Thursday, 9 October 2025

Civil servant boss can afford US$2m wedding yet his secretary cannot afford one decent meal a day. What the hell is going on! E Cross

 T he Changing Landscape of Zim Economy - Multi-millionaire oligarchs living dream lives 


 By Eddie Cross 


I have often told foreign diplomats who are assigned to serve their countries in Zimbabwe and to visiting specialists, that we specialise in confusing foreigners. But this confusion is found even among our own people and Government. So here I am going to try and unpack this issue.

Our economy has three main segments, they work and subsist together, but in many ways, they are quite separate. They are the formal economy now estimated to be about US$50 billion in GDP per annum. The second major element is the informal economy which everybody agrees is probably larger than the formal sector, I agree with that and it employs in one form or another the great majority of our adult population. The third element is what I call the grey economy - I call it grey because it is dominated by white, brown and black oligarchs who control substantial resources and operate under the radar, not always illegally, but very often operating criminal enterprises.

The formal economy is growing strongly and supports regular employment of probably over a million adults - half in the public service which is probably twice as large as it needs to be and consumes half the national budget. It is generally underpaid because it is larger than we can actually afford based on our tax base which is 90 per cent dependent on the formal economy.

In a perfect world I would cut the budget for salaries and pensions for the public service (including the armed services) to 35 per cent of the national budget which would be 20 per cent of the formal GDP. But I would pay our top Civil Servants and the heads of our armed services 80 per cent of what their private sector counterparts earn and scale up the rest so that our public servants can live decently on their salaries. I would cut staff numbers radically.

I would allow our formal economy to operate on a market driven basis with a domestic currency that was undervalued to stimulate exports and discourage imports. I would abolish exchange control and close down three quarters of the State run and dependent agencies that charge for their services and are accountable to no one. I would take action to ensure that all domestic monopolies are forced to compete or face open imports to ensure that they compete to survive.

I would take steps to ensure our legal services are honest, professional and able to service the country effectively. I would ensure the Constitution and all human; political and property rights are not only recognised but enforced. The Reserve Bank would be placed under a completely independent Board and ensure it operated properly as the bank of last resort and the regulator of all financial institutions.

The informal sector! What can we say, its dynamic, its thriving, its competitive and it provides for the great majority of our people. Without it we would hardly survive. I was in Mbare last week and did a walk about with local leaders. Astonishing, this is the heart of our economy. On 500 hectares of tightly packed enterprise and people, its turnover runs to billions every month. The stock on site was enormous, and you can buy anything. In the middle is a branch of OK Bazaars - I walked in and was shocked to see the state it was in - very little stock, staff outnumbering customers. Why shop in there when you can buy everything they sell outside their front door at a lower price?

It may be many things, but it is orderly, well managed and clean. The produce fresh and delivered daily from the whole country and even neighboring States. There is virtually no theft because if you do try to steal anything, justice is immediate and severe. Prices are fixed by consensus. There are areas dedicated to manufacturing, furniture and light steel structures. I wanted a water tower for an elevated tank at home - went to a formal sector industrial plant and was quoted 6 weeks delivery and US$1600. I went to Mbare and got what I wanted for US$500, it was delivered to my home in 5 hours, still wet with paint. It operates perfectly.

In the same area I found a motor workshop specializing in maintaining small taxis from Japan. You could drive in at 08,00hrs and collect the vehicle with a new engine at 16.00hrs for US$350. A valet service was US$5 per vehicle. While you waited you could get a decent meal for US$2 in a makeshift restaurant on site.

We have a building boom underway with perhaps a million homes under construction. Many of these are really decent homes, brick under tile, many are architecturally designed, nearly all are being built by informal sector builders. I built an extension to our home - 180 m2 for US$75 000. It would have cost me four times that if I had hired a contractor. It was designed by an architect.

In the rural areas we have 700 000 small scale farmers, nearly the same number of small scale miners producing chrome and gold. Nearly all of this is informal, and they produce very substantial quantities of bananas, small grains, maize, beans, potatoes, vegetables and oilseeds. We have perhaps 20 000 taxis and you can make a call at 3 in the morning and be picked up and taken to the airport 20 kms away for US$13 compared to US$40 in a formal sector taxi. 5000 cross border traders operate daily. Our real imports may be double the formal sectors.

Then the grey economy! The other day I made a statement that this sector may exceed our national budget in value, that statement was never challenged. I estimate that grey operators syphon off over US$2 billion a year from the fuel industry. Dubai bought 450 tonnes of raw gold from Africa in 2024, all of this without certificates of origin. At todays price of US$3900 an ounce that would be worth nearly US$50 billion. A very large proportion of that came from here. The buyers paid for this with local or imported currency (Money laundering) but the proceeds were externalized. One of the well known gold oligarchs handled US$1,4 billion last year, he does not have a bank account, another handled over US$5 billion.

In Ghana where the State has regularised their gold industry they have gone in three years, from a state where they were seeking emergency funding from the IMF to now when they have a current account surplus, they can service their debt and foreign trade. Our situation is no different. We have oligarchs who can hand out hundreds of motor vehicles and millions of dollars in cash, wives who can fly to Europe first class, with friends and spend a million dollars a day. We have children who can walk down to a jetty in Dubai and buy a US$37 million boat for cash. Some of these people have no visible means of support.

Its not limited to the oligarchs - we have civil servants who can spend US$2 million on the wedding of their daughter. Many parts of our cities look like Hollywood - homes with helicopter pads, heated pools, irrigated gardens. Luxury cars crowd our roads. Yet our public education system is a disaster, private schools play sport internationally and win bag pipe competitions in Britain. Our public health system has no drugs, even cleaning materials. We are now one of the most unequal societies in the world and this simply cannot go on.

Eddie Cross

Harare, 4th October 2025

6 comments:

  1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iP4gNx8Np9s

    There many reason why Zimbabwe is a failed state and the mother of all those reasons has to be "Zimbabwe has the great misfortune of having millions of brain dead citizens and, to crown it, they have the vote!" Mnangagwa has his VaPositori4ED and Chamisa has his Chamisa chete chete brigade, millions of dunderheads, who, in the infantile foolishness are keeping Zanu PF in power and perpetuating the nation's suffering!

    Mnangagwa gave VaPositori chicken and chips and they broke out into Sapatina! Sapatina! praising the corrupt, murderous and vote rigging dictator.

    Chamisa has repeatedly lied to con his supporters to participate in flawed elections to give Zanu PF legitimacy. The supporters refuse to accept he is a liar and conman out of their personality cult mentality. They believe he is a demigod who can do no wrong. How anyone can be so shallow, thick and slow, in his day and age, beggars belief!

    ReplyDelete
  2. @ Chivayo says Mutodi will not win in CCC or Zanu PF next time!

    Who is elected into office in Zimbabwe, be it opposition or Zanu PF is dictated by looters. He who pays the piper calls the tune! This is the price the nation pays for having allowed corruption to become rampant!

    Of course, Chivayo dictates what happens in CCC and Zanu PF!

    ReplyDelete
  3. https://x.com/i/broadcasts/1nAKEEnyBzOKL

    Zanu PF is incapable of reforming itself much less society, argued Dr Simba Makoni. He is spot on. Zanu PF is rotted to the core and the rot has percolated, penetrated and corrupted every section of society including the youth and opposition.

    The MDC/CCC leaders had the chances to end the Zanu PF dictatorship, notably during the 2008 to 2013 GNU, they wasted them all.

    As much as the nation is desperate for meaningful change, the people must first realise that neither Zanu PF nor their compromised MDC/CCC side-kick will deliver that change. Why the nation has failed to realise this by now beggars belief!

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  4. @ BaKudzai

    “That was not possible at all Zanu PF will never allow reform because. Implementing reforms is like pushing self out of power so they will never entertain that.”

    In short you do not know what the reforms are much less that the 2008 to 2013 GNU was the golden opportunity to get the reforms implemented. So even now with the benefit of hindsight you still believe the nonsense that Zanu PF stopped MDC leaders implementing even one reform. No wonder we a failed state!

    “As a collective political leadership, we should have taken time to apply our minds to the existential question:

    “What next after the GNU?”
    We did not address this matter.
    This was suicidal.” confessed Professor Arthur Mutambara in his Book In
    Search of the Elusive Zimbabwean Dream, Volume III (Ideas & Solutions).

    This is like some one in secondary school who does not even know all the letters of the alphabet! There is no hope in hell he/she will ever learn! Poor, poor Zimbabwe; she is doomed!

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  5. @ Chiwenga

    Did you do the same with the Marange and Chiadzwa diamonds? Who elected you into that position? Who was behind Operation Mavhotera Papi in 2008? The 2017 military coup? You should be in prison for all your crimes against this nation!

    ReplyDelete
  6. @ Change radio

    "President Chamisa is in our communities. Zimbabwe is a country of faith. President Chamisa is a man of faith. Our nation will unite and heal when we feel for our neighbors. We live with them. Eat with them. Pray with them. Worship with them. That is what neighborliness means.
    #Godisinit."

    The competition for the dunderhead Sapatina SAPATINA vote is hotting up! I bet my bottom dollar none of this lot know that Chamisa lied about plugging vote rigging loop holes in 2023 to con them to participate in flawed elections to give Zanu PF legitimacy and perpetuate the dictatorship.

    ReplyDelete