for a peaceful election in a country that has a history of violent and disputed votes.

The ministry accused the embassy of election-related social media posts bordering on activism and meddling in Zimbabwe’s internal affairs.

Deputy Ambassador Elaine French was called to a meeting with Zimbabwe foreign affairs acting permanent secretary Rofina Chikava on Tuesday following the posts on the U.S. Embassy’s official Twitter account.

The Zimbabwe foreign ministry said it had a particular issue with a May 26 tweet that called for Zimbabweans to Register to vote and make sure your voice is heard. Another tweet from the embassy said Zimbabwe’s constitution grants citizens the right to choose their representatives in legitimate, credible, & peaceful elections.

The foreign ministry said the tweet urging people to register to vote was against diplomatic protocols.

We stand by our recent social media posts calling for peace during the election season,” U.S. Embassy spokeswoman Meg Riggs said in a statement. Elections are a part of a functioning democracy.

Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa has said the elections will take place in August, although he hasn’t announced a specific date.

But campaigning has started, with opposition parties already alleging violence and intimidation against their supporters by ruling party activists and security forces. Mnangagwa’s ZANU-PF ruling party and the government have denied the allegations but human rights groups have said there is intimidation and Mnangagwa’s government is suppressing criticism amid a currency crisis and a sharp rise in food prices.

Zimbabwe has been under U.S. Sanctions for two decades over human rights abuses, which started under the regime of former president Robert Mugabe, who led Zimbabwe from independence from white minority rule in 1980 until he was removed in a coup in 2017 and replaced by Mnangagwa.

Zimbabwe has had a series of violent and disputed elections since 1980 and this vote is expected to be closely contested.

Catch the latest stock market updates here. For more news on sports, politics follow Zee Business 

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