(From Swazi Media Commentary, 19 February 2011, www.swazimedia.blogspot.com Also
on Face book at 
http://www.facebook.com/Swazi.Media.Commentary?v=wall#!/group.php?gid=142383985790674&ref=ts).






  We were promised a ‘pro poor’ budget by 
Swaziland’s Finance Minister Majozie Sithole –
 but we didn’t get it.

When you strip away the weasel 
words from the budget statement yesterday (18 February 2011), you are left with 
one 
inescapable fact: the Swaziland Government is unable to tackle poverty 
in Swaziland.

Sithole told the Times
 of Swaziland, an independent newspaper in the kingdom, this week, ‘The budget 
to be presented will target mainly the poor. We 
have put priority on the poor. We have made priorities based on the 
publics’ needs. The situation is not entirely bad but government must 
return to a position where there is money to do the things initially 
budgeted for.’

But that’s not what he delivered. 
By Sithole’s own admission in his speech, ‘The Ministry 
of Economic Planning and Development has stated that our economy must 
grow at least by 5% each year to ensure Government is able to alleviate 
poverty.’

But Sithole 
could offer nothing to the kingdom except a promise of a ‘bleak’ future.

He said in his 
speech, ‘Preliminary estimates reflect that overall gross domestic 
product will grow by 2.0 % in 2010 after a sluggish growth of 1.2 % in 
2009.  It is further expected to pickup in 2011, expanding by 3.3 % as 
economic activity continues to recover. However with the global growth 
likely to remain weak, a bleak outlook is anticipated especially on the 
high unemployment levels which are expected to persist for several 
years, thus the need for decisive action and crucial policy adjustments 
to cater for jobs creation.’

So 2 percent
 growth, maybe. And 3.3 percent if you’re lucky. At least Sithole is 
more realistic than King Mswati
 III, sub-Saharan Africa’s last absolute 
monarch, who said
 in his own speech at the opening of 
parliament two weeks ago, Swaziland can ‘double our national 
output.’ That’s double, as in have 100 percent growth. 

Employment 
prospects in Swaziland are abysmal. In the past year Sithole counted 
3,900 job losses (that’s the ones he knows about). The much lauded (by 
the Swazi Government, anyway) Swaziland Investment Promotion Authority 
(SIPA) was able to create 2,655 jobs between January and December 2010 
through foreign direct investment (FDI). That’s a net loss of 1,245 
jobs.

And those 
calculations don’t include the 7,000 jobs that the government says it 
will cut from the public service.

So where are
 new jobs coming from? Sithole said, ‘SIPA seeks to foster linkages 
between FDI [foreign direct investment] and domestic SMEs [small and 
medium enterprises] with a target of 1,000 jobs created by local SMEs.’ 
Not enough: nowhere near enough.

The reliance
 on FDI is misguided since recent history tells us that Swaziland has 
failed to attract any FDI worth the name – and what little it gets tends
 to be for textile factories, offering sweatshop conditions.

And this is 
the rest of Sithole’s plan for jobs, as set out yesterday:

  - Improve governance so as to build investor confidence and 
allow for greater transparency and accountability;

- Improve the export base and facilitate increased participation of 
the Small and Medium Enterprises (SME) sector in international trade; 
and

- Attract foreign direct investment (FDI) and provide support for 
the development and the involvement of domestic investors in the 
manufacturing and other businesses.

All of these
 things have been tried in the past and failed. So what’s different now?
 The sad, inevitable answer is: Nothing.



Finance 
Minister Sithole and the Swaziland Government cannot come up with an 
original idea between them. They got us into this mess and they have no 
idea how to get us out of it.

Expect more 
of the same in the year ahead
Link http://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2011/02/swaziland-budget-fails-poor.html 





      

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