Thinktank inspired by Perestroika (restructuring) & Glasnost (openness), committed to challenging outdated systems, embracing change and fostering open dialogue
@nickmangwana Zim’s best brains leave the country because there is little room for them to grow, no jobs, no opportunities, no nothing. Their skills end up developing other countries.
More cars and bigger houses does not mean the whole country is doing well. Real development is when ordinary people can find good jobs, afford food, pay school fees, get proper healthcare, have reliable electricity and water. If life was truly better for most Zimbas, so many people would not still be leaving the country to look for opportunities elsewhere.
@paultungwarara We have heard these investment announcements for years, yet the only person who seems to be getting richer is you. Ordinary ctizens still waiting for jobs and better living standards.
@matinyarare Lets not confuse proximity to power with business success. This is just privileged access to gvt contracts and political connections. Not long ago, his whole family used to live off the garage.
@CMukungunugwa Voluntary help is welcome, but it should never replace government responsibility. Those flats were built by the colonial gvt in the 1940s. Should have been maintained long ago
Macroeconomic stability means little if ordinary Zimbos are still struggling with high prices, low wages and unemployment. Real measure of success is jobs, industrial growth, and better living standards, not praise based on distorted fiscal and macroeconomic metrics. Real reform is judged by people's daily lives, not by statistics alone.
@nickmangwana The real test is whether these graduates find decent jobs, revive closed industries and build competitive businesses.After 46 years of independence, every skilled young Zimbabwean should have a future at home, not be forced to look for one abroad or across borders
@edmnangagwa Good ideas deserve support, but real development is about results, not ribbon cutting. Zimbabweans want factories that produce, create real jobs and stay open.
Nobody hates success. We question a system where a few flaunt luxury while millions struggle. The goal is an economy where every family can afford their own holiday through honest opportunity, not one where prosperity depends on political connections or funding from political baby daddies like in your case.
@paultungwarara 2030 should be about serious structural reform, not symbolism. The best gift Zimbabweans need is jobs, revived industries and broad based economic growth. A nation prospers when opportunity reaches everyone, vakomana, not just a few.
Law and order are important. But the real solution is to fix the system, create jobs, revive industries and employ these vendors. Also Harare should be allowed to directly elect its own mayor, as many major cities around the world do. Strong cities need both democracy and good governance.
@wicknellchivayo Happy birthday to him. But the best gift Zimbabweans need is jobs, working factories and a strong economy. A nation grows when opportunities reach everyone, not just a few
@matinyarare The question is not whether government deserves all the praise or all the blame. The real question is whether Zimbabwe's economy is creating broad-based prosperity for ordinary citizens.
@nickmangwana Best way to honour the liberation struggle is to build a better future, not just celebrate the past. That war ended 46 years ago. It's time to focus less on the past and more on reviving industries, creating jobs and rebuilding the economy.
@nickmangwana Focus should be on creating a country where people can actually build a life when they come back. Through a stronger economy, fair and honest leadership plus business environment that gives investors the confidence to create jobs