I might be touching a hornets nest on this one. I mean the reactors of every posting might turn rebellious when I touch on issues which boil around politics and the economies.
Being an untrained man in this regard I am not sure if the relationship the country has been engaging itself in really benefits the ordinary citizenry or certain sectors of the country.
The country has been seen falling in love with oil rich countries such as Kuwait and Equilateral Guinea. I hear such marriages usually take years to stabilize but I am happy that Kuwait has been seen pumping million for the highly criticized Sikhuphe Airport project. then what? No one knows if the country’s relationship with Kuwait goes beyond Sikhuphe because after the smell of the oriental oils presented to the lucky, I don’t see anything which would benefit the ordinary citizenry from the oil rich country.
I know those who are always privileged to high profiled information that oil rich country opened up for interested Swazis in the Agriculture sector to consult government and get information of how they can take advantage of the opportunity. I wish to hear who has already benefited on such or it was one of the ‘known’ stunts by the country’s politicians to justify their late night dining with ‘agents of investments’.
Recently the country is said to have fallen in love with Equilateral Guinea another oil rich country but unfortunately negative reports about the country’s leader seem like it will yield a bone crushing divorce with the country. It is so unfortunate that the the French Government has frozen the leader’s assets whilst they are trying hard to investigate money laundering allegations. I know now that such has emerged there is nothing fruitful the country is going to benefit from this marriage.
On the other side of the coin I hear of an invisible figure known as African Growth and Opportunities and I hear it’s a brainchild of the American government. I hear it was an opportunity for the country to receive mouth watering incentives for frican countries to continue their efforts to open their economies and build free markets and in return African countries would access US markets without restrictive quotas or import taxes.
It was during the introduction of AGOA that Matsapha industrial sites was littered with textile factories who as of today I am confused of who benefits from investment. Fine such provided job opportunities to our sisters but the basic income it provides leaves a lot to be desired.
I remember stumbling on an article where the US Department of Commerce said the value of Swaziland's AGOA exports increased nearly threefold, from $65 million in 2001 to a peak of $199 million in 2005; Lesotho's exports reached $140 million in 2001 and peaked at $467 million in 2004.
According to IRIN News network during the peak period of Swaziland's AGOA exports, employee numbers were double the current figure - about 15,000 Swazis, mostly women, are employed in garment factories financed by Taiwanese investors and operated by managers from mainland China.
It is just sad that each and every year factories close …and with the low salaries received by our sisters in the factories they cannot afford paying the taxes which at the end of the day would help government improve the country’s social programmes.