SANF 26 no 02 by Munetsi Madakufamba, Policy Analyst
For more than four decades, relations between India and Zimbabwe have been marked by a quiet consistency. Built on shared history and political solidarity, the partnership has endured shifts in global alignments, economic cycles, and domestic transitions in both countries. Diplomatically, it works. There is regular engagement, mutual respect, and a steady exchange of visits and agreements.
Economically, however, the picture is less convincing.
Trade exists, but it remains modest relative to potential. Investment is visible, but its impact is uneven. The relationship, in short, is stable but underperforming. This gap between political intent and economic outcome is not new, but it has become more difficult to ignore — particularly as both countries enter phases of economic change that should, in principle, bring them closer together.
The question is no longer whether India and Zimbabwe have a basis for deeper cooperation. They do. The more pressing question is why that cooperation has not yet translated into structural economic gains — and what would need to change for it to do so.
A Trade Relationship That Reveals More Than It Delivers
At first glance, the trade relationship appears straightforward. Zimbabwe exports tobacco, minerals, and a small range of agricultural products to India. In return, it imports pharmaceuticals, machinery, vehicles, and industrial inputs. There is nothing unusual about this pattern. It reflects differences in industrial capacity and stages of development.
But beneath this simplicity lies a more consequential imbalance.
Zimbabwe’s exports are largely unprocessed. They leave the country at the lowest point of the value chain, capturing minimal economic value. India’s exports, by contrast, are diversified and manufactured, reflecting multiple stages of processing, technology, and scale. The result is not just a trade deficit — though that exists, typically exceeding US$100 million annually over the last 10 years — but a deeper asymmetry in how value is created and retained.
This matters because trade, in its current form, reinforces rather than reduces structural inequality. Zimbabwe supplies inputs. India supplies finished products. One extracts; the other transforms.
Even if trade volumes were to double under this model, the outcome would remain broadly the same. More exports of raw materials would generate additional revenue, but without changing Zimbabwe’s position in the value chain. The imbalance would persist, simply at a higher scale.
The problem, then, is not trade itself. It is the structure of trade.
The Limits of Incremental Gains
There is a tendency in policy discussions to focus on expanding exports as an end in itself. And to some extent, this is understandable. Zimbabwe has clear opportunities to increase exports to India, particularly in agriculture. The Indian market is large, growing, and in need of products that Zimbabwe can produce — pulses, citrus, nuts, and other high-value crops.
Yet these opportunities, while real, have remained largely underexploited. The reasons are not difficult to identify. Market access is uneven. Standards and certification requirements are not always aligned. Supply chains are fragmented. Perhaps most importantly, there is limited coordination between producers, exporters, and buyers.
But even if these constraints were addressed, export expansion alone would not resolve the deeper issue. It would improve foreign exchange earnings and support rural incomes, which are important outcomes. But it would not fundamentally alter the structure of the relationship.
There is a ceiling to what commodity exports can achieve. They are subject to price volatility, constrained by production cycles, and limited in their capacity to generate broad-based industrial growth. Beyond a certain point, they stabilise an economy — but they do not transform it.
Investment That Stops Short of Transformation
A similar pattern can be observed in investment flows.
Indian firms have established a presence in Zimbabwe across sectors such as manufacturing, agro-processing, and mining. Cumulative investment is estimated at around US$600 million, spread across hundreds of projects. This is not insignificant. It reflects a degree of confidence and long-term commitment.
And yet, the developmental impact of this investment has been uneven.
In many cases, projects operate in isolation, with limited integration into local supply chains. Backward linkages to domestic suppliers are weak. Forward linkages into export markets are often absent. Technology transfer, where it occurs, tends to be narrow and firm-specific rather than systemic.
The result is economic activity without structural change. Jobs are created, but often at the lower end of the skills spectrum. Output increases, but without significant spillovers into the wider economy.
This is not a criticism of investors as much as it is a reflection of the environment in which they operate. Without a framework that encourages integration — through policy incentives, infrastructure support, and institutional coordination — investment will tend toward stand-alone projects rather than ecosystem development.
In effect, the relationship has remained transactional. Capital flows in, goods flow out, but the underlying structure of production remains largely unchanged.
The Missing Middle — Where Transformation Should Happen
What is missing is not opportunity, but a layer of cooperation that sits between trade and investment — a space where production, processing, and value addition take place.
This is where industrial partnerships come in.
For Zimbabwe, the challenge is not a lack of resources. It is the limited capacity to process those resources domestically. Minerals are exported before beneficiation. Agricultural products are sold before processing. Manufactured goods are imported rather than produced locally.
India, by contrast, has built its economic strength on precisely these stages of production. Its experience in pharmaceuticals, agro-processing, light manufacturing, and small-scale industry is not just advanced — it is also adaptable. It has developed systems that function in environments where infrastructure is uneven, capital is constrained, and small enterprises play a central role.
This alignment is not accidental. It is structural.
The opportunity, therefore, is to move from a model of exchange to one of co-production. Instead of exporting raw tobacco and importing finished cigarettes, Zimbabwe could participate in processing stages. Instead of importing pharmaceuticals, it could produce them locally under licensing or joint ventures. Instead of exporting minerals in raw form, it could develop beneficiation capacity that captures more value before export.
These are not abstract possibilities. They are practical pathways that have been pursued in other contexts, often with Indian participation.
But they require a shift in approach — from seeing trade and investment as separate activities to treating them as part of a single industrial strategy.
Why India Matters in This Equation
India’s relevance to Zimbabwe is not just about scale. It is about fit.
In many sectors, the technologies and business models developed in India are more suited to Zimbabwe’s economic conditions than those from more advanced industrial economies. They are generally more cost-effective, less capital-intensive, and better adapted to environments where infrastructure constraints are a reality.
This is particularly evident in areas such as pharmaceuticals, where India has built a global reputation for producing affordable generic medicines, and in agriculture, where its experience with smallholder systems offers useful parallels.
There is also a financial dimension. India’s development financing, including concessional lines of credit, tends to come with longer repayment periods and fewer conditions than many commercial alternatives. When aligned with national priorities, this can support both infrastructure and industrial development.
But perhaps most importantly, India’s own development trajectory offers a model of gradual, sector-specific industrialisation. It is not a perfect model, nor is it directly transferable. But it provides a reference point that is closer to Zimbabwe’s starting position than many others.
Where the Impact Would Be Felt Most
The sectors where this partnership could make the most difference are not difficult to identify, and they are not theoretical.
Agriculture is the most immediate. Expanding exports to India would support farmers, increase incomes, and strengthen rural economies. But the larger opportunity lies in agro-processing — turning raw produce into higher-value goods that can be sold both domestically and regionally.
Pharmaceuticals offer a different kind of impact. Local production would reduce dependence on imports, improve supply security, and over time lower costs. In a country where access to affordable healthcare remains uneven, this is not a marginal issue.
Mining, long central to Zimbabwe’s economy, presents the clearest case for value addition. Beneficiation is not just about increasing export revenue. It is about creating jobs, building skills, and developing industries that extend beyond extraction.
Then there is energy.
Zimbabwe’s energy constraints are well known, but their economic implications are often underestimated. Unreliable power supply increases production costs, disrupts operations, and discourages investment. It is a constraint that cuts across all sectors.
Here, India’s experience in renewable energy — particularly solar — offers a practical avenue for cooperation. Decentralised systems, mini-grids, and battery storage can provide more reliable power, especially in industrial zones. Over time, this reduces costs and supports the kind of industrial activity that value addition requires.
These sectors are not just economically significant. They are socially visible. They affect how people work, what they earn, and what they can access.
The Institutional Constraint
If the opportunities are this clear, why have they not been realised?
Part of the answer lies in institutions.
The mechanisms designed to coordinate bilateral engagement have not functioned consistently. The Joint Permanent Commission, which should serve as the central platform for aligning policy and monitoring implementation, has not met for decades. Other forms of engagement exist, but they tend to be ad hoc and lack continuity.
This creates a familiar pattern. Agreements are signed. Commitments are made. But follow-through is uneven.
At the same time, businesses on both sides operate with limited information about each other’s markets. Concerns about contract enforcement and reliability further complicate engagement. These are not headline issues, but they matter. Trade and investment depend on trust as much as they do on policy.
Without institutional coherence, even well-designed strategies struggle to gain traction.
A Strategic Window
Despite these challenges, the timing for a reset may be better than it appears. India’s economy continues to expand, with growing demand for raw materials and intermediate goods. At the same time, global supply chains are shifting, creating space for new production hubs.
Zimbabwe, for its part, is seeking to reposition itself as an industrial and logistics hub within southern Africa. Its membership in regional and continental trade frameworks provides access to markets far beyond its borders.
This creates a convergence of interests.
Manufacturing in Zimbabwe is not just about serving the domestic market. It is about accessing the wider Southern African region and, increasingly, the African continent. This speaks to the Southern African Development Community (SADC) market, and the 54-member African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCTA) with 1.3 billion consumers. For Indian firms, this offers a way to combine local production with regional reach.
But this window is not indefinite. Other countries are making similar pitches, often with more developed infrastructure and clearer policy frameworks.
Opportunity, in this sense, is competitive.
From Intent to Execution – What would a different approach look like?
It would begin with a recognition that expanding trade is not enough. The focus would shift toward restructuring trade — toward increasing the share of value-added goods, developing industrial partnerships, and integrating production systems.
In practical terms, this means pursuing immediate gains in sectors like agriculture, while simultaneously investing in longer-term industrial capacity. It means aligning investment with national priorities, rather than treating it as an end in itself. It means strengthening institutions, not by creating new ones, but by making existing ones work.
Above all, it means prioritising execution.
The relationship between India and Zimbabwe does not suffer from a lack of ideas. It suffers from a gap between intention and implementation.
Closing that gap will require sustained coordination, clearer incentives, and a willingness to move beyond incremental change. It will also require a shift in mindset — from viewing the partnership as a series of transactions to seeing it as a shared process of economic transformation.
A Partnership at a Turning Point
India and Zimbabwe are not starting from scratch. The foundations of their relationship are solid, built on history, trust, and a degree of mutual understanding.
What has been missing is not goodwill, but structure.
The next phase of the partnership will not be defined by the number of agreements signed or the volume of trade recorded. It will be defined by whether those interactions translate into factories, supply chains, and industries that create value on both sides.
That is the difference between a relationship that works — and one that delivers. sardc.net
(2076 words)