NDS2 sets tough economic, governance targets to 2030

The launching of the National Development Strategy 2 (NDS2) in Harare yesterday signals a new phase in Zimbabwe’s long-term reform agenda, as government sharpens its focus on turning Vision 2030 from a policy slogan into measurable, time-bound targets. Building on the economic recalibration that began in 2017 under President Emmerson Dambudzo Mnangagwa, NDS2 is being framed as the roadmap that must carry Zimbabwe across the final stretch toward upper-middle-income status by 2030.

Unlike broad political pronouncements, NDS2 comes with specific numbers and benchmarks that will test both the discipline of government and the resilience of the economy. The framework targets an annual economic growth rate of 5 percent, budget deficits kept below 3 percent of GDP, and domestic revenue above 20 percent of GDP by 2030. These figures speak to a push for macroeconomic stability, protection of the local currency, and inflation that remains within a manageable band. In essence, stability is being treated as the foundation on which inclusive growth and structural transformation must rest.

Industrialisation and value addition sit at the centre of the new strategy. Government is positioning NDS2 as a pivot away from raw commodity dependence toward a more modern, diversified productive base. Priority is being placed on value addition and beneficiation of agricultural output and mineral resources, as well as rural industrialisation that links remote communities to national value chains. Investments are earmarked for key economic enablers such as energy, transport, ICT, water, and sanitation infrastructure. The ambitious target of delivering one million housing units by 2030 further reflects a desire to combine economic expansion with tangible social outcomes.

Food and nutrition security remain non-negotiable pillars of the strategy. In the face of climate shocks and recurrent droughts, NDS2 stresses climate-smart agriculture and environmental protection as tools to stabilise food systems and protect vulnerable communities. At the same time, science, technology, digital innovation, and human capital development are highlighted as levers for lifting productivity. The strategy makes it clear that education, digitalisation, and research must no longer operate at the periphery of development, but become central drivers of competitiveness.

NDS2 also responds to a global and domestic crisis of unemployment. By putting emphasis on job creation, entrepreneurship development, and support for the creative industries, sport, and culture, the plan acknowledges that growth without jobs will not be sustainable. Under this approach, the creative economy and sports sector are no longer treated as side activities, but as meaningful contributors to livelihoods, identity, and economic diversification.

Devolution and social justice are woven into the strategy as governance and equity anchors. NDS2 underscores the strengthening of provincial and local structures, social development, gender mainstreaming, and social protection systems. The underlying message is that national development must be territorially balanced and socially inclusive, ensuring that no region or group is left behind as the country pursues upper-middle-income status.

On the external front, government is tying NDS2 to efforts to improve Zimbabwe’s international image, enhance competitiveness, and deepen trade and investment flows. This outward-looking dimension is linked to internal governance reforms, institutional strengthening, and a stated commitment to transparency, accountability, and zero tolerance for corruption. In this sense, the strategy recognises that investor confidence and international credibility are shaped as much by governance quality as by resource endowment.

Ultimately, NDS2 is being positioned as more than a planning document; it is a test of implementation capacity and political will. The ambitious targets on growth, revenue, jobs, infrastructure, and governance will require consistent policy execution, credible institutions, and sustained citizen engagement. If effectively implemented, the strategy could accelerate Zimbabwe’s transition toward an upper-middle-income economy by 2030. If not, it risks becoming another well-written plan that fell short at the level of practice.

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