Zambia Must Prosper Ii PDF
Zambia Must Prosper Ii PDF
Zambia Must Prosper Ii PDF
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Published in Zambia by
DATAFRIKA PUBLISHERS
A division of Datafrika Research Ltd
Lusaka
ISBN 978-9982-70-752-7
Email: kbfzambia@gmail.com
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DEDICATION
To my late father, Eric Benson Bwalya and my late
mother Florence Kasomo Bwalya…
-KBF
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“When our people are able to live in safe and secure
communities, have access to good education and
health services, can find work any time they want to
work & able to earn a decent living, be able to meet
with anyone at any time and freely express their
views without fear; only then can we say Zambia is a
well governed nation”
-Kelvin Fube Bwalya-KBF
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
DEDICATION…………………………………….........................................v
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ……………………………………………………….ix
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS………………………………………………………x
FOREWORD……………………………………………………………………….xi
INTRODUCTION…………………………………………………………………..1
1.0 A NEW VISION FOR A NEW ZAMBIA……………………………………9
2.0 REUNITING A POLARISED NATION……………………………………15
3.0 A NEW GOVERNANCE CULTURE……………………………………..25
4.0 THE JOURNEY TO 5 MILLION JOBS…………………..47
5.0 DEPLOYING GOVERNMENT PROCUREMENT FOR JOB
CREATION…………………………………………………………………………55
6.0 RAPID IMPACT WARD BASED DEVELOPMENT
MODEL............................................................................................63
7.0 A HOUSE FOR EVERY ZAMBIAN FAMILY……………….…………..71
8.0 CREATION OF PRODUCTION ZONES…………………………………79
9.0 EXPLOITING ZAMBIA’S GEOGRAPHY……………………………….105
10. LOCAL CHURCH BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT FUND……………121
11. EVERY YOUTH IN SCHOOL OR AT WORK…………………………131
12. PROSPERITY THROUGH AGRICULTURE…………………………..153
13 MOBILISING THE INFORMAL SECTOR FOR NATIONAL
PROPSERITY.................................................................................173
14. RESTRUCTURING ZAMBIA’S ECONOMY TOWARDS CITIZEN
DOMINANCE……………………………………………………………………185
15. STRATEGIC ENERGY REFORMS………………..…………………...193
16. INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT..………………..……………..205
17. A NEW APROACH TO INVESTORS……….…………….................217
18. FINANCING ZAMBIA’S TRANSFORMATION
AGENDA…………………………………………………………………………229
19. SUMMARY………………………………………………………………….249
APPENDIX i. LIST OF TABLES…………………………………………….260
APPENDIX ii. LIST OF FIGURES & DIAGRAMS………………………..261
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
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LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMES
PF Patriotic Front
RTSA Roads Transport & Safety Agency
GRZ Government of The Republic of Zambia
ZRA Zambia Revenue Authority
Hon Honourable
PAYE Pay As You Earn
GDP Gross Domestic Product
MP Member of Parliament
UPND United Party for National Development
ANC African National Congress
UN United Nations
JCTR Jesuit Centre for Theological Reflections
ZMW Zambian Kwacha
USD United States Dollar
NAPSA National Pensions Scheme Authority
ZNBS Zambia National Building Society
PPP Public Private Partnership
MGT Management
SADC Southern African Development Community
DRC Democratic Republic of Congo
UK United Kingdom
UAE United Arab Emirates
SME Small and Medium Enterprises
IT Information Technology
UCZ United Church of Zambia
MMD Movement for Multi-Party Democracy
ZANASE Zambia National Service
IAPRI Indaba for Agriculture Policy Research Institute
FISP Farmer Input Support Programme
FRA Food Reserve Agency
FOREX Foreign Exchange
USA United States of America
ERB Energy Regulation Board
EV Electric Vehicle
EU European Union
IMF International Monetary Fund
EIZ Engineering Institute of Zambia
WHO World Health Organisation
TAZARA Tanzania Zambia Railway
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FOREWORD
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walk with their heads high on account of the shame that came
with the acknowledgement that the party they supported and
voted for seemed to have lost direction. It was reported that
many ardent PF supporters had become objects of ridicule in
their communities and work places for having supported the PF.
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The Difference Between a Leader & a politician
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2. A genuine leader will seek the most efficient and effective
ways of applying public resources for the best dividends to
the nation. A politician will eagerly spend public funds on
expensive vehicles, hotels and travel for his personal
enjoyment. Yes, the politician will do this with a ‘clear
conscience’
3. A leader will never allow his country to be overcharged for
public projects. A politician, on the other hand, actively
seeks kick-backs and cares less if his country is charged
four times the fair price for public projects.
4. In times of economic hardship, a leader will never call for
the re-registration of vehicles and charge a fee of K500. If
this exercise was of vital necessity, a true leader would peg
a minimal fee of K50 for the exercise. A politician on the
other hand will insist on this non-value adding exercise to
extort more money from struggling citizens without any
shame.
5. A leader will never pay himself gratuity and benefits when
he knows there are thousands of citizens who have been
waiting to be paid their pension benefits for years.
6. A leader will not fear to engage his citizens with the truth
whilst a politician’s most treasured tools of the trade are
deceit, lies and intimidation.
The list can go on and on, but I believe you get the general idea.
The point is; no matter our naïve expectations as the people of
Zambia, some of the people we call leaders have never had the
interest to serve the people of Zambia. They have never bothered
to sit down to envision a better Zambia, formulate solutions for
this country and I am sorry to announce that they never will!
They don’t have the time for this because they are busy
scheming and executing ways to siphon as much money from
public coffers as possible.
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A New Leadership Code
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people leadership performance worth the benefits they enjoy. We
must now go for real performance based leadership.
“As citizens and your employers, we are not going to pay you all
your benefits until you deliver!”
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nine percent of the time, there are no consequences to their
mediocrity and rogue behaviour. No wonder most of the time
they behave like Masters and not servants of the people! This
has to stop!
I once used to grapple with the question of why God had allowed
the state of affairs prevailing in Zambia, when we are a nation
boldly dedicated to God as a Christian nation by way of our
constitution. Had God abandoned us because we claimed to be a
people of God but hypocritically lived a life not befitting this tag?
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What is becoming clear by the day is that God truly loves this
nation. That Zambia is a favoured nation and that no weapon
formed against this nation shall prosper. God has a plan for
Zambia’s prosperity. In God’s records, it is Zambia’s destiny to
prosper and therefore Zambia Must Prosper!
-KBF
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“The wealth of a Nation does not reside in the
abundance of its natural resources but in the wisdom
of its people”
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INTRODUCTION
1
https://zambianeye.com/zesco-increases-electricity-tariffs-by-25/
2
ERB fuel increment announcement, 2nd October, 2018
3
ERB fuel increment announcement, 2nd October, 2018
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1. 10% withholding tax on rented properties. Government
began to pursue this tax in earnest and went on to appoint
agents to collect this tax from residential areas. This move
pushed monthly rentals up by 10%, negatively affecting
tenants.
2. A 30 ngwee daily tax on cell phone users.
3. Government announced that it would be collecting taxes
from all informal sector businesses. A K1 daily tax was
subsequently imposed on all Zambians trading from
markets across the country.
4. TV levy was increased from K3 to K5.
5. Government announced its intention to slap a K500 re-
registration fee for all motor vehicles in the country. This
was planned for implementation in the first quarter of
20194.
6. Government, through RTSA, mounted cameras on major
roads to capture and charge road traffic offenders through
an automated system. In the first month of erecting the
speed cameras, K13.6 million was raised in fines5.
7. Toll gates were installed on major roads around the
country to the extent that a Zambian motorist driving to
and from Lusaka and Kitwe, now had to pay a total of K160
in toll fees.
8. Customs Duty for importing various types of second-hand
vehicles has now been set to range between K19,260 and
K240,7506.
9. Government introduced a K250 borehole tax7 on all
boreholes in the country. This is despite the fact that the
government has failed to supply clean and safe water
consistently in urban areas forcing citizens to spend
heavily on sinking boreholes.
4
Ministerial statement in parliament by Minister of Transport (Brian Mushimba), 16 November, 2018
5
RTSA announcement, 17 August,2018
6
https://www.themastonline.com/2018/01/03/zra-introduces-standard-duty-on-imported-used-vehicles/
7
GRZ, Statutory Instrument no.20, 7th March 2018
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10. In the 2019 budget, government proposed to increase
duty on powdered milk by 10%8.
8
Hon. Margaret Mwanakatwe, 2019 Budget Speech.
9
Hon. Margaret Mwanakatwe, 2019 Budget Speech.
10
World Bank Group (2017). Vulnerable employment, total (% of total employment) (modeled ILO estimate).
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capitalist economies such as the United States of America and
Britain, the performance of a President or Prime Minister is tied
to how many jobs he or she helps to create. In other words, if a
country is experiencing high unemployment levels, it is a clear
indication of poor economic management on the part of
politicians in power. It is an indication that a government is not
pursuing the right policies and investments to stimulate
employment and economic growth.
Whichever way one looks at it, the stark reality is that our nation
needs drastic reorientation before we find ourselves in an
economic crisis of unimaginable proportions. Zambians may
have different challenges at household and individual levels but
economic challenges rank the highest on the priority list for the
majority at the moment. The need for Zambia to change course
economically has never been this urgent. It is desperate –period!
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underlining spirit in putting these ideas on paper is to pursue a
very practical, as opposed to a theoretical and academic outlook.
I do this, not as a final authority, but in the spirit of eliciting
more views and input from the huge army of knowledgeable
Zambians that have been denied a platform to contribute to this
great nation. I have no doubt that as a collective, we do have
what it takes to recalibrate and usher our nation into a new era
of prosperity. I will be using my Facebook page: Kelvin Fube
Bwalya-KBF to debate and receive input on various topical
issues from all concerned and patriotic Zambians.
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ONE
A NEW VISION- FOR A NEW ZAMBIA
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“The only way you qualify to be regarded as a
capable leader is when you have the ability to
produce great results especially when confronted by
the toughest of obstacles.”
-KBF
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A summary of my aspirations or vision for a new Zambia is given
in the following table:
Aspiration Timeline
1 Establish and enforce the Supremacy of the 1 Year
Rule of Law
2 Establish a disciplined, meritorious and 1 year
corruption free government.
3 Achieve top ranking in Africa in the area of 5 years
good governance.
4 Achieve Clean and Professionally managed 2 years
towns & cities.
5 Establish medical and pension schemes that 2 years
are sustainable.
6 Establish Zambia as the agricultural, 5 years
industrial & export hub of the SADC Region.
7 Create 5 million new and high quality jobs. 10 years
8 Achieve a situation where every Zambian 5 years
youth is either at school or at work.
9 Begin to produce the best college and 6 years
university graduates in Africa.
10 Achieve $25,000 average annual productivity 5 years
per worker
11 Increase productivity in the agriculture sector 5 years
from $1,500 to $15,000 per worker
12 Grow Zambia’s annual GDP to $150 billion 10 years
13 Establish 1,000 Zambian originated business 10 years
outlets in 10 African countries
14 Increase value of annual exports to $40 billion 10 years
15 Attain 90% citizen’s control of Zambia’s 10 years
economy
16 Achieve 70% Zambian households owning 5 years
their own decent housing.
17 Reduce PAYE tax rate from the current 36.5% 5 years
to 10% for the highest taxed bracket
18 Reduce poverty levels from 60% to 10% 5 years
19 Reduce current annual fuel imports by 5 years
$ 500 million.
20 Establish a working labor protection 1 year
framework
21 Hand-over Zambia to a completely new 10 years
generation of leaders.
Table1: KBF’s Zambia Must Prosper Vision in summary.
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This vision has been deliberately framed to offer specific and
measurable goals together with delivery time frames. I found this
extremely necessary because it is fashionable for Zambian
politicians to make blanket promises without specifics. The
truth, however, is that when you promise citizens that you will
create employment and you do not specify how many jobs, how
you hope to create these jobs and by when you plan to create
these jobs- it will be difficult to be committed to such a vague
promise. One cannot simply claim he or she will fix Zambia’s
economy without a practicable blueprint of some kind. Without
specifics, it is almost impossible that one will bother to sit down,
think, consult and formulate how to achieve goals. This is
precisely the reason many politicians are failing the people of
Zambia.
May I submit that at this juncture more than at any other time
in our history, Zambia will need to put politicians aside and look
for Leaders. We have had politicians masquerading as leaders
for too long and the nation was blinded not to notice the
difference. The consequence is that politicians have brought this
nation to the brink and in all honesty, if this nation was to go on
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with usual Politicians beyond 2021, I dare not imagine the fate
our beloved nation will suffer! Without any exaggeration, it is a
matter of life and death; Zambia needs to be rescued from
politicians and put in the hands of leaders.
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TWO
RE-UNITING A POLARISED NATION
TOWARDS UNITY OF PURPOSE
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“History teaches us that unity is strength, and
cautions us to submerge and overcome our
differences in the quest for common goals, to strive,
with all our combined strength, for the path to true
African brotherhood and unity.”
-Haile Selassie
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It will be a serious over-sight on my part to delve into national
transformation without addressing a great evil and danger that is
quietly eating away at our nation like a cancer. This is no other
than the demonic madness of politically motivated tribal
polarisation. It is vital that I address this issue because Zambia
will never prosper as a divided formation. The cornerstone of our
prosperity as a nation is our brotherhood and unity of purpose.
Without the Eastern, Western, Northern, Southern and Central
parts of Zambia standing side by side in our diversity, strengths
and weaknesses, our nation is headed for failure. Divided, it is
absolutely impossible for us to attain the transformation agenda
I am selling in this book. My vision demands that Zambia stands
as one. Tonga, Bemba, Lozi, Nkoyas, Nsenga, Kaonde, Lamba,
Namwanga and every other tribe in our nation, purposefully
united in our diversity.
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is of the devil and is a vice we need to quickly shake off to avoid
judgement from God. It is time we paused and meditated on the
words of our Lord Jesus Christ in John 4:19-21
For some reason, politicians have kept playing hide and seek
games with this ugly and demonic phenomenal and have
conveniently refused to decisively address it head on. It is now
time that any Zambian leader worth his salt, should stand up to
be counted as we rise up to defeat this foul spirit from the pit of
hell. I am fully aware that we will achieve this, not by our might
or by our strength but rather by the grace of God. Hence my
foremost cry is to the Almighty God to grant us the wisdom we
desperately need in overcoming this vice.
1. The Bembas and the Easterners have been selfish and have
not taken development to other regions. It is time that
other tribes were also given chance to rule Zambia.
2. Bembas are thieves and dishonest.
3. Tongas are tribalists with a superiority complex.
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4. No one can be President of UPND except a Tonga person.
5. Lozis are selfish and practice segregation based on tribe.
6. Lambas are lazy.
7. Easterners are bootlickers and sell-outs.
There are many more sentiments that I might not be aware of. It
is with a heavy heart that I acknowledge the shameful reality
that the above sentiments have contributed to some of the
following anomalies in our nation:
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superiority and opened our hearts to the basic truth that a Soli
politician has something good to offer a Mambwe leader and vice
versa. It is time we got back to the truth that Zambians should
vote for leaders not based on their surnames or which region
they come from but rather on what they have to offer the people
of Zambia.
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Provinces remain just as undeveloped as other provinces around
the country. Lusaka and Copperbelt still lead in development
compared to any other region. Luapula, Muchinga and Northern
Provinces are amongst the poorest and least developed provinces
in our country.
Zambia-together we will!!
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THREE
A NEW GOVERNANCE CULTURE
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“No government or public owned company official
should use first class air travel paid with Zambian tax
payers‟ money”
-KBF
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In the absence of a firm foundation in the area of governance, it
will be difficult to make headways in most other areas of national
interest. In the absence of good governance, a country becomes
dysfunctional. The Mo Ibrahim Foundation defines governance
as the provision of the political, social and economic public
goods and services that every citizen has the right to expect from
their State, and that a State has the responsibility to deliver to
its citizens11. Figure 1 gives a good summary of key aspects of
governance.
11
http://mo.ibrahim.foundation/iiag/
12
Source: Mo Ibrahim Governance Index 2018 Report
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Poor governance results in inefficiencies, corruption and failure
to implement vital projects. The Financial Intelligence Centre
estimated that in 2017, Zambia lost K4.5 billion of its budget
amount through corrupt activities13. My personal estimation is
that poor governance is actually robbing the Zambian people of
as much as K20 billion or $2 billion per annum! In case I appear
highly exaggerative, on 10th December, 2018 News Diggers
reported that our Secretary to the Cabinet at the time, Dr.
Roland Msiska, stated that government was going to save K400
million annually just by effecting some changes in how
government manages issues to do with government vehicles!14
13
Financial Intelligence Centre, 2017 Money Laundering/Terrorist Financing Trends Report, June 2018
14
News Diggers, Msiska justifies Lungu’s perks, 10 December, 2018
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Sinking and equipping a borehole with a pump can cost as much
as K30,000 and can benefit as many as 500 citizens for many
years to come. Somehow, people in government find it justifiable
to purchase a vehicle costing K1 million for a single government
official even when an option of purchasing a fairly decent brand
new vehicle costing K300,000 existed!
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fast deteriorating in our country. Some went as far as judging
the ruling PF regime as the worst leadership to have had ever
presided over the affairs of Zambia to date.
15
Oasis Forum statement on Zambia’s 54th independence anniversary, 23 October, 2018
The Mast Newspaper, Arrest of Ndola pastors worry sheikhs, 25 October, 2018
16
https://www.lusakatimes.com/2018/06/10/pf-calls-for-disbandment-fic-board-and-dismissal-of-its-director-
general-mary-tshuma/
17
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2018/09/18/uk-freezes-millions-aid-zambia-amid-allegations-fraud-looting/
18
http://tumfweko.com/2018/12/10/govt-forged-bank-statement-to-cover-up-illegal-withdrawal-of-germany-funds/
19
Mo Ibrahim Foundation. Ibrahim Index of African Governance 2018 Report
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status confirming that there were some negative developments
taking place.
20
https://zambianeye.com/police-arrest-maiko-zulu-for-staging-lone-protest-against-kcm-owners/
21
Zambia Daily Mail, Police charge Ndola pastors, 3 others, 21 October 2018.
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Dr. Chishimba Kambwili further reports that the Zambia Police
routinely rejects his applications for public meetings in his own
constituency whilst PF officials are allowed to conduct public
meetings in Dr. Kambwili’s Constituency! Honourable Harry
Kalaba, who was by then another Member of Parliament critical
of the ruling PF, continued facing regular harassment and
intimidation in 2018 and 2019.
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# Name Occupation Year Arrested
or summoned
1 Eric Chanda Politician 2016
2 Dr. Nevers Mumba Politician 2016
3 Dr. Saviour Chishimba Politician 2017
4 Chilufya Tayali Politician 2017
5 Dr. Fred Mmembe Politician 2017
6 Mutinta Mazoka Politician 2017
7 Godfrey Bwalya Mwamba Politician 2016,2018
8 Hikainde Hichilema Politician 2017, 2018
9 Tutwa Ngulube Politician 2017,2018
10 Sean Tembo Politician 2018
11 Fumba Chama (aka Pilato) Musician/activist 2018
12 Harry Kalaba Politician 2018
13 Laura Miti Civil Rights Activist 2018
14 Mika Mwambazi Civil Rights Activist 2018
15 Bornwell Mwewa Civil Rights Activist 2018
16 Lewis Mwape Civil Rights Activist 2018
17 Michael Zulu (St. Maiko) Politician/musician 2018
18 Mike Mulongoti Politician 2018
19 Justin Chikonde Politician 2018
20 James Lukuku Politician 2018
21 Garry Nkombo Politician 2018
22 Dr. Chishimba Kambwili Politician 2018
23 Fresher Siwale Politician 2018
24 Pastor Lloyd Nsakanya Pastor 2018
25 Pastor Amos Kanyakula Pastor 2018
26 Pastor George Palo Pastor 2018
27 Chiko Mwinga CTPD official 2018
28 Isaiah Mbewe CTPD official 2018
29 Musikani Hampongo CTPD official 2018
30 Bishop John Mambo Clergy 2018
Table 2: List of Zambians arrested by our government for political activism.
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3. In many districts, political cadres interfere with the
collection of council levies and adversely affect the capacity
of local authorities to finance their operations including
salaries.
4. After the 2016 elections, suspected UPND cadres, in the
Southern part of Zambia, carried out ethnic style terror on
some of our citizens. This particular incidence has been
buried and forgotten about22.
5. The police service seems not to have authority to discipline
political cadres belonging to the ruling PF party going by
the many instances cadres have assembled without
informing the police as required by the Public Order Act.
6. Those dissenting against the government are easily
targeted and harassed on various charges.
7. There seems to be a general decline in the levels of
discipline within the Civil Service.
8. Several Councils and individual councillors have been
reported to engage in illegalities especially in the matters of
land administration with little discipline and improvement
being recorded.
9. The highly publicised land audit is still to be availed to the
general public.
Though this topic might sound more political than anything, the
reality is: governance and the rule of law have such a serious
impact on the prosperity and well-being of a nation. Genuine
investors prefer destinations with strong governance credentials.
Countries with broken down systems of governance and the rule
of law, routinely attract rogue investors, perpetrate corrupt and
criminal activities and promptly result in a few wealthy
individuals and an ever growing poor majority. Already, our
country is the fourth most unequal nation in the world23.
Genuine commercial competition and creativity is often
decimated in this kind of environment. The people with the best
22
Michael Wahman, Democracy in Reverse: The 2016 Elections in Zambia, December 2016.
23
https://www.lusakatimes.com/2015/05/30/zambia-among-worlds-most-unequal-countries-report/
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connections to those in power dominate the economic space as
opposed to people offering the best and most competitive services
and merchandise. Abuse of state resources become rife and
further negatively affects the masses as value for money is not
provided for every Ngwee spent by the government.
In the simplest terms, poor governance does not offer the right
environment for the prosperity of the majority. If anything,
statistics confirm that the poorest countries are also amongst
the most corrupt. On the other hand, countries with strong
governance systems also happen to be amongst the richest
countries in the world. Researchers have observed a correlation
between corruption and poverty24.
For any country to enjoy good governance and the rule of law,
the number one prerequisite is a disciplined leadership that is
genuinely committed to good governance. Those wielding Political
Leadership set the tone in any country when it comes to good
governance. A country can have the best of laws to govern and
guide on various conduct but these laws can be rendered useless
by an indisciplined political leadership that does not subscribe to
good governance and the rule of law.
24
USAID, Corruption and Poverty-a review of recent literature, January 2003
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reported in Africa. South Africa experienced what has popularly
come to be known as State Capture25. This was simply because
the President of South Africa then, became complicit to corrupt
activities. Even when bold South African men and women stood
up against the apparent wanton corruption taking place in plain
sight, they could only make painstakingly slow progress as long
as a corrupt President was in power.
25
Wikipedia, State Capture
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of fight against corruption will not do it for our country anymore.
We need to clean up this country.
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1. Every politician, senior and strategic civil servant will be
required to declare their assets and liabilities on taking up
new appointments. They will then be subjected to lifestyle
audits every 2 years. Decisive action will be taken against
those with unexplained accumulation of wealth.
2. Each government ministry, department and parastatal
must be subjected to quarterly internal audits. Controlling
officers must be required to take immediate action against
erring officers.
3. Corruption, misappropriation and misapplication of
government resources will become a ‘treason-felony’
attracting 5 years minimum mandatory prison sentence
plus recovery of misappropriated/misapplied funds.
Corruption and theft of public resources is economic
sabotage and a crime against the Republic of Zambia by
any measure. There can be no compromise on this!
4. Each government ministry, department and parastatal
must under-go annual external audits by the Auditor
General. If anomalies are identified, the controlling officer
together with internal auditors shall be answerable.
Penalties will include immediate dismissal, imprisonment
and recovery of funds from the controlling officer and
internal auditors.
5. Auditor General will be given prosecution powers with the
establishment of such a wing. The Auditor General will no-
longer wait for the Anti-corruption Commission to
prosecute erring officers through the courts of Law.
6. Establish a very effective online and mobile phone based
whistle-blower platform that allows Zambians to report on
suspected corruption anonymously.
7. The Anti-Corruption Commission will be expected to
publish a report of all investigated and concluded cases
every quarter.
8. Law enforcement officers who are found to fail to apply the
law correctly must be liable to prosecution. If acting under
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instructions, the superior officer must be liable for the
same offence.
9. A fast-track court system must be established to ensure
corruption cases are concluded within 3 months from the
date of plea. Government will have the legal right to recover
stolen funds by confiscating personal property including
pension contributions.
10. The public protector must be appointed by the public
from the list of 5 qualified Zambians through Parliament
and the office sufficiently funded.
Judicial Reforms
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1. The quality of any judicial system is determined by the
quality of the personnel running the judiciary. To this end,
I am of the view that the process through which judges and
magistrates are appointed and assessed needs to be
overhauled. Changes are required to ensure the judiciary
assimilates and retains our best experienced men and
women to assume positions at the bench. Thereafter,
regular training for our men and women at the bench will
be vital.
2. Court cases take too long in Zambia. They say justice
delayed is justice denied. Delay in disposing off cases is
one of the biggest compromises and injustices in our
current justice system. My proposal is that there should be
established time limit guidelines for the disposing off of all
cases. In all fairness, no case should go beyond a year!
3. As part of performance management, Judges and
Magistrates will be assessed in terms of how many cases
they are able to offload in each year.
4. Training of the Judiciary in how to handle specialised cases
will also be vital. There will be judges and magistrates
trained and specialised in critical areas such as corruption.
5. To enhance efficiency, the establishment of specialised
courts to handle cases to do with public procurement,
corruption, family matters, public procurement and the
like will be necessary.
6. For easy access to justice, we must ensure that provincial
High Court infrastructure is established and staff assigned
to operate them. Job creation will be a bi-product here.
7. There is need for specialised training for prosecutors to
equip them to prosecute and investigate cases of a
specialised nature such as corruption, fraud, money
laundering, public procurement and forgeries.
8. Adequate funding for the Judiciary will be a must at all
times.
- 62 -
A professional and well-funded police service
Over the years, our police service has been abused by politicians
and has been the foremost tool used to perpetrate selective
justice and breakdown of the rule of law. This is mainly due to
the fact that the Police Command is appointed and controlled by
politicians. In addition, the Police Service has over time,
deteriorated in their efficiency and effectiveness due to
insufficient funding. It is now common knowledge that our police
men often times struggle to report to several crime scenes due to
lack of resources. In a lot of cases, it is not uncommon for
victims of crime to be expected to provide transport or fuel for
our police officers to go and do their job. In most cases,
investigations are substituted with confessions pounded out of
suspects.
- 63 -
To put Zambia back on track with regards to the rule of law and
national security, immediate steps need to be taken in reforming
our police service. Some proposed steps are as follows:
Very few of our youths willingly and in their right minds want to
go and engage in violent activities against their fellow citizens.
Many of them are being motivated by a desire to make a living
- 65 -
and nothing else. My observation is that when irresponsible
politicians fail to empower our youths, they turn a blind eye
when our youths turn to the markets, bus stations and councils
to help themselves to public resources. No law supports this!!
- 66 -
- 67 -
FOUR
THE JOURNEY TO 5 MILLION JOBS
- 68 -
“Zambia remains one of Africa‟s youngest countries
by median age. Over the next two generations,
demography will move in Zambia‟s favor as the
dependency ratio falls. But this fall in dependency
will only be an asset if Zambia‟s economy can
generate faster growth of jobs with higher
productivity. According to the UN‟s mid-range
population projections, at least 375,000 young people
on average will enter the workforce each year to
2030. Between 2030 and 2050 this average number
doubles to 747,000 jobs per year, just to keep the
present-day rates of labor force participation and
employment fixed.”
-World Bank Group 201726
26
World Bank Group, Jobs Diagnostics Zambia, 2017
- 69 -
I have come to fully appreciate that the cornerstone of national
prosperity and progress is work. The more Zambians we can
deploy to productive activities, the more wealth our nation will
generate and the wealthier our people will be. Our nation stands
to benefit more if we were to get every available Zambian to
engage in productive activities. For me, it is no longer acceptable
that over 60% of our people are living in poverty and are
suffering yet we have over 4 million Zambians who are willing to
work but are unable to find suitable employment! In fact, I am
pleasantly surprised to note that just by ensuring all our able
bodied citizens are in productive employment, we can resolve
80% of our economic and social challenges as a nation!
Zambians working in productive jobs will earn better incomes;
afford better housing, health, education services and better
livelihoods in general with very little government intervention!
- 70 -
From the year 2011 when the PF took over government, we have
seen our Kwacha dropping in value against the dollar from K5 to
a dollar27 to K12 to a dollar as at 2nd December, 201828. This is
based on rebased Kwacha. This represents a fall in value of
140%. Again, the only sustainable way we can strengthen our
Kwacha is by increasing production and exports through
increased employment in our country. Increased production will
also contribute to the reduction of imports.
27
https://www.exchangerates.org.uk/ZMK-USD-31_12_2011-exchange-rate-history.html
28
https://www.exchange-rates.org/history/ZMW/USD/T
29
JCTR, Basic needs basket Lusaka, August 2011
30
JCTR, Basic needs basket for Lusaka, September, 2018
- 71 -
Due to the importance of employment, our foremost strategic
focus for Zambia is to direct the most efforts and resources
towards getting more and more Zambians to work. And when I
say work, I am referring to quality, highly productive, secure and
pensionable jobs. I am talking about formal jobs that pay decent
salaries. It is possible to organise our economy in such a way
that the majority of our working people get decent incomes. The
secret lies in deploying our workers into activities in which they
can create sufficient value to justify decent salaries. The logic is,
if a single farm worker can create monthly value of K10,000 after
all costs and expenses, why would it be difficult to pay such a
farm worker a monthly salary of K5,000? As far as I am
concerned, if we rearranged our economy to focus on highly
productive activities, it is possible to have K5,000 as our
national minimum wage without any stress!
- 74 -
- 75 -
FIVE
RESTRUCTURING & TRANSFORMING
GOVERNMENT PROCUREMENT FOR
JOB & WEALTH CREATION
- 76 -
“ Zambia like many other countries is losing a lot of
tax payers‟ money due to bid rigging (i.e. collusive
tendering and corruption). The Zambian Government
has a lot of laws that purport to work for the benefit
of streamlining the procurement processes… yet every
year the Auditor General‟s Report tells a different
story”31
-KBF
31
Kelvin Fube Bwalya, LLM Thesis UNILUS. Analyzing the effects of bid rigging and corruption on
the procurement process government (Ministry of health and Roads Development Agency)-2018
- 77 -
It has been generally observed that as much as a third of
government expenditure or budget gets to be spent through the
government procurement system. I came across this information
during my Masters-degree studies in which I majored in the
procurement sector. From a close look at the proposed 2019
budget which stands at $8.6 billion, as much as $2.8 billion will
be channelled through various government procurement
systems. The purchase of medicines, furniture, vehicles,
construction services, office supplies, food and so many other
state requirements will be acquired by the government through
the procurement system. Infrastructure such as roads, clinics,
schools e.t.c. is also part of this expenditure.
- 79 -
also earned a combined total of K1 million, they spent and
injected more money into the economy than one family earning
K1 million. This means they supported more businesses and jobs
than the single family earning K1million.
- 81 -
Through these reckless, criminal and unpatriotic practices, the
people of Zambia have lost and continue losing billions of dollars
every year and we cannot afford to allow such to continue and
expect our country to progress. It is therefore justifiable when
sentiments are expressed by the common man that some
Zambians in the current government will, one day, need to
account for this highly unpatriotic conduct.
- 82 -
- 83 -
SIX
RAPID IMPACT, WARD BASED
DEVELOPMENT
- 84 -
“Every Country needs public infrastructure to deliver
basic services and goods to its citizens, but to deliver
this, a people‟s mind-set must be drastically
transformed by knowledge and vital information”
-KBF
- 85 -
One of the most pronounced realities in Zambia is that
development is not benefitting Zambians in an equitable manner.
Ordinarily, some portions of Zambia see very little or even no
development at all. This is not acceptable and must be reversed
instantly. Shangombo, Zambezi, Lukulu, Ikelenge, Nakonde,
Vubwi and other far flanked border areas are part of Zambia but
see very little development.
- 87 -
tenders, $ 30 million to renovate Mulungushi International
Conference Centre and a reported $140 million to purchase 5
airplanes to be used by a few individuals, surely spending $178
million on programs that will directly benefit 17 million Zambians
is better value for money any day! It is all about focus and
necessary political will.
- 88 -
and other materials shall be purchased from suppliers within the
ward.
- 89 -
1. $178 million will be directly injected into local citizen
owned businesses annually.
2. From each ward allocation, an estimated 30 jobs per ward
would be supported annually. At 1,780 wards, that gives
us 53,400 new jobs.
3. There will be youth and women business empowerment
going on in every ward countrywide every year.
- 90 -
- 91 -
SEVEN
A HOUSE FOR EVERY ZAMBIAN
FAMILY
- 92 -
“I have been blessed with a successful career, a good
home and family. But if you knew anything about my
background, I am not from a rich family. As a child,
my family went through hardships. At one time, with
my father in jail, my mother, my siblings and I had no
home”
-KBF
- 93 -
Owning a house is one of the most fundamental and basic needs
for any family. Unfortunately, in our country, the majority of our
citizens live in substandard housing. In Lusaka, for example, it
is estimated that 60% of the population live in the slums that are
dotted around the capital city33. A significant portion of our
citizens are still living in rented houses and spending significant
portions of their incomes on rentals. It has been widely
determined that Zambia needs 100,000 new housing units every
year for the next 10 years in order to bridge the current gap in
terms of quality housing needs.
33
Center for Affordable Housing Finance Africa. Challenges of Affordable Housing Delivery in Zambia
- 94 -
Using the Construction Sector as an Engine for Jobs & Wealth
Creation.
- 95 -
can’t afford to build on their own. These houses will be sold
on long term flexible payment terms.
7. Leverage organisations such as NAPSA and ZNBS to make
this agenda a reality.
20 100 flats 50
Housing units
library
5 5 5 10 sports complex 10 5
School
Shops
1km
5 5 5 10 10 5
Clinic Churches
50 100
5 5 5 10 flats flats 10 5
5 5 5 10 5 5 5 5 10 5
1km
Totals 127
GDP $3,050,000
Table 7: Permanent jobs after building of the 500 housing units settlement
- 97 -
6. Development Company to reserve the rights to build and
own the mini shopping complex in the settlement.
7. Government to finance the building of the school and
health centre together with houses for teachers and health
workers in each settlement. Development Company to be
the contractor for this development.
8. Local contractors will be the preferred contractors for these
developments.
9. Government will monitor and supervise construction
contracts and issuance of certificates and tittles. At all
times, the value of affordable houses will be agreed with
government for the benefit of poor citizens.
So much gets said about affordable housing and yet so little has
been seen in this area. This is regardless of the fact that building
technologies have rapidly advanced to make it possible for a
house to be completed within 48hours at significantly reduced
cost. When Zambians hear the phrase, ‘affordable housing’,
many immediately assume that what are being discussed are
pre-fab houses. Building technologies have evolved so much that
it is now possible to construct 600 housing units made of proper
concrete walls in 30 days with a team of 100 builders! We intend
to adopt these building technologies to ensure that those citizens
who do not have the resources to finance the complete
construction of their homes can still own an affordable home on
flexible payment terms.
- 98 -
From some of the construction technologies I have so far had a
chance to assess, it is possible to construct a fairly decent 3
Bedroomed house at a cost of K100,000. We would need to
engage financiers and development companies to build affordable
houses in bulk and offer them to new graduates, civil servants,
young couples and low income families. Our citizens will then be
paying between K1,500 and K3,000 monthly for a period of 5 to
10 years to own a house. These monthly instalments have
already factored in interest payment!
- 99 -
EIGHT
CREATION OF PRODUCTION ZONES
- 100 -
“I believe today our Zambian Engineers More than
ever before are ready, willing and able, if given a
chance, to prove themselves in our nation‟s building”
-KBF
- 101 -
RAPID AGRICULTURE AND INDUSTRIALISATION AGENDA
1. Agri-city
- 102 -
The employees that will be working in the agricultural operations
and the processing plants will need services such as schools,
hospitals, shops, banks, sports facilities and many more. The
provision of these vital support services will in turn entail more
jobs being created.
Suburb Suburb
Fruit trees 7 8 Dairy farm
Horticulture Horticulture Feedlot
CBD airport
Suburb Suburb Suburb Suburb Suburb Suburb
9 10 11 12 13 14
CBD
cotton
1. Growing of trees
2. Maintaining natural plant cover and animal life in certain
areas.
- 103 -
3. Incorporating and enhancing forest foods such as honey,
mushrooms, caterpillars, masuku, imfungo and intungulu
as part of the agriculture production.
FARM LAND
Hotel
G H I J
The shopping Mall will host office space and banking services.
- 104 -
SECTION LAY-OUT
20 100 flats 50
Housing units
library
5 5 5 10 sports complex 10 5
School
Shops
1km
5 5 5 10 10 5
Clinic Churches
50 100
5 5 5 10 flats flats 10 5
5 5 5 10 5 5 5 5 10 5
1km
- 105 -
According to our tabulations, we are guaranteed to create the
following jobs in an Agri-city:
AGRI-CITY
Key Permanent
features/units Employment
1 20 suburbs 121,400
2 Office park 500
3 City Mgt 200
4 Construction 200
5 Retail Park 1,000
6 Hospitality 500
7 Investors 5,000
8 Airport 200
9 Warehousing 200
Totals 129,200
GDP $3,230,000,000
Table 8: Minimum jobs in an agri-city
SUBURB
Key features/units Employment
1 5,000 housing units
2 10 Sections 3,820
3 University campus 300
4 University hospital 200
5 Sports Complex 50
6 Shopping mall 500
7 Hotel 100
8 Industrial Park 500
9 Agricultural unit 300
10 Utilities Company 100
11 City Mgt 50
12 Transport 50
13 Construction 100
Totals 6,070
GDP $151,750,000
Table 9: Break-down of jobs per suburb
- 106 -
A section will generate guaranteed jobs as detailed in table 10
SECTION
CALCULATIONS
Key features/units Employment
1 500 Housing units
2 School 50
3 sports club 20
4 Mini shopping 25
complex
5 Library 5
6 park/open space 2
7 2 Churches 8
8 Health Centre 10
9 Maintenance unit 8
10 Agriculture 250
11 Security 4
Totals 382
GDP $9,550,000
Table 10: Break-down of jobs in a section
34
ZDA, Opportunities in agriculture
- 108 -
2. Resort Fishing Towns
Lake
- 109 -
Because water bodies easily form leisure and tourist sceneries,
the Resort Fishing Towns will be designed as resort and leisure
towns specifically targeted at the local and international tourist
markets. To this end, these towns will incorporate such
infrastructure and activities to attract tourism as follows:
- 110 -
Major Commercial Units Employment Total
units per unit
1 Fish farms 4 250 1,000
2 Town MGT 1 100 100
3 Construction 2 50 100
4 Residential 10 101 1,010
settlements
5 Airport 1 50 50
6 Hospitality 1 200 200
7 Shopping Mall 1 300 300
8 Hospital 1 100 100
9 University campus 1 200 200
10 Play park 1 50 50
11 Animal park 1 20 20
12 Lodges/guest houses 10 10 100
13 Boarding school 1 200 200
14 stadium/sports 1 50 50
complex
15 Livestock farm 1 100 100
16 Sports/tour services 10 20 200
17 Civil Servants 1 220 220
Totals 4,000
GDP $100,000,000
Table 11: Break-down of minimum jobs in a resort fishing town
3. Livestock town
35
Ministry of Livestock and Fisheries website.
- 111 -
production. From our deliberations, we have established that it
is even possible to produce the entire 1 million goats every year
from a single livestock based settlement!
Farming 1 2 3 4
community
5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24
25 26
Pasture land
27 28
29 30 31 32 33 34
35 36 37 38
39 40 41 42
43 44 45 46
47 48 49 50
- 112 -
communities). This stock is sufficient to produce 1 million goats
for sale to the market every year.
Livestock towns will have state of the art meat processing and
packaging equipment together with veterinary services. They will
be towns with special animal disease control regimes. Livestock
towns will produce their own animal feeds.
This concept will be applicable for cattle and sheep keeping too.
Pasture land
GOAT KEEPING COMMUNITY LAYOUT
20 100 flats 50
Housing units
library
5 5 5 10 sports/recreation 10 5
complex
School
Shops
1km
5 5 5 10 10 5
Clinic Churches
50 100
5 5 5 10 flats flats 10 5
5 5 5 10 5 5 5 5 10 5
1km
- 114 -
Other proposed production Towns
4. Mining Towns
- 115 -
# Sector Units Jobs/unit Total %
Jobs
1 Mining 1 12,000 12,000 20%
2 Education 40 100 4,000 7%
3 Health 25 100 2,500 4%
4 Agriculture 400 30 12,000 20%
5 Construction 30 100 3,000 5%
6 Retail & 500 20 10,000 17%
services
7 Manufacturing 40 50 2,000 3%
8 Transport 200 25 5,000 8%
9 Others 1 10,000 17%
- 116 -
5. The Steel Industrial City
- 117 -
For example, a ton of iron was going for an average of $200 /ton
at a time the price of Copper was $7,000/ton.
Due to the low prices of iron coupled with the fact that we have
not been a machinery/equipment manufacturing country, we
have not taken iron mining and steel production seriously in the
past. But as we begin a serious thrust towards more
manufacturing, mining, construction and mechanized
agriculture, we will need to rethink our attitude towards iron
mining and steel making in our country. This is where our own
Zambian Engineers come in even more.
- 118 -
We might not immediately go into hi-tech equipment and
machinery manufacturing. We can begin to make those simple
tools and less complex equipment parts for ourselves. I know for
a fact that there are Zambians who can make a complete tractor
from engine to body. It would be a strategic positive if we can go
ahead and take iron mining and steel making seriously. Even if it
means making equipment and only importing the engines will go
a long way in providing our people with more jobs and retaining
much of our wealth in our country. Surely casting a train wagon
cannot be such a complex undertaking that we need to spend
millions of dollars on importing train wagons. I refuse to believe
that! I am not a Mechanical Engineer, but if Henry Ford could
start a car manufacturing company over 100 years ago, our
engineers can definitely design and manufacture equipment,
machinery, parts and vehicles right in our country. Henry Ford
started from scratch with no Mechanical Engineering Degree and
no donor/government financing or support. Our engineers have
the advantage of knowing everything that Henry Ford knew plus
much more and therefore are much better placed to design and
manufacture vehicles, equipment and machinery than Henry
Ford was 100 years ago. Come on guys, we can do this!
Our ancestors learnt to mine and work iron into tools during the
Iron Age thousands of years ago even before Christ was born. It
will therefore be a ridiculous proposition that it is too challenging
for Zambians to mine iron, design and manufacture equipment
and machinery profitably from it in this day and age.
The following table gives projected jobs per sector expected in the
Steel City.
- 120 -
# Sector Units Jobs/unit Total %
Jobs
1 Mining 1 10,000 10,000 10%
2 Steel Making 1 10,000 10,000 10%
3 Equipment & tools 50 100 5,000 5%
manufacturing
4 Truck/vehicle 2 1,000 2,000 2%
manufacturing
5 Kitchen & house 20 100 2,000 2%
ware
6 Education 80 100 8,000 8%
7 Health 50 100 5,000 5%
8 Agriculture 300 50 15,000 14%
9 Construction 50 100 5,000 5%
10 Retail & services 600 25 15,000 14%
11 General 50 50 2,500 2%
Manufacturing
12 Transport 200 25 5,000 5%
13 Others 1 20,000 19%
TOTALS 104,500 100%
GDP $2.6
billion
Table 14: Projected jobs for a steel city
36
www.countryeconomy.com
- 121 -
Like other investment vehicles detailed previously, Boarder
towns will feature all basic infrastructure and amenities found in
a modern town. The following tables give projections of jobs
expected to be created by each boarder town.
7. Resort Towns
- 122 -
Being a stable country blessed with wild animals and other
natural attractions, it has long been realized that Zambia holds
serious potential for generating substantial revenues from
tourism. But like most things in Zambia, the dream for a
lucrative tourism sector has been unrealized to date. This must
change by introducing what we have decided to call „Resort
Towns‟. Resort towns are going to be small completely fenced
towns or villages that are designed and built with the sole aim of
tapping into Zambia’s tourism potential. The towns will have live
animals inside. We call Livingstone the tourist capital of Zambia
but seriously speaking, the state, design, landscaping and
service standards in that town only tell me one thing- and that
is, we are not serious about the tourism sector a tiny bit!
- 123 -
Resort towns will feature high quality tourism and hospitality
business training with the core mission of setting Zambia apart
in global hospitality industry excellence. Resort towns will
compete for honors on the global stage, with a Zambian theme at
all times.
- 124 -
To ensure that our country benefits from tourism, payments for
holidays to be undertaken in Zambia will be paid into bank
accounts based in Zambia.
- 125 -
NINE
EXPLOITING ZAMBIA’S
GEOGRAPHICAL POSITION
- 126 -
“Our competitive geographical advantage in
international trade and investment is unrivalled. Our
political peace is a commodity we seldom sell
adequately. Zambia needs a visionary leadership that
believes and defines modern business as its middle
name”
-KBF
- 127 -
With 8 countries sharing our borders, Zambia possesses the
enviable position of being at the centre of a significant market for
various products and services.
Country Population
1 DRC 78.74 million
2 Tanzania 55.57 million
3 Mozambique 28.83 million
4 Angola 28.81 million
5 Malawi 18.09 million
6 Zambia 16.59 million
7 Zimbabwe 12.75 million
8 Botswana 2.21 million
9 Namibia 2.48 million
Total 244.07 million
Table 16: Total population of Zambia & its neighbours 37
37
Source: SADC Website
- 128 -
# DESCRIPTION UNIT QTY PRICE/UNIT TOTAL REVENUES
1 Beef Tones 1,500,000 2,500 3,750,000,000
2 Mutton Tones 1,000,000 2,500 2,500,000,000
3 Pork Tones 600,000 2,500 1,500,000,000
4 Fish Tones 500,000 2,500 1,250,000,000
5 Fruits & veg Tones 1,000,000 500 500,000,000
6 Gold Tones 100 1,000,000 100,000,000
7 Copper Tones 1,000,000 5,500 5,500,000,000
8 Steel Tones 1,000,000 220 220,000,000
9 Gemstones Tones 100 1,000,000 100,000,000
10 Apparel, shoes, bags Units 5,000,000 3 15,000,000
11 Sugar Tones 1,000,000 1,000 1,000,000,000
12 Cooking oil Litres 10,000,000 1 10,000,000
13 Juices Litres 1,000,000 0.5 500,000
14 Hardware/building materials Tones 1,000,000 3,000 3,000,000,000
15 Vehicles/equipment Units 10,000 20,000 200,000,000
16 Maize Tones 5,000,000 150 750,000,000
17 Rice Tones 2,000,000 300 600,000,000
18 Flour Tones 2,000,000 500 1,000,000,000
19 Other minerals Tones 1,000,000 3,000 3,000,000,000
20 Legumes Tones 2,000,000 500 1,000,000,000
21 Construction & Services 10,000,000,000
22 Furniture & other wares 5,000,000,000
TOTALS 40,995,500,000
- 129 -
As part of our export market penetration strategy, our various
manufacturing and producing localities, cities and provinces
must be organized in a manner that maximizes access to local
and international markets. The following is a proposed model for
an effective and efficient access to local and international
markets.
PRODUCER
Local manufacturer (Zambia)
EXPORTER
City Warehouse/Distributor (Zambia)
IMPORTER
City warehouse/Distributor (Foreign Country)
- 131 -
Home grown brands as a platform for job creation &
exporting local products and services
One strategic issue that will come to the fore as part of the
foreign market penetration drive is the issue of developing world
class products and business brands. South Africans have
bombarded us with brands born and bred in their country. MTN,
Sun Hotels, Shoprite, Spar, Pick n Pay, Nandos, Hungry Lion,
FNB, Mr. Price, Pep Stores, Edgars, Furnmart and many more
visible brands are all originated from South Africa. The 10
brands I have mentioned are less than half the total number of
South African Brands successfully operating in Zambia. If you
were to ask me- I think that’s a bit too much and too careless of
us to have allowed given the fact that we have not set up even a
tenth as many Zambian grown retail brands in South Africa.
South Africa is systematically exporting her retail brands into
the larger Africa to an extent that all other Southern African
countries can easily be mistaken for provinces of the Republic of
South Africa. And understandably, most of the merchandise sold
by these retail brands is South African produced.
- 133 -
on franchise basis. This will bring more confidence to SME
financing organizations as they will now be financing youths
knowing the youths will be venturing into businesses that will be
supported by our international class training, marketing,
management and distribution systems.
- 134 -
Type of business/brand Proposed number
of brands
1 Clothing retail shops 5
2 Restaurants/take-aways 5
3 Media & news 4
4 Salon/beauty parlor 4
5 Accounting firms 3
6 Banks 3
7 Book stores 3
8 Butcheries 3
9 Construction firms 3
10 Electronics & gadget 3
store
11 Energy Companies 3
12 Furniture shops 3
13 Game shops 3
14 Hardware shops 3
15 Internet & IT shops 3
16 Office 3
equipment/stationery
17 Super-markets 3
18 Clearing & forwarding & 2
warehousing
19 Clinics 2
20 Craft shops 2
21 Fuelling stations 2
23 Food processing 2
24 Gym 2
25 Jewelry shops 2
26 Landscaping/décor & 2
events
27 Lodge/hotel 2
28 Marketing & branding 2
29 Packaging 2
30 Pharmacies 2
31 Property agencies 2
32 Public transport 2
33 School Shop 2
34 Security companies 2
35 Transport & logistics 2
- 135 -
36 Travel & tours 2
37 Fun park 1
38 Property development 1
firm
39 Integrated farm 1
40 Mining Company offices 1
41 Primary school 1
42 Secondary School 1
43 University 1
TOTAL 100
Table 18: Planned business brands
- 136 -
Delivery outlet Qty/per Number of Total
country countries
1 Cities/towns 2 10 20
2 Shopping Malls 4 10 40
3 Supermarkets 5 10 50
4 Butcheries 20 10 200
5 Eating places 10 10 100
6 Hotels/lodges 5 10 50
7 Hardware stores 10 10 100
8 Clothing shops 5 10 50
9 Heavy equip outlets 2 10 20
10 Agro supplies shops 5 10 50
11 Wholesale 2 10 20
12 Bakeries 10 10 100
13 Drinks distributors 4 10 40
14 Schools 5 10 50
15 Banks 2 10 20
Construction 2 10 20
16 companies
17 Transport 4 10 40
companies
18 Furniture shops 4 10 40
1,010
Table 19: 1,000 business outlets to be established in foreign countries
Manufacturing
For Zambia to expand its export base using the various planned
local and international outlets, our product development and
manufacturing has to become aggressive. From now onwards,
the strategic position should be that, just like South Africa, our
retail and wholesale outlets should stock over 90% Zambian
made products. It means we no longer have the luxury of not
producing the basic products found in a retail shop such as
furniture, clothes, shoes, and processed foods. As a matter of
definite priority, we will now have a situation where a Zambian
originated super market or grocery store can comfortably operate
- 137 -
with only Zambian manufactured products. We must promote
Zambian goods first.
- 138 -
Construction
Construction is going to play a major role in ensuring we
generate as much revenues from foreign countries as possible.
One major way construction will give us an international trading
advantage is as follows;
- 139 -
The Importance of Research and Development
- 140 -
support needed to develop and perfect innovations that will put
this nation ahead.
- 141 -
TEN
LOCAL CHURCH BUSINESS
DEVELOPMENT FUND
- 142 -
“Zambia‟s Economic Transformation is not
going to happen without the full
participation of the Church”
-KBF
- 143 -
In the first „Zambia Must Prosper‟ book, I indicated my firm belief
that Zambia’s transformation is not going to happen without the
active participation of the Church. This is because the Church
has extensive grassroots reach and collectively meets millions of
citizens every week throughout the year. In these churches are
the poor Zambian citizens we are trying to serve. I also pointed
out that as long as Zambians are poor, majority of churches will
be poor with poorly paid pastors. The implication is, if we
empowered our poor church members, churches will have better
financial standing to pay pastors well and pursue God’s work
more effectively. The prosperity of this nation is intricately tied to
the prosperity of the Church. If the Church took a decisive move
to prosper, Zambia shall prosper. The Church is the game
changer here.
- 146 -
1. Increasing agriculture productivity
2. Providing a national network of outlets for distributing
products from production cities/towns.
3. Improving Education services
4. Ensuring every family has a home
5. Ensuring citizen’s domination of Zambia’s economy
1. Agriculture operations.
2. Private schools.
3. Tuck shops.
4. Chain stores.
5. Clothing stores.
6. Butcheries.
7. Construction companies.
8. Property development companies
9. Real Estate Agencies
10. Restaurants.
11. Financial services.
12. Accounting & Tax Services
13. Brick making.
14. Carpentry.
15. Metal fabrication.
16. Hardware stores.
17. Car wash.
18. Beauty shops (salon & barber services)
19. Bulk Transport services.
20. Passenger transportation
21. Bed and breakfast services.
22. Cleaning services.
23. Furniture shops.
24. Bakeries & confectionaries shops
25. Internet cafes & business centres
26. Mobile money services
- 147 -
The overall thinking here is that when the Agri-city, Livestock
town and fish producing town produce and processes their
various products, there will be local church owned butcheries,
restaurants, chain stores and tuck-shops and many others that
will stock and distribute these items in local communities
throughout the country. Most importantly, these will be outlets
owned by Zambian citizens.
- 148 -
fund, K500 million or $50 million would be raised every month!
If we only had 2 million Christians as active contributors to this
project, $20 million can still be raised every month. By the end of
the year, $240 million would have been raised by the collective
Church body. In 5 years, $1 billion can be raised using this
approach! This represents substantial financial resources to
significantly impact the economy of this country if deployed
efficiently.
- 150 -
- 151 -
ELEVEN
EVERY YOUTH IN SCHOOL OR AT
WORK
- 152 -
“I have realised that when our youths approach me
on the streets and politely request me for an
opportunity to clean my car in exchange for a small
fee, what the youths are actually communicating is
that; „we are young, energetic and ready to work.
Give us work to do; any work- as long as we can feed
our families‟.
It is at this stage that one has to admit that we have
failed our youths and it is time to correct this
anomaly. It‟s time to get our youths to work!”
-K.B.F.
- 153 -
There are two fundamental misconceptions Zambian Politicians
continue to hold when it comes to our youths. Firstly, that the
millions of our unemployed youths are a burden as opposed to
an asset. Secondly, that education is a cost rather than an
investment.
In the year 2017, the World Bank Group estimated that between
2017 and 2031 about 375,000 young people will be offloaded
into the Zambian job market every year38. Yet available statistics
indicate that jobs in Zambia grow only at an average annual rate
of 2.8%39. That’s roughly around 80,000 new jobs in the year
2017. According to the Ministry of General Education, 113,647
Zambian youths sat for grade 12 exams in 2017 but yet the
Minister of Higher education announced in January 2018 that
government would sponsor only 4,612 students for vocational,
college and university training for the entire country!40 This
represents a mere 4% of grade twelve leavers and is a good
indicator of how careless Zambia has become in the area of
handling youths.
38
World Bank Group, Jobs Diagnostic, Zambia, 2018
39
World Bank Group, In Zambia, A Need for Faster and More Productive Job Creation, 13 June 2017
40
https://zambiareports.com/2018/01/31/4-000-students-get-unza-cbu-tevet-scholarships/
41
CSO, Zambia in figures 2018
- 154 -
The Educational Statistical bulletin 2016 reports 26,029
students enrolled in all major Educational Colleges around the
country.
If we get our minds and act right in how we handle our youths,
Zambian youths are by far the greatest asset this country readily
possesses. You need to accept the reality that the quality and
wealth of a nation is highly dependent on the quality of its
human resource. This is simply because this human resource is
what interacts with the natural resources to produce wealth and
prosperity for a nation. Actually, the human resource is far more
important than the natural resources. This is why there are
countries with much less natural resources than Zambia but
have wealthier citizens than Zambia by far. Having a lot of
natural resources is no guarantee for national prosperity but a
high quality human resource composition is a sure guarantee for
national prosperity. Dr. Mensa Otabil correctly postulates that
“The prosperity of a nation depends on the wisdom of its people.”
- 156 -
With the underlying understanding that productive work or
employment is the foundation for wealth and prosperity, if we
prepare our young people adequately for the work place through
education/training and ensure that they have work when they
are ready to work, our nation will reap serious real benefits.
Currently, our nation is ailing because we are not adequately
training our young people and we are not providing jobs for
those young people who want to work. This is a perfect recipe for
poverty to be entrenched in our nation.
- 159 -
I also want to ensure that maximum class size be limited to 30
pupils within 10 years. For pupil population of about 4 million,
we will require nothing less than 134,00 properly trained and
employed teachers in our education sector. If we assume
120,000 will be employed by government, at an average salary of
K9,000, the annual wage bill would be about $1 billion.
- 160 -
Interventions for the girl child
- 161 -
to the inflated prices Zambia has been subjected to in the last 5
years or so! Imagine how much money we will avail if we froze
the purchase of unnecessary new government vehicles for 2
years! If you have an idea of how much money we are spending
just on purchasing and maintaining government vehicles, you
will agree that the money to revolutionise our education sector is
there and all we need to do is to change our priorities!
42
Source: The Educational Statistical Bulleting 2016
- 162 -
trained teachers applied for teaching jobs and only 2,009 were
given jobs! We have more than 25,000 trained teachers roaming
the streets!
- 163 -
settled fact that none of us would be who we are without the
teachers that taught us.
When it comes to creating jobs for our youths, I will ensure our
youths find jobs and business opportunities in our planned
production cities, wards and housing settlements. And
specifically:
Mentorship:
Markets:
Money:
- 165 -
This approach will ensure our youths have jobs and productively
contributing to our economy.
The next table gives an idea of how many candidates sat for the
various exams in 2012 and 2017.
The years 2012 and 2017 have been picked for analysis for the
sole reason that the stream of students that wrote grade 7
examinations in 2012 is the same stream of students that wrote
grade 12 examinations in 2017. From the table you will notice
serious decline in candidates sitting for exams as the grades
proceed. According to the Ministry of Education, in 2012, we had
337,706 students that sat for grade 7 exams. By the time this
stream of students were writing grade 12 exams in 2017, they
were only 113,647. This is a decline of 223,659! This is a rough
indicator of how many students dropped out of the education
system between 2012 and 2017. My concern is: what happened
to this huge number of students who wrote grade 7 exams in
2012 but did not write grade 12 exams with the rest of their
peers in 2017? This is a 66% drop and is too huge for us to just
casually gloss over! The general interpretation is that we are
losing up to 66% of our students before they get to grade 12.
Where did this 66% of our young people go and what are they
currently doing? How many of them continued with some form of
education and what kind of work are they currently doing if any?
The reality is we have quite a huge chunk of school dropouts in
our secondary education system. It is this group that I have in
mind. I understand that a lot of them could have failed to
43
As per statements from Ministry of Education
- 166 -
proceed due to financial limitations and lack of educational
facilities. Some of them still have the desire to pursue their
education beyond grade 12 whilst others are more interested in
attaining vocational and skills training.
- 170 -
carry them into new governments, is something that defies all
logic.
- 171 -
1. Introduce a quota-system that demands that 30% of
cabinet, parliamentary and senior civil service positions are
reserved for people below the age of 40.
2. That a term limit be introduced for all elective positions
including MPs, Mayors and councillors. If we see it fit that
a president should be limited to two terms in office, it is
odd that we don’t have term limits for other elective
positions! This country has too many qualified people and
it makes every sense that we have inbuilt systems that
ensure we give opportunities to as many Zambians as
possible to contribute to national building.
- 172 -
- 173 -
TWELVE
PROSPERITY THROUGH THE
AGRICULTURE SECTOR
- 174 -
“Zambia is well positioned to be a food basket for the
Eastern and Southern Africa region given its
abundant water and land resources. It is well located
with eight neighbouring countries, most of whom are
deficit food producers.”
-IAPRI 2016
- 175 -
Zambia as a country covers a span of 74million hectares
(753,000 square kilometres), of which 42 million hectares (58%)
are suitable for agriculture. Of the land suitable for agriculture,
only about 5.9 million hectares (14%) is currently being utilised
for cultivation44. In addition, only 30% of the land suitable for
irrigation agriculture is being utilised in Zambia. As a country at
the centre of the Southern African region, Zambia is well
`positioned to be the breadbasket of the region.
44
World bank, Increasing Agriculture Resilience through better risk management in Zambia, 2018
45
IAPRI, Zambia Agriculture Status Report 2017
- 176 -
In Zambia the farmers are categorized by size of land cultivated
as follows:
- 177 -
Area planted (ha) Yield rate (MT/ha)
Crop 2016/2017 2017/2018 % 2016/ 2017 %
change 2017 /201 change
8
Maize 1,644,741 1,392,546 (15.33) (21.57)
2.19 1.72
Maize for 8,316 15.94 (2.52)
seed 7,173 5.45 5.31
Maize for 2,274 (33.79) 1233
silage 3,434 0.12 1.58
Green 241 (12.64)
Maize 276 1.98
Sorghum 32,308 (4.21) (20.94)
33,728 0.51 0.41
Rice 34,217 2.74 9.09
33,303 1.15 1.26
Millet 49,105 (7.03) 6.61
52,820 0.62 0.66
Sunflower 97,851 (6.97) 1.87
105,184 0.48 0.49
Groundnuts 284,708 5.60 2.04
269,611 0.63 0.64
Soya beans 205,508 (11.28) (2.91)
231,630 1.52 1.47
Seed 118,763 4.50 (5.46)
cotton 113,649 0.79 0.74
Irish 1,867 85.77 (77.03)
potato 1,005 31.60 7.26
Virginia 6,273 20.29 (7.90)
Tobacco 5,215 2.32 2.13
Burley 7,787 43.45 (4.65)
Tobacco 5,428 1.55 1.48
Mixed 84,566 1.11 12.71
beans 83,635 0.55 0.62
Bambara 7,253 16.33 38.26
nuts 6,235 0.70 0.97
Cowpeas 14,022 (46.96) 3.53
26,438 0.47 0.49
Sweet 60,325 9.06 (18.69)
Potatoes 55,312 3.74 3.04
Wheat 21,709 (18.91) (27.13)
26,773 7.24 5.27
Barley 936 9.20 (28.45)
857 7.62 5.45
Popcorn 11,190 22.31 (1.22)
9,149 0.86 0.85
Table 25: National 2016/2017 Vs 2017/2018 Crop Forecast Survey, Area, Expected
Production46
46
Source: CSO , 2017/2018 Crop Forecast Survey, Area, Expected Production, Yield, Expected Sales
and Fertilizer used (National).
- 178 -
E-Voucher System
47
Times of Zambia, challenges of e-voucher system through FISP, 2nd March, 2018.
- 181 -
The teething problems posed by the e-voucher system have
indeed began to affect the yields in Zambia. Quoting Mr.
Kennedy Kaputo, Mambwe District Agriculture Coordinator
(DACO) in Muchinga Province:
48
https://www.lusakatimes.com/2018/05/09/maize-production-for-2017-2018-season-reduces-by-33-6/
49
https://www.africanfarming.com/zambias-smallholder-farmers-complexities-government-support/
- 182 -
looking at our agriculture sector posting $24 billion contribution
to our national GDP compared to the current paltry $2.4 billion.
Our primary focus in revolutionising our agriculture sector must
be to increase productivity per every person working in the
agriculture sector by at least 10 times. With the necessary
support and policy incentives, Zambians can do this!
- 183 -
After taking care of the market side of things, we can then go all
out to increase productivity and our production volumes.
Increasing Productivity
The first table highlights our current animal stocks together with
what I propose should be our minimum stocks within specified
periods of time. I am certain that these targets are very much
achievable with the political-will and appropriate investments
that I propose to pursue.
50
For fish, the figures relate to current fish production and projected fish production from fish farming.
51
CSO, Preliminary Livestock & Aquaculture Census Results, 2018
- 184 -
Crop/Produce Current New Target Period
Production52 (Tonnes)
1 Maize 3,606,549 10,000,000 2 years
2 Groundnuts 168,699 500,000 2 years
3 Sunflower 50,220 200,000 2 years
4 Cotton 89,293 500,000 2 years
5 Soya beans 351,416 1,000,000 2 years
6 Wheat 193,713 500,000 3 years
7 Burley Tobacco 8,416 20,000 2 years
8 Virginia Tobacco 12,079 30,000 2 years
9 Rice 38,423 200,000 2 years
10 Sorghum 17,337 100,000 2 years
12 Millet 32,566 50,000 2 years
13 Mixed Beans 45,938 100,000 2 years
The targets in the two tables imply significant positive social and
macro-economic shifts for our country. Achievement of these
targets implies wealthier citizens, better forex earnings and a
stronger national GDP. With these targets, what will remain now
is to navigate what policies, investments and actions we need to
undertake to deliver the targets. The following step will be vital in
ensuring our targets are achieved:
- 185 -
Livestock
Average number of
Type of Target Number of
# animals per
livestock national stock households
household
Table 29: Average household animal stock based on our target figures
- 186 -
Table 30: calculations of ideal annual revenues per type animal per household
1 Cattle 60
2 Goats 250
3 Sheep 250
4 Pigs 30
Table 31: Proposed minimum breeding stock per type animal per household
- 187 -
3. Establish livestock towns in each province starting with
Southern, Eastern and Luapula Provinces and then the
rest of the country.
4. Establish fish farming towns in each province.
5. As processing centres, packaging & distribution centres,
Livestock and fish farming towns will form reliable and
effective markets for livestock farmers.
6. Aggressively promote livestock farming as a viable business
and rapidly absorb youths into this sub-sector. This will be
most effectively done through livestock towns.
- 188 -
1. Invest adequately in agriculture to ensure more area is
cultivated and better yields are achieved per hectare.
2. Invest in establishing reliable market for agro produce.
3. Invest in processing capacity for agro produce.
4. Establishing effective export channels for agro produce.
- 189 -
international market53. Add middlemen, transportation and
customs, it should be conceivable that our fertilizer import bill is
beyond $300 million every year. In fact Trade Economics
reported that according to the United Nations COMTRADE
database, Zambia imported fertilizers worth $540.86 million in
the year 201754.
55
https://www.agweb.com/article/food--ag-industry-contributes-992-billion-to-us-economy-naa-ben-potter/
- 191 -
will reap more benefits than the financial resources we will
invest by way of subsidies.
- 192 -
- 193 -
THIRTEEN
MOBILIZING THE INFORMAL SECTOR
FOR NATIONAL PROSPERITY
- 194 -
“When well cultivated and properly organised,
utilised and directed, the informal sector possesses
the most remarkable tool for connecting to the people
and attaining both social and economic power. That
tool is: the sheer will to survive!”
-KBF
- 195 -
employed Zambians are working in the informal sector! Some of
the major groupings in the informal sector include the following:
1. Farmers
2. Marketeers, vendors and hawkers.
3. Bus and taxi drivers and conductors
- 196 -
phenomenal. Literally speaking, the government of Zambia must
begin to spend more money towards improving the environment
in the informal sector.
- 197 -
informal sector, I find myself challenged and provoked to deep
thoughts.
- 199 -
I refuse to believe that our people cannot run the retail shops
run by the Rwandese, Indians, Chinese and Lebanese in our
various communities. I refuse to believe that if we supported our
people adequately, they would fail to run the brick making
operations being run by the Somalians and Lebanese in our
country. No, I refuse to believe that!
1. I want to see the women who have been sitting in the sun
for over 5 years at City market selling vegetables and
Kapenta to upgrade to owning stores that sell vegetables,
Kapenta, fish and goat meat! It is the same business but at
a slightly bigger scale.
2. I want to see all those Zambians who are currently selling
meat in the open air and unsafe environment to graduate
to owning clean, refrigerated and fully-fledged butchery
stores.
- 200 -
3. I want to see my young brothers who have been employed
as taxi and minibus drivers to graduate to owning their
own buses and taxis and begin to work for themselves.
4. I want to see every Zambian who decides that they would
like to join the informal sector finding a space to trade from
in our markets and other designated places.
5. I want to see specially identified and well managed areas in
our Central Business Districts (CBD), set aside for vendors.
6. I want to see my young brothers on Katondo streets joining
hands to own registered, legitimate money changing
businesses. Bureau de changes.
7. I want to see our people owning and running fully-stocked
tuck-shops, retail shops, restaurants and wholesale outlets
in our numerous communities.
8. I want to see our people in the informal sector have access
to cheap loans to grow their businesses.
9. I want to see every Zambian working in the informal sector
be assisted to own a decent house.
- 202 -
allowances and food. Most of these trips bring no benefit to the
Zambian citizen sitting in the sun selling vegetables. If we reduce
the frequency and the number people who go on these trips by
80% we can save and avail as much as K10 million every month
to finance and help the over 1 million citizens currently in the
informal sector to grow their businesses. Yes, just like that!
- 203 -
K2.4 million every year towards a Chilimba56 savings
arrangement. This is a clear demonstration of the collective
financial muscle which these groupings possess.
56
Chilimba is a savings concept where a group of people contribute savings to a collective fund. Every member
then take turns in receiving proceeds of this savings on a rotating basis.
- 204 -
Proposed Investments
- 205 -
FOURTEEN
RESTRUCTURING ZAMBIA’S ECONOMY
TOWARDS CITIZENS’ DOMINANCE
- 206 -
“If Zambians owned and managed the mines and
produced even as low as 30% of the current
production, at least $2 billion will come and stay in
our economy from mineral sales. This is far better
than the 5% our government is getting from the mining
industry”
-Mauden Shula
- 207 -
The Zambian economy is currently structured in such a way that
ultimately, a big part of our revenues are finding their way
outside our country! We are spending more money outside the
country than the money coming in. The overall effect is that
cash-flow has become scarce in our economy. An average
Zambian is complaining of the fact that there is no money on the
streets. It is becoming a regular expression among Zambians.
The following are the main ways in which Zambia is losing its
revenues:
57
http://www.worldstopexports.com/zambias-top-10-exports/
- 208 -
7. Importation of goods that can be produced from within
Zambia. Fish, construction materials and other basic food
stuffs top the list.
1. Banking
2. Mining
3. Manufacturing
4. Wholesale
5. Block making
6. Commercial farming
58
http://www.worldstopexports.com/zambias-top-10-exports/
- 209 -
7. Fuelling Stations
8. Property Development
9. Construction
10. Tourism
11. Telecommunication
59
Wikipedia, Demographics of Zambia, 2016
60
Source: Zambia in figures 2018
- 210 -
choice before us is to look at the situation holistically and take
measures to correct this anomaly. This can and must be done
without alienating the hard working foreign business people.
Things that we must decisively consider include pertinent issues
such as the following:
- 212 -
- 213 -
FIFTEEN
STRATEGIC ENERGY SECTOR
REFORMS
- 214 -
“The whole of Europe, many parts of America and
Asia have taken decisive measures to wean
themselves off fossil fuels. They consider this, a major
strategic economic issue. It is alarming to note that
Zambia and Africa at large seem oblivious to these
emerging energy dynamics and are not making any
significant plans in this regard!!”
-Mauden Shula
- 215 -
As earlier mentioned, in 2017 Zambia recorded import values of
$8.1 billion. Fuel accounted for about 15% of these imports and
was the single biggest component. According to the Minister of
Energy at the time, Mr. Mathew Nkuwa, Zambia uses fuel worth
$1 billion every year61. Statistics from ERB indicated that in
2016, Zambia consumed about 463 million litres of unleaded
petrol alone.
Cheaper to run
Cheaper to maintain
A battery electric vehicle (BEV) has a lot less moving parts than a
conventional petrol/diesel car. There is relatively little servicing
and no expensive exhaust systems, starter motors, fuel injection
systems, radiators and many other parts that aren’t needed in
an EV.
61
Hon. Mathew Nkuwa, speaking on Hot FM Radio Station, 3 October 2018
62
https://www.ergon.com.au/network/smarter-energy/electric-vehicles/benefits-of-electric-vehicles
- 216 -
With just one moving part – the rotor –EVs are particularly
simple and very strong. Just maintain the brakes, tyres and
suspension and that’s about it.
Health benefits
Safety improvements
Due to these reasons plus the reality that you cut out or reduce
fossil fuel requirements when you use electric cars, many
forward thinking nations have embarked on policies and changes
towards increasing the use of electric cars.
Quoting wikepedia:
San Diego's local private utility, San Diego Gas and Electric
(SDG&E), offers its customers an electric vehicle incentive of
$10,000 for a 2017 BMW i3.
- 219 -
In the UK the Office for Low Emission Vehicles offers grants
for the installation of up to two charge points both in private
residences and up to 20 for commercial organisations.
BIO-DIESEL
What is biodiesel?
Indonesia
63
The Jakarta Post, Indonesia plans to make 30 percent biodiesel blend mandatory, studies B100. 10 December
2018
- 221 -
European Union
64
http://www.ebb-eu.org/biodiesel.php
- 222 -
Figure 11: Summary of economic benefits of bio-diesel in the EU
All in all, the future of automotive vehicle fuel is not fossil oil
based fuels. The world is rapidly shifting to electric and bio-
diesel technologies and there is absolutely no sense in our
country lagging behind in this important trend65. If Zambia was
to embrace bio-diesel production and electric vehicles in earnest,
Zambia will reduce its fossil fuel requirements and spend less on
fossil fuel imports.
65
https://techcabal.com/2018/08/20/the-world-is-leaving-africa-behind-in-electric-vehicle-adoption/
- 223 -
With this in mind, we must immediately, embark on pursuing
policies that will deliver an energy shift from reliance on fossil
fuels to bio-fuel and use of electric motor vehicles.
- 224 -
- 225 -
SIXTEEN
INFRUSTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT
- 226 -
“I am not sure I should be applauding our
Government‟s infrastructure achievements
considering the fact that the money purported to have
been spent on infrastructure could easily have given
us twice as much infrastructure as we have received
as a country”
Mauden Shula
- 227 -
Adequate infrastructure is vital for the social and economic
development of a country. The quality of infrastructure has a
direct bearing on the quality of services a country is able to offer.
It is impossible for a nation to offer such essential services as
health, education, electricity, sanitation and transportation with
inadequate related quality infrastructure. Adequate quality
infrastructure facilitates commerce and ultimately affects the
GDP of a nation. In fact it has been long determined that the
level of infrastructure has a huge bearing on how much a
country attracts in terms of investments.
Roads
The road sector assessment was a grade of D. This implies
that the assessment determined the infrastructure‟s quality
and performance to be poor. Only 40 per cent of the core
road network is in maintainable condition and 60 per cent
requires critical rehabilitation. Furthermore, funding for
maintenance of the existing road stock continues to be under
severe pressure with not more than 22 per cent being
received from budgetary allocation in the period 2012 to
2014. The rate of accidents and number of fatalities also
continued to increase. Intensive efforts with regards to the
education of road users as well as implementation of
- 228 -
appropriate safety policies and measures are required to
save lives.
Bridges
Bridges assessment was a grade of C, implying that the
performance and quality of this infrastructure type was fair.
About 41 per cent of the bridge stock required intervention to
bring it to a satisfactory condition. Budgeting and funding
gaps exist and only an average of about 60 per cent of the
budgeted amounts were being made available. Increased
training of staff is necessary for routine operations such as
bridge inspections.
Urban Sanitation
The assessment of this sub-category was F. The
infrastructure is totally inadequate for present and future
use. The infrastructure operated by the vast majority of
commercial utilities is in a poor state and needs
rehabilitation. The coverage of the urban sanitation network
is quite low in many jurisdictions with the exception of
- 229 -
Copperbelt and Lusaka Provinces. Most newly established
residential and peri-urban areas are not serviced due to
limited capacity in the network.
Electricity
The overall assessed grade for electricity infrastructure was
C. The quality and performance of the infrastructure is fair.
The major power stations: Kariba North; and Victoria Falls
Power stations have been rehabilitated to design condition
levels. However, the facilities at small hydropower stations
have become obsolete and maintenance is increasingly
difficult. A rehabilitation program is currently underway to
upgrade the small hydropower stations. There is also a
- 230 -
major issue of the dams at both Kafue Gorge and Kariba
North Bank which are in need of urgent interventions. The
condition of the transmission system is good. The
distribution system is in need of voltage and capacity
rehabilitation, expansion and upgrading. Vandalism of
infrastructure facilities for the acquisition of steel,
conductors, and oil is currently very high. For the power
stations and the major substations, these risks have been
mitigated by the installation of security systems. For the
transmission lines and the smaller substations, regular
patrols and maintenance have been instituted. This has
invariably increased the operational costs.
Mobile Network
The overall grade assessed for mobile phone infrastructure
was D, implying that the performance and quality of this
sub-sector was poor. The mobile network has been growing
exponentially. However, its growth in rural areas was being
- 231 -
limited by poor infrastructure. The advent of 3G and better
technology allowing broadband internet access has boosted
mobile phone usage. Service providers have, however, faced
numerous quality of service challenges. These include long
average call set up time, high call drop rates, and billing
challenges on both voice calls and data bundles. Upgrade
programs setting up communication base stations towers are
in progress to address some of these issues.
Satellite Network
The overall grade assessed for Satellite infrastructure was
C, meaning that the quality and performance of the
infrastructure is fair. Satellites are mainly used in the rural
areas that have no other means of coverage or as backup by
ISPs and Corporates.
Postal Services
The overall assessment grade for postal service
infrastructure was C. The performance and quality of this
sub-sector was fair. Most post office buildings were,
however, in need of minor maintenance works to bring them
to modern and customer-friendly status. Some post office
buildings require major rehabilitation works, as they were
dilapidated.
Airports
The overall national grade for Zambian Airports was
assessed as a grade of D. This means that a number of
- 232 -
critical interventions are required in terms of rehabilitation,
funding and planning in order to improve the quality of
aviation infrastructure. In particular, several domestic
airports have unpaved runways. The condition of terminal
buildings and terminal facilities is poor at a number of
domestic and international airports. Navigation systems,
communication, and metrology equipment at most airports
are poor.
Rail infrastructure
The overall national grade for rail infrastructure was
assessed as a grade D. Generally, the rail infrastructure is
in poor condition. Zambia‟s railway network suffers from
two main constraints: poor track maintenance with the case
of Zambia Railways; and low availability of main line
locomotives and wagons in the case of TAZARA. The
problems faced by the railway companies have resulted in
considerably reduced service capacity and hence their
present inability to attract more traffic. The cost of
rehabilitating and maintaining the railway system is
generally much higher than that of the road transport
system. Therefore, it is necessary to implement best
practices for future maintenance as this will ultimately
reduce maintenance costs than would be the case if
maintenance was continually deferred.
- 234 -
Many of us still question the wisdom in accumulating debt and
spending $755 million on airport infrastructure in Lusaka and
Ndola at this particular stage in our development as a country.
Going by the way our economy is currently structured; it is very
hard to see how this airport infrastructure will give us value for
money in the next 30 years. By this we mean; how much more
revenues and investments will Zambia be attracting now that we
have these new airports compared to before?
Priority Ranking
- 235 -
As a general starting point, key factors in determining
infrastructure priority must include the following:
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Type of Infrastructure Justification Strategy
1 Sanitation, water supply Eliminate Identify needs and
& solid waste health risk to immediately
management millions of allocate resources
infrastructure citizens. Job to attend to such
creation needs.
2 Production cities Jobs, housing, Develop 3 every
schools & year until every
health centers province hosts 3
for millions of of these.
Zambians
3 Schools and health These are basic Build 200 schools
Centers. services & 200 health
expected of a centers every year.
government At least one per
constituency
4 Housing settlements Housing is a Develop 200
basic need housing
settlements every
year
5 Roads & bridges Critical for Continue
distribution of maintenance &
goods and construction every
services. year using funds
collected from toll
fees. No more debt
acquisition
6 Rail lines Will be critical Maintain rail lines
for our & Invest in new
international locomotives. Link
market Zambia to Angola,
expansion Mozambique and
Namibia through
rail.
7 Electricity Need to increase Continue to
electricity expand generation
access & capacity & make
electricity Zambia an
export capacity. electricity
generation hub.
Table 32: Summary of infrastructure strategy
- 237 -
SEVENTEEN
A NEW INVESTOR APROACH
- 238 -
„I plan to run the most business friendly government
Zambia has ever seen, however, I would rather have
no foreign investor come to Zambia than agree to bad
deals.”
-KBF
- 239 -
The world is increasingly becoming a global village with ever
growing nation to nation interdependency on so many fronts. A
nation, no matter how wealthy it might be, cannot sustain its
level of wealth without trading and cooperating with other
nations. Zambia is no exception in this regard and for this
reason, it is vital that we rethink and refine the way we conduct
ourselves in regards to international business relations.
- 240 -
2. We need to boost our agriculture and manufacturing
sectors significantly and become an agricultural and
industrial hub of the SADC region.
3. We need to acquire modern and durable infrastructure and
industrial equipment at competitive prices.
4. We need every Zambian youth in school or at work.
5. We need our people to possess the best skills.
6. We need every Zambian family to own a house at an
affordable price.
7. We need every Zambian to have access to universal health
coverage.
8. We need every Zambian to have access to clean water and
electricity.
9. We need our people to control 90% of the Zambian
economy.
10. We need every Zambian child to learn in a decent
classroom.
Joint ventures can also be entered into where firms from the
financing nations can set up operations in our production cities
in conjunction with the government of Zambia or our local
companies to supply to regional markets. In such arrangements,
Zambia will always return at least 50% ownership in the
ventures.
- 243 -
to generate more than sufficient revenues to be able to repay
loans from financiers without placing any burden on the
national treasury. In this case, government will only play the
role of facilitator, supervisor and loan guarantor and not be
under any pressure to repay loans. The businesses that will
be established in the productions cities from borrowed funds
will be responsible for repaying all loans.
- 244 -
GOAT KEEPING TOWN
Major Commercial Units Employment Total
units per unit
1 20,000 housing units 1
2 Town MGT 1 200 200
3 Construction 2 100 200
4 Farming communities 50 273 13,650
5 Meat processing unit 1 200 200
6 Fruits & vegies 1 200 200
processing
7 Animal feed 1 200 200
manufacture
8 Hotels 5 50 250
9 Lodges 5 20 100
10 Airport 1 200 200
11 Utilities 2 50 100
12 University campus 5 300 1,500
13 Hospitals 5 200 1,000
14 Shopping malls 5 400 2,000
15 Grains farm 1 200 200
16 Packaging & branding 1 200 200
17 Construction 1 100 100
18 Land scaping 10 5 50
19 Office park 1 300 300
20 Leather works 1 200 200
21 Auto services 10 10 100
22 Milling company 1 200 200
23 Wood works shop 1 100 100
24 Engineering 5 20 100
25 Foot wear 2 100 200
26 Transport & logistics 5 20 100
27 Building materials 2 100 200
28 Bakery 5 20 100
29 Cosmetics 5 20 100
30 Printing 5 10 50
31 Others Investors 1 5000 5,000
Totals 72 27,100
Table 33: Potential permanent jobs in a livestock town
- 245 -
Mind you, the jobs in question are permanent, will support
education, sports and health and will be there for generations
unlike once-off construction projects that employ a few lowly
paid Zambians for a few months. The Treasury will earn
increasing tax revenues from a livestock town for generations.
- 248 -
clustered around the main farm operation. Trust me, this is
already on the table!
- 249 -
EIGHTEEN
FINANCING ZAMBIA’S ECONOMIC
TRANSFORMATION AGENDA
- 250 -
“I totally believe that our natural resources and
human resources are enough to finance our economic
agenda and create wealth beyond measure for our
nation”
- KBF
- 251 -
A new national vision requires a new expenditure focus. To a
large extent, Zambia is where it is economically and
developmentally mainly due to the way we as a country have
applied our financial and human resources. It is a huge fallacy
to expect significant shifts in our economy, education,
agriculture, industrialisation and health without corresponding
shifts in our budgetary and expenditure priorities. If a leadership
announces that it intends to make agriculture and
industrialisation, major national focus areas but fails to make
any significant priority changes to the national budget to reflect
this shift, you should know that the leadership in question is
either clueless or is simply not genuine and is merely playing
politics of rhetoric.
- 252 -
Prudent Financial Management as a Source of Development
Financing.
- 253 -
4. Expenditure on unnecessary workshops and travel.
5. First class air travel for government officials.
6. Abuse of government property such as vehicles and fuel for
personal use.
7. Stealing of government resources such as medical supplies.
8. Paying salaries to thousands of retired government workers
simply because their pension packages have not been paid.
9. Paying salaries to non-existent or ghost workers
- 254 -
Function 2019 Budget
Amount Share of Budget
General Public Services 31,277,061,748 36.00%
External Debt Payment 14,947,077,126
Domestic Debt Payment 8,626,278,083
Local Government Equalization Fund 1,164,867,612
Zambia Revenue Authority 900,000,000
Compensation and Awards 200,000,000
Public Affairs and Summit Meetings 176,478,995
Constituency Development Fund 249,600,000
Defence 5,072,431,839 4.90%
Public Order and Safety 2,865,505,045 3.00%
National Identity Documents 24,999,000
Economic Affairs 20,651,090,605 23.80%
Roads Infrastructure 6,501,672,380
Farmer Input Support Programme (e-voucher) 1,428,000,000
Strategic Food Reserves 672,000,000
International Airports 1,592,850,000
Rural Electrification Fund 182,461,999
Energy Power Infrustructure 415,763,796
Environmental Protection 875,101,216 1.00%
Climate Change Resilience 213,035,243
Housing and Community Amenities 2,238,697,351 2.60%
Water Supply and Sanitation 1,984,759,408
o/w Lusaka Sanitation Project (Millenium Challenge) 175,000,000
Kafue Bulk Water Ssupply & saitation project 207,750,000
Kafulafuta Water Ssupply Project 416,635,390
Nkana Water Supply & Sanitation Project 304,500,000
Markets and Bus Stations 16,809,740
Health 8,069,128,277 9.30%
Drugs and Medical Supplies 900,082,236
Health Infrastructure 725,884,552
Medical Equipment 620,188,226
Recreation, Culture and Religion 297,272,319 0.30%
Education 13,274,546,421 15.30%
School Infrastructure 258,806,582
Student Loans and Scholarships 557,000,000
University and College Infrastructure 601,645,546
Luapula university 442,670,455
skills development 163,993,697
Social Protection 2,187,059,906 2.50%
Public Service Pension Fund 1,060,550,212
Social Cash Transfer 699,494,400
Food Security Pack 110,880,000
TOTAL 86,807,894,727 100.00%
Table 34: 2019 proposed budget expressed in Zambian Kwacha
- 255 -
NEW SPENDING PRIORITIES FOR NEW RESULTS
Economic Affairs
Education
- 256 -
trainers to service a minimum of 300,000 students at tertiary
level education every year. This will require a minimum of
10,000 lecturers or instructors.
All in all, at the peak of our ideal education sector, we will need a
budgetary allocation of $1.8 billion per annum under current
terms. This means an additional $500 million to the proposed
$1.3 billion allocated to education as proposed by Hon.
Mwanakatwe. The additional $500 million is specifically to cover
the sponsoring of tertiary training for more youths every year
and ensuring other educational requirements are adequately
taken care of.
Agriculture
Our agriculture sector provides our country with one of the most
effective channels of lifting our people out of poverty. The
majority of our self-employed citizens are employed in the
agriculture sector as small-holder farmers. According to recent
statistics, we are looking at about 1.6 million Zambians working
in the agriculture sector. Moreover, over 8.3 million Zambians
rely on agriculture for their sustenance.
- 257 -
Our immediate intervention in the agriculture sector should be
to improve productivity per agro worker from the current $1,500
to $15,000 per annum in a space of 5 years. We must push this
level of productivity to at least $25,000 per annum by the 10th
year. Besides developing two agriculture based production cities
mentioned under Economic Affairs every year, we can further
achieve this by pursuing the following:
- 258 -
billion from the suggested $540 million proposed in the 2019
budget66.
Health
66
Hon. Margaret Mwanakatwe, 2019 Budget Speech, 2018
67
https://www.who.int/hrh/workforce_mdgs/en/
- 259 -
equipment are available for our citizens needing medical
attention within their communities and close to family and
friends. We are aware that our country requires additional health
centres and workers and we will roll-out the building of health
centre on an annual basis.
Key steps I propose for action in our health sector are as follows:
- 260 -
our revenues from taxes will increase substantially without
necessarily overburdening the citizens with high tax rates.
68
National Assembly, Committee on Parastatal Bodies on the management and operations of the industrial
development corporation in Zambia, June, 2018
- 261 -
books, retrenchment is failure by a management/leadership to
find productive engagement for their staff. Instead of
retrenching, we expect creative managements to analyse their
workforce, assets and markets and formulate means to deploy all
their staff in such ways that they can add value to the
profitability and well-being of the organisation in general.
At the time the Patriotic Front was taking over power in 2011,
Zambia’s external debt stood at only $ 1.9 billion. As at August,
2018, Zambia was known to have total debts to the tune of $15
billion. Foreign debt was estimated at $9.51 billion69 whilst local
debt stood at $5.4 billion70.
69
https://www.lusakatimes.com/2018/11/09/external-debt-continues-to-rise-mwanakatwe/
70
https://zambiareports.com/2018/11/08/zambias-domestic-debt-stands-k54-billion/
- 262 -
Description of Debt Amount
1 2012 Eurobond $0.75 billion
2 2014 Eurobond $1 billion
3 2015 Eurobond $1.25 billion
4 Kenneth Kaunda Airport expansion project $0.36 billion
5 Ndola airport expansion project. $0.395 billion
6 Security Wings Housing Project $0.275 billion
7 Kafue Gorge Power Plant Project $1.7 billion
8 Kariba North Bank Power plant $0.43 billion
9 Lusaka L400 Roads Project $0.3 billion
10 Lusaka Decongestion Project $0.285 billion
11 Digital migration Project $0.280 billion
12 Copperbelt C400 Roads Project $0.418 billion
13 Mongu Kalabo Road $0.287 billion
14 2000 military houses $0.157 billion
15 Heroes stadium $0.094 billion
16 Kafulafuta Dam Project $0.449 billion
17 Kafue Water Project $0.104 billion
18 Lusaka sanitation Project $0.13 billion
19 Mbala Nakonde Road $0.180 billion
20 Mansa Luwingu Road $0.242 billion
21 Levy Mwanawasa Stadium $0.094 billion
22 Mulungushi Conference Centre Expansion $0.03 billion
Project
23 Domestic debt $5.4 billion
TOTAL $14.6 BILLION
Table 35: List of some of Zambia’s debts between 2011 to date
She said US $1billion that was issued in 2014 was mainly for
completion of some of the outstanding projects “so as to unlock
further economic capital”.
The minister further told the House that the remainder from the
$1 billion Euro bond was shared among the sectors of health,
- 264 -
agriculture, water and sanitation whilst part of it was used for
general budget support as appropriated by Parliament.
Mwanakatwe, on the $1.25 billion Euro bond which the
government issued in 2015, said: “Sir, it is important to
mention that due to volatility in our domestic currency during
that period, it was prudent to hold part of the money in dollars
to reduce exchange losses when making payments in foreign
dominated currency.”
- 265 -
capacity to directly increase productivity and the country’s tax
base71.
When it comes to the debt situation, the truth is, Zambia’s debt
is indeed stressful but manageable. With a prudent leadership in
place, the $750 million can be repaid when it falls due in 2022.
This is provided the current leadership does not engage in more
unnecessary debt acquisition to worsen the already stressful
debt situation. The number one key factor to Zambia’s navigating
its debt scenario successfully is Financial Discipline at political
level going forward. Financial discipline for a government simply
means the following things:
71
Dr. Caleb Fundanga. “Fit for purpose? An analysis of Zambia’s Medium-Term Debt Management Strategy .
March 2018.
- 266 -
ministries to identify and plug the many loop-holes through
which government is leaking substantial public resources, IMF is
likely to sit up and listen. As things stand, IMF experts do not
take our politicians seriously for very valid reasons. Currently
our politicians are not serious and are playing with the future of
this country.
- 268 -
- 269 -
NINETEEN
SUMMARY
- 270 -
“We must widen our individual relationship with time
as a community. Never assume time is our enemy, but
rather see it as an instrument and great ally that
educates us at each stage of our life as a nation”
- KBF
- 271 -
The following is a summary of the key aspects of how we will
practically transform Zambia towards prosperity and better
quality of life for our citizens:
1. Offer a very clear and bold vision which has the ability
to positively affect the majority of our citizens.
2. Introduce Strong Governance Systems to ensure
discipline, efficiency and prudent utilisation of public
resources.
3. Put in place a budget that supports employment
creation, economic growth and better public services.
4. Pursue an agenda that ensures that Every Youth is
either in School or at Work.
National prosperity is driven by work. The more citizens are
employed productively, the wealthier a nation becomes.
82% of Zambians are under the age of 35 years. If we
educate and train our young people well and ensure they
are all employed, Zambia shall prosper.
Our action plan in this regard includes:
i. Ensure all available youths are employed
ii. Introduce free primary and secondary school
education.
iii. Ensure a minimum of 300,000 youths are undergoing
tertiary training every year.
5. Create a minimum of 500,000 new jobs every year
through initiatives as detailed in table 30 on the next page:
- 272 -
Job Creation Key Actions Minimum
Policy Initiative New Jobs
Expected
annually
1 Transform The -80% to be reserved for Zambians 20,000
Public -50% to be reserved for youths
Procurement -Localized procurement approach
System - Bench marking prices tendering approach
2 Transform The -Increase funding to the agriculture sector 100,000
Agriculture sector -Ensure effective agriculture extension
services
- Increase agriculture productivity
- Establish effective market channels
-Transform agriculture into a profitable
business
-Attract more youths into agriculture
3 Support the -Finance & support informal sector 20,000
informal Sector enterprises to grow into formal businesses
4 A house for every -Establish 200 new residential settlements 60,000
Zambian family annually
-Avail 100,000 plots/houses annually
5 Ward Based -Allocate K1 million per ward for 50,000
Development development programs every year
Agenda -Award contracts to local contractors
6 Local Church -Establish a $100 million revolving fund 100,000
Business -Target to finance 20,000 churches
Development - Each church to support the establishment
Agenda of at least 1 new business every year.
7 Production Cities -Establish 3 Production cities annually 100,000
8 Restructure -Actively support citizens to venture into 10,000
Zambia’s economy agriculture, manufacturing, mining &
towards citizens’ banking
ownership. -Support establishment of citizen owned
network of retail franchise outlets.
9 Transform The -Build 200 new schools every year 10,000
Education Sector -Employ all the 20,000 unemployed trained
teachers. There after employ 5,000 every
year.
- Ensure Maximum of 40 pupils per class
-Support 300,000 tertiary students annually
-Achieve 10,000 well trained lecturers
-Adopt education that is inclined towards
practical training.
10 Transform The -Build 200 new health centers every year 10,000
Health Sector -Enforce efficient resource utilization
-Employ 10,000 health workers annually
11 Energy Reforms -Introduce bio-diesel & electric cars 20,000
Total Jobs to be created every year 500,000
Table 36: Summary of estimated jobs to be created annually
- 273 -
What you should take note of is that initiatives 1 to 5 do not
even require substantial funding to implement but yet they can
result in almost immediate impact in terms of job and wealth
creation in this country. These initiatives only require political
will, proper expenditure priorities to give us up to 250,000 new
jobs every year!
- 274 -
millions of Zambians employed in productive and wealth
generating jobs, the following things become automatic:
1. China has grown its GDP per capita from $205 in 1980 to
$8,800 today. Zambia’s GDP per capita was $650 in 1980
and is only $1,509.8 today.
2. China has experienced the fasted economic growth of any
country in the world in recent times. In the years 2007,
2008 and 2011 China posted remarkable GDP growths of
28.7%, 28.9% and 24% respectively72.
3. China has become the world’s largest exporter.
4. At over $3 trillion, China has the world’s largest Foreign
Exchange Reserves73. America’s reserves stood at $1.2
trillion in 201874!
5. China has become the world’s second biggest economy.
6. China has lifted 800 million people out of poverty from
1990 to 201775 and has dropped poverty levels from 40% to
only 10%.
72
https://knoema.com/atlas/China/GDP
73
https://tradingeconomics.com/china/foreign-exchange-reserves
74
https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/foreign-exchange-reserves
75
World Bank President Jim Yong Kim speaking during a news conference at World Bank-IMF Annual Meetings
in Washington in October 2017.
- 276 -
China achieved these and many other milestones during our life
time. Zambians aged 20 years and above were alive when China
was busy achieving these things. This is not a fairly-tale that
happened 200 years ago. This has been achieved during our
generation and simply demonstrates that it is practically possible
to turn around a nation within a generation!
SINGAPORE MODEL
76
https://europe.graduateshotline.com/free-education.html
- 277 -
policies in urbanization. Rwanda is a classical African
country which is successfully emulating the Singapore‟s
model of National Transformational Development. Singapore
in the Post-World II Era: The Socio-economic conditions of
Singapore during the Post-World War II were characterized
by Acute Poverty, High Unemployment , little Foreign
Investments, Low Education, Poor Health care system, Poor
Housing, Rampant Corruption, Restless Political Climate,
intolerance of Law and Order, External Threats from China,
Indonesia, and USSR, as Singapore was booted out of
Malaysia in 1965. Vision & Values: The founding fathers of
Singapore had vision and values that were pegged on:
Building a harmonious, peaceful, prosperous, multi-racial,
multi-religious, social democratic society based on justice,
equality, integrity and meritocracy; Moving the country from
a Third World Nation to First in one generation (1965 -
2000). They envisioned a Nation led by Leaders of Integrity:
a Corruption-free Society; Disciplined, hard-working, highly
educated, skilled & productive labor; Delayed Gratification:
a society that saves; National Self Reliance; Clean, Green
and Safe society; Tripartitism: Government, Labor &
Business working together; Employment for all; Quality,
Affordable & Sustainable Housing for all; Quality Education,
Health Care, Infrastructure & Living Standard for all; Justice
for all with no tolerance on impunity.
77
Source: EIZ National Transformation Strategy-agriculture, 2015
- 279 -
As human beings made in the image of God, we have the right to
conceptualise and embrace a prosperous future. It is our birth
right as humanity to debate and interrogate what we need to do
to attain this God given heritage. All in all, only when we rise up
as a united force can we make this future a reality.
A Zambia where all our young people will get the best education
is possible. A Zambia where every citizen who is willing to work
will find a job is a very practical prospect. It is possible to have a
Zambia with high quality health services. A Zambia where every
family owns a house of their own is not just a day-dream. A
Zambia free of oppression by a handful of criminals
masquerading as political leaders is possible. A Zambia led by
genuine and true leaders is very much a reality up to us as
citizens.
- 280 -
Appendix i
List of tables
Name of Table Pg
Table1: KBF’s Zambia Must Prosper Vision in summary 11
Table 2: List of Zambians arrested by our government for political activism 33
Table 3: estimated monthly expenditure of one family earning K1 million 58
Table 4: estimated expenditure of 100 families earning K10,000 each 58
Table 5: List of suspected highly inflated projects 60
Table 6: 68
Table 7: Permanent jobs after building of the 500 housing units settlement 76
Table 8: minimum jobs in an agri-city 85
Table 9: Break-down of jobs per suburb 85
Table 10: break-down of jobs in a section 86
Table 11: break-down of minimum jobs in a resort fishing town 90
Table 12: Details of potential jobs in a livestock Town 93
Table 13: projected jobs per sector for a mining town 95
Table 14: projected jobs for a steel city 100
Table 15: projected jobs for a border town 101
Table 16: Total population of Zambia & its neighbours 107
Ta bl e 17: Projected a nnua l export vol umes by yea r 2031 108
Table 18: planned business brands 114
Table 19: 1,000 business outlets to be established in foreign countries 116
Table 20: products to be manufactured in Zambia 117
Table 21: number of students enrolled in each university 133
Table 22: Zambia’s youth population broken down by age 134
Table 23: number of candidates sitting for various exams in Zambia 145
Table24: categorisation of farmers by land cultivated 156
Table 25: National 2016/2017 Vs 2017/2018 Crop Forecast Survey, Area, Expected Production 157
Table 26: current livestock in Zambia[1] and new targets 163
Table 27: latest crop production and proposed new targets 164
Table 28: average household animal stock based on current figures 165
Table 29: average household animal stock based on our target figures 165
Table 30: calculations of ideal annual revenues per type animal per household 166
Table 31: proposed minimum breeding stock per type animal per household 166
Table 32: Summary of infrastructure strategy 216
Table 33: Potential permanent jobs in a livestock town 224
Table 34: 2019 proposed budget expressed in Zambian Kwacha 234
Table 35: list of some of Zambia's debts acquired between 2011 and 2018 242
Table 36: Summary of estimated jobs to be created annually 252
- 281 -
Appendix ii
- 282 -