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Zim’s long road to ending poverty

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NOEL Bhizori has a permanent post at a traffic light in Bulawayo’s central business district, where he sells mobile phone recharge cards at a busy intersection.

NOEL Bhizori has a permanent post at a traffic light in Bulawayo’s central business district, where he sells mobile phone recharge cards at a busy intersection.

IPS

“The profits are little, but then this is the only means to earn a living I know,” he said.

Most people now survive on vending since jobs are scarce
Most people now survive on vending since jobs are scarce

“I eat one meal a day, a plate of isitshwala (sadza), which costs a dollar. With my kind of earnings, this is what I can afford.”

The 29-year-old Bhizori says he has a tertiary education qualification, but has long stopped looking for a job in a country where labour unions say up to 90% of Zimbabweans have no jobs, while the Confederation of Zimbabwe Industries admits only 15% of Zimbabweans are in formal employment.

Bhizori makes less than $200 a month, but still has to deduct $70 per month for a room rental in one of the city’s sprawling poor working-class townships. He also has to pay anything between $15 and $25 for electricity and water.

“Poverty is real my friend,” Bhizori said.

His grim circumstances present an off-the-radar reality of millions in urban areas, previously thought to be better off than the traditionally poor most seen in rural areas.

Recent statistics from the Zimbabwe Statistics Agency’s (ZimStat) October national datum lines showed that the average Zimbabwean lives on $3,24 per day, which is more than the World Bank’s $1,90, an indicator of extreme poverty.

However, as Bhizori explains, continuing price increases of basic commodities have meant he and fellow city vendors easily fall within the extreme poverty bracket.

“We are only happy when there are supermarket specials when prices are reduced, but it’s still money we do not have,” he said.

In its October consumer index, the Consumer Council of Zimbabwe (CCZ), a quasi-government agency found that an average family of six required $561 per month, which means each family member requires $93,30 per month or $3,10 per day.

Official figures show that the least paid government employee earns $296 per month, while scores of companies reeling under tough operating conditions continue laying-off thousands of workers.

According to ZimStat, at least 72% of Zimbabweans live below the official poverty datum, which could create a huge task for the country to meet its Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) towards reducing poverty and hunger.

And as the cost of basic commodities continues to spike, the percentage of Zimbabweans needing aid is likely to increase with it, at a time when the United Nations Development Programme’s Human Development Index put Zimbabwe at number 156 of the least developed countries out of 187.

In September the World Food Programme (WFP) said that 2,2 million Zimbabweans will require food assistance this year.

Aid agencies are increasing their presence across the country’s rural areas to address hunger and poverty, a clear sign that government will need partners to meet its SDGs, despite long-held accusations that non-governmental organisations work to undermine the government.

Writing in September this year, UN Resident Representative in Zimbabwe, Bishow Parajuli, said Zimbabwe will require assistance from international development partners to meet its SGDs, noting that this “success will be driven by the government and the people of Zimbabwe”.

In August, World Vision International, in partnership with the UK’s Department for International Development (DFID) launched the Responding to Drought and Protecting Livelihoods Programme in Zimbabwe, while the WFP reports that only 11% of children aged between 6 and 11 months have access to the minimum nutritional diet. “We are assisting with cash vouchers for food assistance in Matebeleland North and Mateleleland South provinces,” Khumbulani Ndlovu, a director at World Vision International, said.

“The cash vouchers are redeemed at designated retailers for food items.”

DFID is providing £15 million for the programme, in what the aid agency says is increasing food insecurity across 16 rural districts.

It is these rural populations now getting food assistance, who previously added grain to the national food reserves, but have seen maize production dwindling because of challenges that range from climate shifts to lack of farming inputs.

Education officials say thousands of primary school children in Matebeleland North and South provinces who subsisted on domestic food stocks have dropped out of classes this term because of hunger.

Commercial agriculture long touted as the country’s hope for economic growth, is facing funding challenges with banks setting stringent conditions for farmers to access credit lines.

According to the WFP, the country’s 2014/15 agriculture season saw a 51% decline in maize production compared to the previous season, further exacerbating poverty and hunger levels in the country.

This month, a new World Bank report issued the grim warning that climate change could add up to 100 million poor people by 2030, the SDGs cut-off year, which is not good news for Zimbabwe as it is one of many African countries on the receiving end of radical climatic shifts.

Amidst all these challenges, Tapiwa Gomo, a researcher at the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said, like any other country, Zimbabwe will require political commitment to address hunger and poverty if it is to meet its SDG targets.

“Development is generally scared of bad politics,” he said. “Zimbabwe is blessed with vast amounts of natural resources to get itself out of poverty and achieve the SDG to reduce poverty, but there is no amount of policies that can cause development to flourish in a context dominated by politics.”

Meanwhile, for Bhizori and thousands of vendors across Zimbabwe’s second city, hunger and poverty remain an everyday reality that will test the country’s ability to address its SDGs.