Here Are The Eight Missing Critical Elements Zimbabwe Needs in the Search for a Winning Solution for Zimbabwe’s Economic Recovery:
Written By Simon Bere
For a country regarded as one with probably the highest literacy levels on the continent to be entangled in a devastating economic situation for close to twenty years is a big misnomer if not a slap in the face of education.
For a person from outside Zimbabwe and without the inner details of things, the economic situation in Zimbabwe may sound all too political and nothing else. There is no doubt that political harmony and normalisation of relations with the global community will add impetus to Zimbabwe’s economic progress. What is flawed is believing that political resolution is all that the country needs to solve its economic problems. There is way more to Zimbabwe’s economic challenges beyond the theory of global and internal politics.
Here are some missing 12 missing elements:
1. The Need for a Long-Range Economic Master Plan: For a long time, apart from a brief phase when the country talked about Vision 2020, Zimbabwe has been using five-year economic plans to drive its economy forward.
In the strategy cycles, we have always argued that Zimbabwe desperately needs a long-range economic master plan. This master plan can have a fifty-year horizon or, if bold enough, a hundred-year time horizon. This is, in fact, separating the country’s economy from the past and the present and creation of a new economic future for the country.
The process of creating and managing the long-range economic master plan can be called visionary economic management, which is the highest level without which it will be a struggle for Zimbabwe to shirt towards a path of sustained economic growth and prosperity.
1. Visionary economic management.
2. Strategic economic management.
3. Operational economic management.
4. Tactical economic management.
In this model, the long-range, the medium term and the short term are all operated at the same time by different teams and the four levels. It is different from the linear approach of starting with the short and hoping to them move to the medium term and finally to the long term.
2. The Need of a Complete Process from Problem to Solution and from Plan to Desired Results: Legend has it that Zimbabweans are very good at coming up with brilliant plans but fail dismally at the implementation of those plans. Given the number of economic plans and blueprints that have been crafted but never survived beyond official launch, this may actually be true. The most important strategic question to ask is;
Why does Zimbabwe fail to follow through with its economic plans and blueprints?
I will argue here that the first reason why Zimbabwe fails is most likely due to a lack of well-defined guiding process for translating plans into practical actions and then the practical actions into results. In other words, Zimbabwe seems to excel and “the what of things” and then struggle on the how, the process.
There is some generic process used to deliver results in strategy. The simplest is a six-step process-asses situation, think, plan, act, measure results and review and adjust performance and strategy. Another popular and effect process is the vision, image, strategy, performance, alignment, resourcing, action, results in measurement and strategy and performance review and adjustment. The use of processes to guide people from ideas to action and from problem to solve is the cornerstone of success especially in science and in other high-performance disciplines. The same tools are underutilised in Zimbabwe, leading to many stillborn economic plans and blueprints.
3. The Need for Skills and Capacity: The second major reason why Zimbabwe’s economic plans execute poorly or fail to execute is lack of skills and capacity. First, when the country produces economic plans and blueprints, serious questions are not asked and answer on the skills and capacity required to drive those economic plans successfully. There is an assumption that there are enough skills and capacity in the country to drive the plan and turn it into action that will lead to results. The other question that is never asked is who exactly is going to do what to make things happen with the economic plan.
While talking about this, it is important to highlight a skills audit done by the government which concluded that Zimbabwe has skills deficits in many areas. I tend to agree with that. First, it is important to clear a common confusion between knowledge and skills. High literacy levels do not necessarily equate to high levels of skills. It is easy to very articulate in an area, for example, marketing or leader and lacks the marketing or leadership skills at the same time. Skills are the capacity to do. Knowledge is about awareness and understanding. The two often work together but they are different.
There is another element of capacity and skill to discuss. Most of the skills that the skills survey targeted are academic and subject matter skills. The survey did not include critical skills such as thinking skills including strategic thinking skills, leadership skills, critical thinking, emotional skills, managerial skills, entrepreneurial skills and organisational skills that are so vital for economic recovery and growth.
The bottom line regarding skills is that any organisation can produce a brilliant plan, but if what the plan requires for successful implementation is beyond the available skills and capacity, that plan is doomed at birth. The only way to make a plan succeed is also to acquire or develop the skills and capabilities required to implement it.
4. The Government-Private Sector Binary Approach: The government-private sector binary economic management model is a major flaw that contributes to the failure to drive the economy forward. According to this model, the government and the private sector are the two critical economic players.
1. The private sector is composed largely of business owners who are intensely interested in preserving their economic value. Private sector players are by large extremely busy running their enterprises and may not have enough energy and time to commit wider economic issues especially those that are futuristic and might adversely affect their current enterprises. Most private sector players are concerned with the present with a special focus on how they can survive and thrive at the moment. But shift the economy from the current to where it should require thinking beyond the present and investing huge amounts of time and energy in creating the future that may be radically different from the present and might actually sink some of the existing entities that belong to the present day private sector players.
2. In many cases, the private sector players may shy away from engaging government in a brutally honest way for fear of being victimised economically. They may play the “good guy” with government and deceive it, making the situation worse for everyone.
3. The private sector, being too busy running their entities may not have the time and energy in research and development, in the creation of the new that is a must for economic advancement, in the accurate assessment of the situation and in the generation of credible and powerful solutions for extracting the economic from where it is to where it must be.
Instead of the government-private sector binary model which is inherently weak, Zimbabwe needs a more robust economic management model which also brings two critical players into the core of economic management. These two players are
1. Philosophers, Original Thinkers, Theorists and Strategists (The POTTS)
2. The technocrats, intellectuals, teachers, academics and specialists (The TITAS)
One can argue that Zimbabwe’s rate of economic failure was fuelled when the country started dismissing input by academic into economic management by labelling it “bookish” or theory.
The mere shifting of dealing with a situation from the reactive or tactical approach to the strategic approach dramatically shifts everything else and maybe the decisive factor between the fate and destiny of an economy. This is so important is we remind ourselves that the purpose of a strategy is to produce the best theory to guide action to achieve desired goals as quickly as possible with the least loss of time, assets and resources. The strategy seeks to bring efficiency, preservation and effectiveness is the execution of plans and programs for solving problems and achieving goals.
7. Poor Leadership Model: While everyone agrees with the adage that everything rises and falls on leadership, definition, meaning and understanding within the Zimbabwean society of what leadership is all about is so varied and even so flawed that to claim to understand the meaning of the adage that it rises and falls on leadership becomes contradictory.
The point here is that for Zimbabwe to succeed, the country must develop the best possible leadership model for driving the economy forward. The current theory of leadership is defective and will lead the country nowhere. Also, the country needs a serious leadership capacity building program so that there are effective leaders in all dimensions especially in the political, economic, business, organisational and technical domains of the economy.
Certainly, this is not the full solution for Zimbabwe’s economic recovery, neither is it a replacement of the current efforts but the government and other players. However, these soft invisible issues cannot be ignored, neither can they be trivialised without severely undermined the country’s capacity for a speedy economic recovery and return to prosperity and growth. The theory is practical. A strategy is vital. Philosophy is the centre of practical success.
©Simon Bere, 2019 simonsbere@gmail.com
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