(introduction...)
When the present King of Swazilands father, King Sobhuza
II, died in 1982, he had occupied the throne for no less than 61 years and was,
indeed, the longest-serving monarch in the world by far at the time of his
death. The fact of his long reign is no mere historical fait divers, however,
for Sobhuza, both before and after the countrys independence in 1968,
enjoyed not only immense prestige but also great personal power. He had led
Swaziland, as very much more than a figurehead, for more than six decades and
his influence on the shape of the country today is immeasurable. First and
foremost, he provided stability, through the years of British administration, up
to and beyond independence, and beyond his death - by ensuring that the
principle of a ruling hereditary monarchy remained an acceptable one in a world
in which it was not simply fast becoming a rarity but had actually already
become one. Secondly, the King was a great traditionalist, and not only ensured
- by revoking the independence Constitution - that the Swazi concept of
government remained highly traditional, but also, in a more subtle way,
guaranteed a continuing feeling of comfortableness with traditional custom that
is also becoming rarity. In present-day Swaziland, modern or
Western is not necessarily better, it is merely different. This
maintenance of stability and of traditional values was made vastly easier by one
vital characteristic: the almost total absence in Swaziland of ethnic, religious
or linguistic divisions.
It is truism, and every article or tourist guide on Swaziland
will remark upon it, but this juxtaposition of modern and traditional is what
distinguishes the country from much of the rest of sub-Saharan Africa. Indeed,
to some extent the Swazi position is the reverse of the norm: much of the
continent has espoused modern forms of government, while economies
have remained strongly traditional; Swazilands government, on the other
hand, is only partially modern in concept, but its economy is becoming
increasingly oriented towards the modern sector, with some of its manufacturing
or processing industries attaining a remarkable level of sophistication.
But first, a little background.
Swaziland is the smallest of the countries of Southern Africa,
and is almost entirely surrounded by the Transvaal and Natal provinces of the
Republic of South Africa. It also has a 100-kilometre border with Mozambique.
Maputo, the Mozambican capital, lies some 80 kilometres to the north-east of the
Swazi border, with Johannesburg 350 kilometres to the west. The country divides
into four distinct natural regions, three horizontal strips of roughly
equivalent size and a fourth, much smaller strip, the Lubombo plateau. To the
west is the Highveld, mountainous and near temperate, with an average altitude
of 1300 metres. It is known in Siswati, the national language, as Nkhangala (the
treeless region) but it in fact now contains one of the largest man-made forests
in the world. The west-central strip, the rolling Middleveld, is lower-lying and
sub-tropical, and it is here that most of the countrys foodcrops and some
cash crops are grown. The Lowveld, to the east, is hotter, flatter and drier
and, because it is subject to periodical drought, has become a region for the
cultivation of irrigated crops, sugar cane in particular. Finally, there is the
Lubombo plateau, similar in climate to the Middleveld, with good grazing and
some good arable land.
The word Swazi means the people of
Mswati, the mid-19th century king whose name has been adopted by the
present King. Mswati ls ascendants came from the clan of the Nkosi
Dlamini, and if a considerable number of people in positions of authority today
are called Dlamini, including the present Prime Minister and five former Prime
Ministers, then it is at least partly because the population is small and the
royal family large. Swazi kings are traditionally polygamous, and their wives
are never Dlaminis, and the absence of intermarriage, together with the fact
that the successor to the throne must himself be unmarried (and therefore,
preferably, young), combine to ensure healthy numbers of royal descendants.
The total population of Swaziland is put at around 720 000, some
30 000 of whom are temporary absentees working in the farms and mines
over the border , as the Republic of South Africa is invariably referred
to. This number is balanced by the refugees from Mozambique and, latterly,
following recent disturbances, from the South African homelands, and though the
numbers are relatively small in comparison with, say, Malawi, they add pressure
on a country which, as it is, has one of the highest population growth rates in
the world.
Population growth: worrying implications
Swazilands economy has been growing at an average of 5 %
per annum for the past four years, but growth has only just kept ahead of the
increase in the population. In 1986, at the time of the last census, it was
estimated that 47.3 % of the population was under 15, a statistic which means
that the need to create employment, as well as the demands on the countrys
health and education systems, will be enormous challenges in the not-so-distant
future. In spite of the fact that the Ministry of Education is allotted 28% of
the Governments recurrent budget, its resources are still too limited to
allow for the building of new primary schools. Efforts are concentrated on the
construction of secondary schools, with the building of primary schools left to
parents, often with outside help. Funding for teachers houses is also
seriously lacking, but government is able only to pay for teachers
salaries, and recognisedly modest salaries at that. Parents contribute towards
the cost of schooling, including the payment of building fees, but, though
education is certainly prized, the financial burden can be very onerous indeed.
For rural families, it would almost certainly represent the largest single item
of expenditure and might absorb as much as 80% of a households cash
income. Some parents, particularly those who do not rely on the land for a
living, consciously limit the size of their families so as to be able to
continue educating their children. More often, however, particularly in rural
areas where children help with cultivation or herding (and this represents
nearly 80 % of the country), parents have to withdraw children from school
because the total costs of fees, books, uniforms, bus fares and so on simply
become too high.
Losses to greener pastures
The Minister of Education, Chief Sipho Shongwe, sees this lack
of funds as the overwhelming problem facing Swazilands education sector
today. He would like, he says, to see universal primary education, but the money
is not there. The inability to retain teachers is a further problem: turnover is
high, because the salaries are low, and housing often inadequate and
particularly because of the proximity of greener pastures where
teachers can get double or more the levels government can afford.
This drain on Swazi brainpower affects all levels of the
teaching profession, including university education. Professor Makhubu,
Vice-Chancellor of the University of Swaziland, lost professors to Transkei and
Bophuthatswana last year. The solution, she says, its of course to pay
competitive salaries, but it is a solution which is unworkable at present.
Another characteristic of the Swazi education system which
Minister Shongwe sees as a disadvantage has been its emphasis in the past on
academic achievement as opposed to practical, vocational achievement, geared to
the countrys manpower requirements. We have not only to, educate
, he stressed, but also to meet specific targets, and we have not,
in the past, met the expectations of the private sector. It is not that
vocational training establishments do not exist indeed there are some excellent
ones but that the numbers of graduates produced are insufficient to meet the
needs of a growing and modernising economy. Electricians, carpenters, welders
and mechanics are all in great demand, as are accountants, statisticians,
specialised lawyers, bookkeepers and the like. Professor Makhubu recognises that
she has to be ...a developmentalist, clued up on how the country is
going, in order to shape the University according to the needs of the
country, and to this end she plans to create a Business Studies faculty at
UNISWA, within the next two years, to respond to the undoubted demand of the
private sector. Fortunately Swazi/South African wage differentials are far less
pronounced in the private sector than in the public sector, so that the danger
of loss of these kinds of skills to other countries in the region is less great.
Approaching the mini-boo m with caution
The Swazi economy is, for a number of reasons, enjoying what the
Minister of Finance describes as a mini-boom. Export revenue levels
are high, due largely to steady production and healthy prices for the
traditional exports, sugar and woodpulp, and soft-drink concentrates (coca cola)
have entered the market as a major export earner. A new development is the
emergence of manufacturing as the dominant sector of the economy, now accounting
for 26% of GDP. Despite the substantial increase in foreign exchange reserves
the boom is being approached with characteristic prudence, born perhaps of long
experience of influential factors beyond the countrys control.
One such factor is the lilangeni, the national currency unit
which though officially de-linked from the South African rand, in fact remains
at parity with it. The effects of this are various, amongst which that Swaziland
imports South Africas inflation (now running at between
12-14% per annum) and that the countrys debt service payments have
increased. Elliot Bhembe, Acting Principal Secretary at the Department of
Economic Planning, admits that its difficult to plan a nations
economy when its currency is linked to that of a neighbour. But there is general
acceptance, even so, that the system has worked well for Swaziland. For one
thing, it has avoided considerable complications for trade. More than 80 % of
Swazilands imports come from fellow Southern African Customs Union (SACU)
countries - RSA, Botswana and Lesotho - and a large percentage of the
countrys exports (35-40%) go to South Africa. It is also attractive to
tourists, particularly South African tourists, who still constitute the largest
group, and, most importantly, it has meant that the lilangeni is, to all intents
and purposes, a convertible currency. Actual de-linking could become desirable,
nevertheless, if the investment climate in South Africa was to substantially
improve.
The backbone of Swazilands economy is, and always has
been, agriculture. It accounts for some 40% of exports, 23% of GDP and is by far
the largest employer. The countrys agricultural activities take two
distinct forms. Firstly, there is traditional, subsistence farming, whereby over
40 000 farmers are supported on smallholdings of less than three hectares on
Swazi Nation Land. Here, rainfed food crops are grown for family consumption,
with perhaps a little maize or cotton grown for sale. (Swazi Nation Land, which
makes up over half the countrys total land surface, is owned by the
monarch and held in trust for the nation). Secondly, on the remainder of the
rural land, are farms owned by individuals or companies and growing sugar cane,
pineapples, citrus fruits, cotton or tobacco. Here, the average holding is 800
hectares (though the largest sugar estate is more than 10 times this) and, while
land use is varied, the farms tend to be market-oriented and highly mechanised.
Cattle-breeding and herding is another major agricultural
activity: the country has a near 1:1 ratio of cattle to inhabitants - one of the
highest ratios in Africa. Only a small percentage of the sector is run along
commercial lines, however. As in much of Africa, cattle constitute capital;
quantity tends to take precedence over quality, and slaughter only to take place
on ceremonial occasions, or for ritual purposes or for family consumption. The
pattern is changing only slowly. At the 600 or so diptanks around the country,
through which herds have to pass weekly, the word is spread that there is money
to be made out of cattle farming... but that herds have to be younger and
heavier. The countrys abattoir, now upgraded and under new management,
could slaughter many more than the present 80 cattle a day, and there is, after
all, a market for the countrys beef in the form of the EECs 3 360
tons per annum - a target not yet being reached.
Sugar: major returns for government
The sugar industry is the countrys largest single employer
and although Swazilands three estates and mills, Mhlume, Simunye and
Ubombo, are all situated in the Lowveld, cutters are signed on for work from
throughout the country and brought to the estates for the duration of the
harvesting season. Labour is so plentiful and so relatively inexpensive that
Simunye, the newest of the estates, having been 60 % mechanised in its first
production year, has in fact now phased out mechanical harvesting altogether.
Production topped 500 000 tonnes in 1986, but has averaged 450 000 tonnes or so
for the past three years, and though further expansion of the estates would be
perfectly feasible, the quota marketing system rules it out. The lions
share of Swazilands production goes to the EEC, part of which - 117 845
tonnes of which, to be precise - at a guaranteed price under the terms of the
Sugar Protocol. Canada is also a major buyer. The estates, like many of
Swazilands large-scale agricultural and manufacturing enterprises,
particularly the highly sophisticated ones, tend to be managed and part-owned by
expatriate individuals or companies, but with the Swazi development corporation,
Tibiyo Taka Ngwane, as a major shareholder. Ubombo Ranches, for example, is 60 %
owned by Lonrho Corporation and 40 % by Tibiyo, meaning that the nation benefits
far more by the industry than by employment opportunities alone. Earnings could
be improved slightly, nevertheless, if the rail link to Maputo harbour could
again be normalised. Last year, because of poor security and unsatisfactory
rolling stock, the industry as a whole lost 10 000 tonnes of sugar between
Swaziland and the Mozambican terminal, and 50 % of production now takes the much
longer route to Durban, involving substantially higher transportation costs.
The same is true for what is now Swazilands second largest
industry and third biggest export earner, the timber and woodpulp industry,
whose transport costs rose by 18 % in 1989.
Forestry: a development success
Forests cover about 7 % of the countrys total land area,
and are an unusual feature in Southern Africa. The reason is that they are
largely man-made and are, in fact, amongst the largest man-made forests in the
world.
Swazilands forestry industry is the stuff of which
development dreams are made. Less than 50 years ago the hills of the Highveld
and parts of the Middleveld offered little but poor grazing to the Nguni cattle
and goats of the local inhabitants. In 1947, Peak Timbers, one of
Swazilands oldest commercial companies, began producing sawn timber and in
1949 the Commonwealth Development Corporation, seeing the potential for
forestry, embarked on a 50-million tree-planting programme. Peak Timbers is now
a major producer of logs and sawn timber and The Usutu Pulp Company, established
in 1961, aims to produce 180000 tonnes of pulp a year - nearly 20 % of total
world requirements at its mill on the Usutu River.
Local resources as basis for manufacture
There are spin-offs in the form of manufacturing, too. Pine
shelves are being produced for export by Swazi Timber Products, for example, a
fast-expanding company on the main industrial estate outside Manzini. In three
years, annual turnover has risen from E. 240 000 to E. 1 200 000, and the
workforce has increased from 80 to 250, with more to be taken on this year. The
company is of just the kind that the Minister for Commerce Industry and Tourism,
Senator Douglas Ntiwane, loves most . It is export-oriented,
heavily labour intensive and local resource-based, with no less than 98 % of its
raw materials of Swazi origin.
S.I.D.C., the national industrial development company, has had
considerable success in establishing such enterprises in the past four to five
years. After a slowish start, some 200 firms are now operating on the Matsapha
estate, ranging from small workshops to huge factories employing up to a
thousand workers. Growth has been so rapid in the late 1980s that existing
infrastructure on the estate needs not only repair but also considerable
expansion. South African-owned firms predominate, but there are also a number of
major Swazi-owned enterprises.
A healthy investment climate and genuine market advantages
Like its competitors in the region, Swaziland offers the usual
package of favourable leasing terms, tax holidays and other advantages to
investors, but, in the Ministers words, it also offers the true face
of a genuinely independent country, and one known for its political
stability. It has good communications, good labour relations and good market
access, including access to the European Community. The country is landlocked,
it is true, but Maputo (though admittedly a difficult route at present) is only
160 kilometres away, and road and rail links exist to the ports of Richards Bay
and Durban in South Africa. Such port access is vital, because most of the
industries at Matsapha are export-oriented. Indeed, with so small a domestic
market, they need to be. NATEX, the ultra-modern textile corporation, which uses
Swazi cotton, would take only four days production to clothe the entire
nation! Its Managing Director, Peter Jones, is certain that investing in
Swaziland makes good sense, particularly as opposed to investing in South
Africa, and this from a number of points of view. In the first place, while
there is great resistance to goods from South Africa in, for example,
Scandinavia, West Germany and the United States, Swaziland is very much an
acceptable source. (It has indeed benefited a certain amount from recent U.S.
disinvestment in South Africa). In the second place, labour costs are not only
very much lower, but labour relations are also very much smoother. Swaziland is
entirely free of the tribally-based industrial disputes that affect parts of
South Africa, and a firm like his, which operates 24 hours a day, 351 days a
year, would not expect to lose any production at all through industrial action,
he says, which in South Africa would be almost unthinkable.
Moreover, he adds, the government is very supportive. You are
made to feel that they want you and that they need you .
Lack of credit hampers expansion
Not all Swazilands manufacturing is as large or
technologically advanced as the big boys at Matsapha. On the outskirts of the
capital, Mbabane, is the SEDCO (Swaziland Enterprise Development Company)
estate, which houses a number of small and medium-sized enterprises. Some of the
businessmen or women who are established here, such as Mike and Thoko Mmema, who
now have 23 women working for them, making school uniforms, have found good
market niches, but find the estate too out-of-the-way. Others find the rent
high, and a common problem - which causes many of the smaller businesses to
stagnate unnecessarily - is the lack of credit. With out collateral, they are
unable to obtain bank loans, and government credit schemes on soft terms are not
yet available.
Infrastructure suffering from success
If the economy is working well, it is partly due to
Swazilands relatively well-functioning transport and communications
system, and if that system is now coming under increasing strain, it is
because... the economy is working well. Traffic volumes, especially on the road
between the two main towns, Mbabane and Manzini, which passes through Matsapha,
have built up considerably in the past two or three years. Some stretches are
carrying up to 14000 vehicles a day, and the congestion is such that the road
now badly needs upgrading, probably in the form of widening.
Swaziland has more vehicles per inhabitant by far than any other
SADCC country, but, in addition to its domestic traffic, it is a transit state
for goods travelling in both north-south and east-west directions.
Rehabilitation of the Matsapha-Goba railway line, to and from the Mozambique
border, is under study and would link up with a similar project on the
Mozambican side of the line. Infrastructure and communications, because of their
role in attracting investment and in keeping the economy growing, are given high
priority by government and get a handsome share of the budget. But major capital
expenditure almost always requires some outside finance. The African Development
Bank is a major funder of road projects, and the World Bank has been
substantially involved in the past, though is less so now. The Works and
Communications Ministry is hoping that the EEC will provide funds for the
rehabilitation of the Matsapha-Mozambique line, as well as for the
Mbabane-Manzini road upgrading, and that it will extend its assistance to the
development of the airport.
Passenger traffic in Matsapha, the main airport, now stands at
80 000 or so annually, and has increased fourfold in the past 20 years. Long
gone are the days when, if the air traffic controller was momentarily absent, a
total ing - perhaps a cleaner - would answer overflying aircraft with a few
set phrases, learnt parrot fashion. Nowadays there is a modern control tower,
with sophisticated radio and navigational equipment, and expert controllers. The
runway, 2600 metres long, is designed for the 737s typically used in regional
traffic, but it can take larger cargo carriers. Freight volumes are low,
however, because handling facilities are inadequate and apron space limited.
Preliminary discussions are under way regarding the financing of further work on
the airport (enlarging the apron and the terminal buildings) from LomV
national and regional funds. If all goes according to plan, the improved
facilities should be in place by 1994.
Tourism: steady growth
One sector that will benefit from the improvements will be
tourism, because more apron space will mean more flights being able to be
scheduled. Not that Swaziland is ever likely to become a one-stop destination
for European or other long-distance tourists, but its attraction as part of a
Southern African tour (combined with the nearby Kruger Park) is already well
established. It holds attractions for the up-market traveller, including
comfort, peacefulness and golf, and for the adventure-holidayer, and offers
ample accommodation for both categories, and for many categories in between.
Casinos exist, but the image of Swaziland as a refuge for afficinados of all
that was outlawed in South Africa is a thing of the past. As would be expected,
most of its visitors are from South Africa. The Sun Group, South African-owned,
but in which Tibiyo has a major shareholding, runs three large hotels in the
Ezulwini Valley, making up three-quarters of the countrys total hotel
accommodation. Over 1200 people are employed in the Suns? and probably 2000 or
so work in hotels and guest houses throughout the country. Many more are partly
or indirectly supported in ancilliary services or in the handicrafts industry,
for example, which produces attractive and good qualitity baskets, candles,
pottery, glassware and much else for tourists, as well as for export. Government
supports the development of the industry, even if it has not always been as
dynamic as the private sector would have liked. It has just agreed, for example,
to issue visas to visitors from EEC countries not enjoying visa exemption at
border posts, free of charge, which will reduce delays and encourage greater
numbers of arrivals. Another initiative which Minister Ntiwane hopes to bring
into being, is a tourist village, a representation of a traditional
Swazi homestead at which visitors could not only see and understand the daily
pattern of rural life, but could also witness, year round, the highly
spectacular traditional dances such as sibhaca, umbholoho and the umhlanga (Reed
Dance) that are now to be seen, in their traditional context, perhaps only once
a year.
There is a paragraph in this magazines last country report
on Swaziland, written in 1985, which now makes rather interesting reading. It
concerns the countrys (then) future economic outlook, and reads as
follows: The Department of Economic Planning and Statistics... forecasts
real growth to rise by only 0.8% in the period 1984-90, because the factors that
enabled earlier growth are unlikely to come into play. Happily, this
forecast (based largely on projected developments in the sugar, woodpulp and
fertiliser industries) has turned out to be quite inaccurate, and proves what
the Department nowadays readily admits: that there is high risk in even
medium-term economic forecasting at a time, and in a place, where coefficients
can change so radically, so swiftly.
Possibly this has never been so true for Swaziland as now.
Political, economic and social change in South Africa, such as that now
gathering momentum, is bound to have major repercussions on Swazilands
economy. So, too, could change for the better in Mozambiques economy,
which was once a powerful force in the region, since greater regional security
would ease the refugee problem and would bring obvious benefits to trade through
improved transport links. But on whether the changes would benefit Swaziland in
both the short and the long term, opinion is divided. Investment opportunities
might well be lost to South Africa, and Swazilands customs revenues would
decrease, but it might also be the case that the country would be carried along
in the general upturn that the regions economy would be likely to
experience. Whatever the outcome, these changes are still a few years off, and
the Swaziland government has time to refine and bring into sharper focus its
overall development strategy. To continue improving the investment climate will
surely be a pillar of that strategy, and one which carries few risks: it will
pay dividends in both the worst case and the best case
scenarios.
Swazis tend to refer to South Africa as greener pastures
, particularly in the context of higher wages for certain trades and
professions. But the term, in any other context, is surely debatable. Swaziland
after all, has a stable and widely supported form of government, a people
undivided by language or ethnic origin, a fertile soil or, at least, a not
infertile one-and, of late, a prospering economy too. Its pastures, both
literally and figuratively, are at present pretty green themselves.
Myfanwy VAN DE
VELDE