Zimbabwe COVID-19 Poverty Monitor: May 2022

How is COVID-19 impacting people living in, or at risk of, poverty in Zimbabwe? What policies are needed to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on chronic poverty? CPAN’s COVID-19 Poverty Monitor is an ongoing research project that interviews people about their experiences of the pandemic. To find out more about the project, visit our blog about the global project. This bulletin dives into the main economic, health, food security and other concerns of those interviewed, as well as policies to minimise the impacts of COVID-19 suggested by the respondents.


Post-lockdown recovery

By early 2022 the lockdown in Zimbabwe eased as the threat of COVID-19 declined (Pindula news. 6 April 2022), with the situation returning to a ‘new normal’. This brought improved well-being for many. The impact of the lockdowns on people’s access to basic services lessened, declining from 21% in 2020 to 14% in 2021. Restrictions in agricultural markets have declined also, from 13% in 2020 to 10% in 2021 (2021 Rural Livelihood Assessment Report).

Income poverty remains high, and many people are extremely poor, although extreme poverty has fallen from a high of 49% in 2020 to 43% in 2021. Infant and maternal mortality rates have also fallen, educational attainment has improved, access to basic services has expanded and asset ownership has increased (ZIMSTAT and World Bank (2022). Zimbabwe Poverty Assessment: Core Poverty Diagnostics. Powerpoint presentation, March 7, 2022).

Thambo, 86, who is in the poor wellbeing group (see Table on wellbeing categories and characteristics), who lives with his orphaned grandchildren in Tsholotsho was relieved that access to healthcare services had improved: 

“Since lockdown restrictions were loosened, it has become possible to travel to clinics and hospitals. Drugs are also now easier to access, even from omalayisha (informal transporters) since travel and courier services are slowly normalising.” Thambo, 86, poor well-being group, Tsholotsho

Thambo added that public gatherings for learning, social, economic, religious, and political purposes are now allowed. “Groups can now gather for all sorts of legal activities. This is good for developmental work, social and moral support of all our community members.”

Thenjiwe, a 55-year-old builder from Tsholotsho (poor wellbeing group), was enthusiastic about improved access to shops, markets, and services. “Yes, our little world has reopened so services have since become available near us.”

Bruce, a 50-year-old farmer and horticulturalist was relieved that things were getting better, back to pre-COVID-19 levels.

Due to the relaxation of the lockdown, I am now able to access the Manhenga market to sell some farm produce and fresh vegetables. My income has since improved as compared to last year when all the markets were closed.” Bruce, 50, vulnerable but not poor well-being group, Bindura.

His life has transformed, and he is living better. He can now afford three meals per day with bread and eggs at breakfast, and sadza (maize meal porridge) and meat two to three times a week.

Those challenges are things of the past and I can now afford some little things that I could not buy during the time that we last spoke (the first-round interview in November 2021). The price of farm inputs is very high.” Bruce, 50, vulnerable but not poor well-being group, Bindura.


Groups at risk of impoverishment due to the COVID-19 pandemic

Recovery in well-being has not been experienced evenly, with some failing to see their well-being bounce back as lockdown restrictions relax. Many still face further impoverishment. Unemployment and underemployment are widespread. Hyperinflation was mentioned by almost every sentinel household, whatever their wealth status, as reducing their standard of living. It worsens the effect of the pandemic and bites deeply into household budgets. Widespread livestock diseases have also had a profoundly negative effect. Downward mobility from these shocks has been compounded by the impact of climate change, experienced through cyclones, more frequent droughts, and rain variability, with negative impacts on livelihoods, food security and resilience.

Semi-skilled workers (formal and informal sector)

  • Urban workers: increased risk, with rising inflation alongside depressed salaries and widespread job losses.

  • Borrowers: widespread indebtedness, with households borrowing to survive during the pandemic now falling into arrears. This is particularly acute in urban areas, where residents have accrued rental and utility debts. 

  • Urban households: many have failed to recover from job losses triggered by COVID-19 lockdowns (including factory workers, informal traders, bus conductors, drivers, and hairdressers). Some have moved into adverse forms of coping, such as reduced food, distress migration and transactional sex.

  • Business owners: nearly one in five rural households reported a drop in business income as one of the effects of Covid-19 in 2021.

Women

  • Women headed households: the flow of remittances reduced or stopped at the start of the pandemic, particularly affecting de facto women-headed households. In Zimbabwe, two in every five households were female-headed. Remittances are increasing slowly but from a low base. Many international migrants lost their jobs and are struggling to find new ones, particularly as the rise in xenophobia in South Africa increases the challenges of the job search.

  • Female cross-borders traders: not yet returned to the former level of well-being, as borders have only recently re-opened and traders need to re-establish their trading links, which had largely broken down over the past two years.

Youth (15-35 years)

  • NEETs: 45% of young people (aged 15-24) were not in employment, education, or training (NEET) (ZIMSTAT (2020). 2019 Labour Force Child Labour Survey report.  Zimbabwe National Statistics Agency (ZIMSTAT), Harare, Zimbabwe).

  • Secondary school children: High drop-out rates amongst secondary school children, with reduced interest in education and many opting to work and contribute to household welfare instead.

  • Children from poor households: Reduced household incomes mean that many parents are unable to pay fees and other school and college expenses. Some have fallen into arrears, putting their children’s school places in jeopardy. 

  • Unemployed youth: Unemployment has increased, particularly amongst the youth, who are struggling to find work and build up an asset base. A young person’s first job is hugely important, potentially setting their path in life, and the longer they are unemployed, the harder it is to find high-quality employment.

  • Drug and alcohol users: Drug and alcohol use is increasing, as youth seek to cope. 


Areas of concern for the poorest and potential impoverishment

Ranking of self-reported impacts

The biggest changes that people in Zimbabwe said the pandemic had made to their lives were:

  • Loss of educational opportunities for children

  • Reduced household income as a result of lockdown restrictions.  

Lost education: Missed learning was cited by many people, including the poorest, as the worst consequence of the pandemic. Many children missed almost two years of schooling due to the lockdowns. Poor and rural children have been the worst affected by reduced learning outcomes, as access to online learning was limited, further entrenching inequalities.

“Only urban learners of better off classes could afford virtual learning, but the contrary is true with our rural folk.” Thambo, 86, woman, Tsholotsho, poor well-being group.

“How many parents even own smart gadgets or laptops. That approach was never practical for 99% of us.” Thulani, 37, woman, Tsholotsho, resilient well-being group

Unaffordable education: Nicole, a vegetable vendor in Bulawayo explains how COVID-19 affected her children’s education:

The most important impact on my household has been the gap in learning that my children suffered because of not attending school. I feel that I have failed as a parent because I had no income at that time and so could not afford to pay for the children to do extra lessons. The charges were US$10 per child, per month, on average. This meant that for my three children to learn I would have had to pay US$30 a month, which I did not have. In addition, I could not afford the ICT gadgets that were a requirement for the children to do online learning.” Nicole, 40, woman, poor well-being group, Bulawayo.

Indebtedness: When schools re-opened in mid-February 2022, many parents did not have the savings to pay school fees. Others, with accumulated debts from previous years, were barred from sending their children back to school until the debts were cleared. Thenjiwe, a 55-year-old builder in Tsholotsho (poor well-being group), laments: “The children are back at school though we still have not paid school fees to date,” so, his children cannot attend. However, people place such value on education that some reported clearing arrears and paying the new term’s school fees so that their children could return to school even while the family was so severely food constrained that they were surviving on only one meal a day.

Reduction in income

Job losses and reduced remittances. Job losses were also triggered by border closures and reduced business revenues.

“Ever since the outbreak of the novel virus, a lot of our children have lost jobs in the diaspora, in particular in South Africa and Botswana.” Very poor well-being group, Tsholotsho.

Income Losses: The lockdown drastically reduced household incomes across study sites and across income and livelihood groups, reducing people’s quality of life. Many households are recovering, slowly, but are struggling to regain their former standard of living. ZIMVAC found that around half of all rural households experienced reduced sources of income and a loss of employment (52% in 2020, 48% in 2021). Reduced discretionary spending squeezes retail and service sector profits and this trend continues as hyperinflation compounds the impacts of COVID-19.

Limited freedom of movement to search for job opportunities, particularly in the context of lockdowns, impaired the ability of households to respond to income shocks.

The pandemic dried up my income sources, namely remittances and petty trading. My children lost their jobs during the pandemic and limited movements made it difficult for my daughter to venture into any other income generating activities.” Destitute/extreme poor well-being group, Chitungwiza.

Increased business costs: Social distancing meant that markets closed. Brenda, an informal trader in Bindura (vulnerable but not poor well-being group) explained that market closures and travel restrictions ruined her business because rather than source goods herself, she had to pay for runners to go and order goods for her from Mutare and Harare and bribe the police to let them travel, despite the restrictions. This slashed her profits, but her business survived, and she is now rebuilding it to pre-COVID levels.

Retreat into subsistence: Some farm households have withdrawn from markets in the face of hyperinflation, retaining produce for self-provisioning.


Shocks and disasters overlapping with COVID-19

A number of other shocks and disasters overlaid the COVID-19 pandemic shocks (hyperinflation, indebtedness, distress migration, food insecurity, health and social shocks, livestock disease, as well as weather-related shocks) seriously affecting wellbeing and reducing household’s ability to cope.

Economic shocks

Hyperinflation was ranked as the most important shock, affecting all four study sites, both rural and urban, and by all wellbeing groups. At the beginning of 2022, ordinary people were alarmed by the skyrocketing prices of basic goods and services and the worsening exchange rate. These are driving up the cost of living and eroding households’ purchasing power. Many have lost the value of their savings. Salaries and pensions are nearly worthless. ZIMVAC found that the most prevalent shock in 2021 was cash shortage (experienced by 57% of households).

The local currency, known as RTGS or Zimbabwe dollars, is fast losing its value against other currencies. Retailers prefer to deal in United States Dollars ($) or South African Rand and “charge commodities a notch higher if they were being purchased with the RTGS”.

Brian in Bindura complained that business owners are still short-changing them by charging exorbitant prices using parallel market rates (currently Zimbabwe is using multiple currencies with official and parallel exchange rates), which are beyond the reach of an ordinary person in the rural areas. He gave an example of increases in the price of a bottle of cooking oil from $4 in November 2021 to $4.80 in March 2022 and $1 for a loaf of bread in November 2021 to $1.2 in March 2022. In RTGS values, cooking oil increased from about RTGS 450 in December 2021 to RTGS 1,000 in March 2022. (Poor well-being group, Bindura).

Hyperinflation drives up the cost of urban residential rents and utilities every month. Nicole of Bulawayo commented that her well-being was being affected by inflation and the dramatic increase in the cost of her water bill. (Poor well-being group, Bulawayo).

Food and non-food groceries have skyrocketed. 500 Rand could buy way more before Covid-19 than it can now.” Thambo, poor well-being group, Tsholotsho.

Hyperinflation is driving up the cost of health care and school fees so that an increasing proportion of the population, including the previously non-poor, are unable to meet their basic needs.

Indebtedness increased during the pandemic amongst non-poor households (vulnerable but not poor, and in a few cases, resilient households) as well as amongst the poor (refer to Wellbeing Categories and Characteristics). Many urban households struggled to both buy food and pay rent and fell into rent and utility bill arrears.

Nkosana in Bulawayo was unable to pay his rent on time during the lockdown. This affected his relationship with his landlord, who became antagonistic and threatened to evict him. The situation has improved again, as he has gradually managed to resume regular rental payments. (Poor well-being group, Bulawayo).

Charity, an 81-year-old widow in Chitungwiza, has been in arrears for more than 10 months now. She is afraid that her household will have to return to living in the rural areas if the council evict her because of rent arrears. (Destitute/extreme poor well-being group, Chitungwiza)

Distress migration: Distress migration is a drastic coping strategy. An estimated three million Zimbabweans lived abroad in 2015, and that number is almost certainly higher today. It usually involves one or more household members seeking work in another country and sending remittances to support the people they have left behind. This coping and risk spreading strategy are common in Zimbabwe, especially in regions of low agricultural potential, such as Matabeleland.

The research found that the dire economic situation has driven many to migrate.  Nkosana, a 42-year-old man in Bulawayo (poor wellbeing category) says his wife has been pushed by falling household income to leave to look for work in South Africa. She has not been able to remit any money to help with household expenses yet. Nkosana complains that this is effectively a breakdown of the family unit, and it has greatly affected the children, as he cannot play the role of mother as well and his older children have had to take on the responsibility of looking after their younger siblings. (Poor well-being group, Bulawayo).

In Bindura, Beauty a 65-year-old widow (poor wellbeing category) indicated that both of her children had migrated. Her son is back at work in Mozambique, while her daughter is looking for a job in Zambia. Her son regularly sends his mother kapenta (tiny, dried fish, Tanganyika sardine), which she sells, making the income that she lives on (poor well-being group, Bindura).

Charity, an 81-year-old widow, lives with her daughter and grandchildren in Chitungwiza. Her son lost his job in South Africa during the pandemic and is struggling to earn money. This means the money he sends back is irregular, having a negative impact on their household. For example, her grandchildren had to delay returning to school for two weeks as their parents did not have enough money to pay school fees.

Christine, who lives in Chitungwiza, has a grandson living in South Africa. He used to send regular remittances but now he sometimes fails to send them anything at all. She understands that he is under pressure. The company he worked for downsized, and he is married now and has to use his disposable income to provide for his new family in South Africa. Christine lives with her six other orphaned grandchildren, and is now destitute, in the extremely poor wellbeing category. She has limited the number of meals they have a day and reduced the quality of food they eat. They cannot afford to eat meat. Christine is worried that the children may suffer from malnutrition.

Rural-urban links under pressure: Rural-urban linkages are a strong feature of Zimbabwean life, with many urban residents having a rural base. There are also high levels of internal migration, with an extended family spread over a wide geographic area, working in different livelihoods. This spreads risk and enables diversified sources of income across the network. There are two-way support systems between rural and urban areas with rural residents providing food, in particular maize, beans, groundnuts and pumpkins to urban family members, especially when they produce a bumper crop. When the rural side of the family is struggling, from drought or another shock, the urban-based members send help. During the pandemic, the shock was so widespread that it overwhelmed these traditional safety nets, and family members could no longer provide the traditional support to other members. This resulted in desperation, where some households were pushed to adopt adverse coping such as distress migration out of the country, borrowing, begging and transactional sex.

Nathan (31) a self-employed mobile phone repairer lives alone in Bulawayo (vulnerable but not poor well-being group). His income has fallen, with negative consequences for his rural extended family as he can no longer afford to send them groceries or money. This has affected his relationship with them. Nathan thinks that his parents feel that “the city life has swallowed him, and he has abandoned them”.

Nonthandazo and her husband are based in Bulawayo (vulnerable but not poor well-being group). Although they are not poor, hardships from the Covid-19 lockdowns pushed Nonthandazo to migrate to their rural home for a short time, to reduce their spending on food.

The challenge of not being able to work affected both me and my husband. On my part, I had to move back to our rural home in order to engage in farming. At first, it was difficult for me to adjust to rural life because I was now used to city life. I gradually adjusted although it was difficult to live far away from my children and home.”

Some whole households undertook urban-rural migration to reduce household spending, particularly on food and rent. Rural extended family networks facilitate such moves by, for example, providing a plot of land so that the migrants could cultivate and become food sufficient. They often also helped build houses (mud and thatch huts) and shared agricultural implements.

Experience shows that retreating to the rural area is a key coping strategy for urban families in hard economic situations, not only for the poor and very poor but also for the non-poor, such as Nonthandazo.

Social

Xenophobia in migrant destinations: Migrants to South Africa are facing a rise in xenophobia alongside depressed job markets. Many who lost their jobs during the pandemic have not been reinstated, as the COVID-related recession has reduced job opportunities and new regulations for foreign workers have been introduced. These factors combine with xenophobia to exclude Zimbabweans from job opportunities in South Africa, and employers increasingly prefer to hire fellow South Africans. There are pressure groups in South Africa such as Operation Dudula, a group of anti-immigration vigilantes that reinforce discrimination against foreigners. A Zimbabwean man, Elvis Nyathi a gardener, originally from Matobo District Matabeleland South, was horrifically murdered in April 2022, by anti-migration protesters in Diepsloot township, north of Johannesburg, South Africa.

Teresa, an 81-year-old widow in Tsholotsho (very poor wellbeing category) explains that her family’s wellbeing has since worsened because her children cannot send her enough groceries or remittances from South Africa. They lost their jobs in the pandemic and are still unemployed. They will probably move back to Zimbabwe soon, as their permits allowing them to stay in South Africa legally will expire soon and are unlikely to be renewed.

Gendered impacts: Women now face an increased burden of unpaid household work. Many young girls dropped out of school, and others were compelled into early marriage. Child marriage was already high in Zimbabwe, with about 1 in 3 (34%) of girls under 18 years being married.

Women and girls have suffered more than men and boys especially on unpaid household duties. There was a lot of burden on girls and women because they have to do household labour like laundry and cleaning. Educationally, due to low income, boys were allowed to go to school while girls were forced to stay at home and others were forced into marriage due to these challenges.” Brian, 22, well-being group, poor.

“The number of children that returned to school after 8 February 2022 is less than 75%. I estimate that three out of ten girls, aged between 14 to 16 years, did not return to school due to teenage pregnancy and domestic work. I also estimate that two out of ten boys, aged between 15 to 18 years, did not return to school due to marriage and drug abuse.” Brian, 22, well-being group, poor.

“COVID-19 has impacted more on women and girls than on men and boys. Women were now forced to take on the hard work normally done by men, especially those women-headed families and also girls … dropped out of school in order to find jobs or got married.” Bianca, wealthy well-being group.

 “When poverty strikes a household, everyone feels the impact no matter age or gender.” Benjamin, resilient well-being group.

Health

Physiological stresses include fear of contracting COVID-19 and the inability to mourn the dead.

We lost neighbours and friends during the peak of COVID-19, and it was so painful because we could not even gather for the burial to bid them farewell’ (Teresa, 81, widow, very poor wellbeing category, Tsholotsho).

Sexually transmitted diseases: The drop in income affected some households’ health. Noah, a 24-year-old orphan, is an informal worker who is looking after his six younger siblings in Bulawayo. His household, which is in the very poor wellbeing category, is an example of the negative social consequences that resulted from the shocks brought about by COVID-19.

The most important impact on my household has been the dramatic reduction in my income that has caused all the other problems I now face. Together with my siblings, we are living from hand to mouth. We must cut down on meals and the quality of food we now eat. To add on to this, my sisters’ health is now compromised as they are now at risk of contracting sexually transmitted infections because they have resorted to having boyfriends who can provide for them in terms of personal ware like toiletries, mobile phone airtime and sanitary wear.” Very poor well-being group, Bulawayo. 

Drug abuse: The use of alcohol and illegal drugs to cope with social stresses and their lack of opportunities has increased amongst young people. A young self-employed barber in Bindura started taking drugs when he began to struggle after his business collapsed due to the lockdown. He became addicted to drugs including mutoriro or crystal meth (methamphetamine), Bronclear (a brand of cough medicine containing codeine and alcohol) and marijuana, in order to cope with stress. He explained that he is still addicted to drugs and:

“It is my hope that my return to work will keep me busy and occupied so that I will manage my addiction to drugs.” Bindura, poor wellbeing category. 

Chipo, a young woman, in the very poor wellbeing group, lives in Chitungwiza with her younger brother who is a drug addict. She said:

“Since we spoke in November (2021, during the first round of PMI interviews) my brother has been hospitalised for his crystal meth addiction. I thought he was recovering but he did not take much time before he relapsed. I think it was because he came back into the same stressful environment. Very poor well-being group, Chitungwiza. 

Food security

Limited food quality amongst the poor: Food security improved amongst most households between November 2021 and early 2022, although some are still struggling. The majority of poor households increased consumption from one to two meals a day and are eating better quality food again. Amongst them are those who have started receiving remittances again or who have found work. For example, Beauty’s son re-started his job in Mozambique and has started sending her remittances again (poor well-being group, Bindura). However, many still do not have enough to eat and food quality is still poor, with many unable to afford protein, relying instead on a diet of maize and green vegetables. Several respondents commented: “We eat for survival, not for enjoyment”.

Some households depending on income from retail or service micro-enterprises are seeing continued declines in well-being, as consumer spending is squeezed by the impacts of unemployment, enterprise failure and hyperinflation. Some others anticipate worsening food security in the coming months due to the impact of hyperinflation, the worsening exchange rate and poor rains.

The food situation is still worsening. This is mainly due to the poor rains and the ever-increasing prices of maize meal, flour, and cooking oil.” Themjiwe, 55, male, poor well-being group, Tsholotsho.

Even richer families have seen luxuries disappear from their diets, such as yoghurt and ice cream, and bread is sometimes substituted with maqebelengwana (a bread made from mealie meal) or isimodo (a type of thick bread made using flour and water). Some of the ‘less desired foods’ are more nutritious than their regular diet and provide health benefits, such as soya chunks, beans, wild vegetables such as okra, Bidens pilosa (blackjack) and Amaranthus hybridus (pigweed), as well as edible insects.

Extremely poor households are still food insecure. Some have experienced weight loss and poor health due to poor nutrition, especially among older people. In Bulawayo, Nkosana, a casual labourer, describes his family as an “underfed household, where there is not enough food to eat, and …. sometimes we are in the situation whereby there is no food at all”.

Casual labourers still struggle to find paid work as households who would normally employ them are still reducing their discretionary expenditure. “The local community still cannot afford to hire us as casual labour.” (Tabitha, 54, female, very poor well-being group, Tsholotsho).

Improvements amongst the non-poor: non-poor households were found to have returned to eating three meals a day, and meat once a week.

I am now buying meat, bread, and butter as I wish so that I can get back my weight lost during the peak of the Covid-19 pandemic. So, I buy two loaves of bread and two kg of beef enough for me and my domestic worker. It is only that I am left with very few teeth in my mouth, I wish I had all my teeth to chew all the meat!” Woman, resilient well-being group, Bindura.

 

Food insecurity depends on self-provisioning: for many in Zimbabwe, food security depends on self-provisioning. This has become even more the case in the face of hyperinflation and a worsening exchange rate. Even urban households attempt self-reliance and some Chitungwiza residents (an urban area near Harare) farm at their ‘rural homes’ and grow enough to meet their needs in good rainfall years. For example, Christine, an 83-year-old widow (extremely poor wellbeing category) used to farm at her rural home in Wedza (Mashonaland East Province) as well as engage in urban agriculture. But she is no longer able to farm as she is recovering from a stroke, so did not grow any crops at all last season. As a result, her family does not have enough food stored for even a month, and without an income to enable them to buy off the market their future food security is precarious.

 

Weather-related shocks

COVID-related shocks overlay numerous other shocks and weather-related shocks are particularly significant. ZIMVAC found that waterlogging (related to flooding) was experienced by 45% of households in 2021. This was the second most prevalent shock in 2021 after cash shortage, followed by drought (26%) and livestock deaths (21%).

Cyclone Ana : Bindura was negatively affected by Cyclone Ana, which hit north-eastern Zimbabwe in January 2022, causing heavy rains and flooding, and affecting at least 3,000 people. The farmers in Bindura estimated that cyclone Ana destroyed 75% of the crops. Houses, schools, and roads were also destroyed.

Cyclone Ana was one of the shocks that drove people in this area into poverty.” Very poor well-being group, Bindura.

The cyclone took the roof of my house off and destroyed some of my furniture, like sofas and beds. It also killed all the 100 broiler chicks for my poultry projects and destroyed other people’s crops and infrastructure.” Brenda, resilient wellbeing category, Bindura.

Cyclone Anna affected my area with massive destruction of infrastructure, for example the dirt roads, school roofs like Manhenga primary school and other houses were destroyed. Furniture was also destroyed. Fortunately, no lives were lost but all the crops were destroyed and swept away.” Bruce, vulnerable but not poor wellbeing category, Bindura.

The farmers reported that the rains during the cyclone were followed by a protracted dry spell that destroyed crops all over again. They predicted that this year would be a drought year.

After Cyclone Anna, there was a serious dry spell that followed……the crops that survived cyclone Anna did not (all) survive the dry spell, which lasted for about three weeks from mid-February to 1 March 2022. Soon after that dry spell, there was a hailstorm that destroyed tobacco and farmers had to write off their crops. So, this year there is drought. Again, too many people who did not plant small grains are likely to be food insecure owing to a dry spell which lasted for a month.” Brian, poor well-being group, Bindura.

Droughts seriously affected the wellbeing of farm households in Tsholotsho, reducing food security. The rains stopped abruptly before the crops had matured. Some recorded low yields, while others experienced complete harvest failure. The drought also affected the mopane worms (a popular wild food), which did not thrive this year, resulting in a low harvest. The low yields left households food insecure.

I have suffered a great loss this year due to the heavy rain followed by a dry spell. This drought affected my crops, especially maize, and they were written off. Only a small piece of sorghum has survived.” (Beauty, poor well-being group, Bindura).

“Even amacimbi (mopane worm) never did too well this time around. The ancestors are probably not very happy with the things that your young ones are doing in this world, so they have taken the rains away early.” (Very poor well-being group, Tsholotsho)

“Crop production for the 2021/22 season is disappointingly low because of the insufficient rains, which went away just before crop maturity.” (Poor well-being group, Tsholotsho).

Livestock disease: Livestock losses from January Disease (theileriosis) (2018-22) have had a devastating effect on farmers, driving asset losses and, in some areas, leaving the majority of households without draught power, limiting cultivation and agricultural production. This led to smaller areas being ploughed, and lower production, contributing to food insecurity. The loss of livestock also impaired households’ ability to cope, as it removed the option of selling cattle to meet contingencies.

Teresa, a farmer in Tsholotsho (very poor well-being group) emphasised that January Disease was the most prominent disease that affected the cattle in the community.

The Department of Veterinary Services provided farmers in Bindura with medication and access to dips to control ticks. They recommend vaccination and dipping cattle twice a week and this regime has stabilised the situation, leaving farmers optimistic that this outbreak of January Disease is over. Some livestock were still dying of January disease in January 2022, but the incidence has dramatically reduced.


Coping strategies

In early 2022, people were still employing a diverse range of coping strategies. They were carefully prioritising expenditure and forgoing luxuries. Reducing the number, size and quality of meals was the most widely adopted coping strategy, and was reported by all wellbeing groups, except for the resilient and wealthy (categories 5 and 6). Migration and remittances, together with livelihood diversification were also frequently cited coping strategies. Others included: urban agriculture; sub-letting urban homes; borrowing; reverse migration from urban to rural areas; illegally circumventing lockdown rules and transactional sex.

We adopted coping strategies like reducing meals and getting support from parents and relatives who are also struggling to make the ends meet. For school fees, I was enrolled into the Basic Education Assistance Module (BEAM) funding from the government, and I sometimes get free meals at school when schools are open. I also reduced meals and resorting to poor quality food obtained after engaging in casual labour. These strategies have worked but it impacted on the health and wellbeing of my family. My parents had to work tirelessly to bring food on the table. The food we were eating was not good since we would eat anything that came our way. We are very fortunate now that the situation has changed due to the lockdown relaxation, and my parents are back at their informal business and are getting a little that can help us to survive and go to school.” (Branson, 18, poor well-being group, Bindura).

“We relied on leasing out some hectares of land, as well as the pension from my father but it is not enough to cater for the family. I sometimes would have to use illegal means to order my goods for resale. There are illegal transport operators who were helping me to smuggle shoes from Mozambique although it was very expensive. To a greater extent, these coping strategies have helped much even though it was not a walk in the park.” (Billy, 28, informal trader and farmer, vulnerable but not poor well-being group, Bindura).

Once the lockdown was relaxed in January 2022, Billy’s situation improved. His income grew and he and his family are getting back to normal again.

Some households found that their preferred form of coping was insufficient. They were forced to adopt adverse coping mechanisms, which resulted in an increase in social harm, created long term damage and impaired resilience and the ability to move out of poverty. We found adverse coping to be widespread (engagement in, for example, transactional sex and artisanal mining) and hyperinflation, the reduced harvest likely in 2022 and any subsequent shocks will have negative consequences for a population that has largely already exhausted its resilience and ability to cope safely.


Programmes to mitigate impoverishment

A number of social protection and food security programmes are in place in Zimbabwe, provided by the Government, international development partners and NGOs, including:

  • Food assistance

  • Cash transfers

  • Agricultural inputs 

However, the social protection system failed to systematically protect well-being. Inadequate transfers and low coverage meant that the majority did not receive cash transfers or food aid during the height of the lockdown, even if they were extremely poor or destitute. So, by November 2021, only 12% of households nationally had received food assistance in the form of grain distribution. The survey found that 19% of the food assistance was provided to households in rural areas compared to 1.2% in urban areas. Only 4% of households received Covid-19 cash transfers, with fewer rural than urban households in receipt and only 3% of households received any other form of cash transfer.

Our data confirms this extremely low-level support, with respondents in March 2022 stating that they received very little support from either Government or non-governmental organisations. Negligible support was reported by PMI respondents in Bulawayo, Chitungwiza and Tsholotsho, but some participants in Bindura received Government social protection assistance, most of them older people. In contrast, all households in the two rural PMI study sites received inputs for planting one acre from the Government’s Pfumvudza/Intwasa conservation farming programme for smallholder farmers, plus advice from the local AGRETEX officers about zero-tillage agriculture. (The Input Package for a Pfumvudza/Intwasa Plot was consistent across the rural research sites, Bindura and Tsholotsho and distributed through the Presidential Inputs Programme. The package consisted of 2kgs seed (maize or sorghum), 12kg lime, 16kg Compound D, 16kg Ammonium Nitrate, and insecticide for pests.)

Social protection assistance

People in Bindura received a wider range of social protection assistance than at the other study sites, though it was targeted mainly at older people, and disbursement of the support package was reported to be ‘inconsistent’, with frequent delays.  

Yes, currently my old parents are receiving …. assistance from the government through the Ministry of Labour and Social Welfare in the form of food stuffs: 20kg maize, 2 litres cooking oil, 2kg sugar, and a sum of $5 per month.” (Very poor wellbeing category, Bindura).

Older people also receive free medication from government hospitals and are exempted from user fees.

Children from poor very families may qualify for the government’s BEAM programme (Basic Education Assistance Module) which gives recipients school fee exemptions and free school meals. Branson is now 18. When he first began secondary school, he was enrolled in because the School Development Committee identified his parents as not being formally employed and struggling to pay school fees.

“During this time when schools are open, we get free porridge in the morning at our school and sadza and beans on Monday, Wednesday and Fridays and it is available to every learner.” (Poor well-being group, Bindura).

Assistance from relatives and churches

In Tsholotsho, Chitungwiza and Bulawayo poor households did not report receiving any formal transfers, with the only support coming from remittances and some church support for older people. For example, an elderly widow in Chitungwiza receives no government transfers and instead relies on support from her Church, despite supporting six orphaned grandchildren. 

Pensions and medical insurance

Pensions coverage is very low in Zimbabwe, with only 2% of the population receiving a monthly pension or social protection transfers in 2019. While several older respondents in Bulawayo and Chitungwiza reported receiving occupational pensions, their value has been eroded by inflation, leaving the recipients struggling. Medical insurance coverage is also low, covering only 7% of the population, mostly employed by private enterprises in the non-financial sector or in central government.


Methodology

CPAN country bulletins are compiled using a combination of original qualitative data collected from a small number of affected people in each country, interviews with local leaders and community development actors, and secondary data from a range of available published sources. Interviews were conducted with 40 households for this bulletin, across four study sites (Bindura Rural District in Mashonaland Central Province; Tsholotsho District in Matabeleland North Province; Nketa suburb of Bulawayo; and Chitungwiza, Harare Metropolitan Province), in March 2022, in addition to local key informant interviews.

More details on the sampling and methodology for this bulletin can be found here.


This bulletin was created in collaboration with the University of Zimbabwe and made possible with support from Covid Collective.

Supported by the UK Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO), the Covid Collective is based at the Institute of Development Studies (IDS). The Collective brings together the expertise of, UK and Southern-based research partner organisations and offers a rapid social science research response to inform decision-making on some of the most pressing Covid-19 related development challenges.  

 
Source: https://flickr.com/photos/ilopictures/4986...

Zimbabwe COVID-19 Poverty Monitor: March 2022

How is COVID-19 impacting people living in, or at risk of, poverty in Zimbabwe? What policies are needed to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on chronic poverty? CPAN’s COVID-19 Poverty Monitor is an ongoing research project that interviews people about their experiences of the pandemic. This is the first bulletin focused on Zimbabwe - to find out more about the project, visit our blog about the global project. This bulletin dives into the main economic, health, food security and other concerns of those interviewed, as well as policies to minimise the impacts of COVID-19 suggested by the respondents.


Key Findings

  • Poverty: Extreme poverty increased from 30% in 2017 to an estimated 49% during the pandemic. (Estimation based on ZIMSTAT’s 2020. Rapid PICES Phone Survey of July 2020, cited in the World Bank (2021). Zimbabwe Economic Update. Overcoming Economic Challenges, Natural Disasters, and the Pandemic: Social and Economic Impacts. June 2021, Issue 3. The World Bank Group.)

  • Economic vulnerability: The groups at risk of impoverishment due to the COVID-19 pandemic are the chronically ill, women, school children, youth, farmers and semi-skilled workers (formal and informal sector).

  • Areas of concern for the poorest:

    • Economic: loss of remittances; price inflation for key goods and services; limited transport; constrained access to markets and widespread job losses.

    • Health: increased pressure on already stretched health systems, with restricted access to medical treatment during lockdowns.

    • Food insecurity: increased, with households reducing meals consumed, quantity and quality of food. 

    • Social: upswing in social harms, with increased drug abuse, early sex and teenage pregnancy, commercial sex work and gender-based violence.

  •  Zimbabweans face compound and sequenced shocks, with COVID-19 just one of many negative shocks and trends: People have endured the impacts of prolonged economic and policy shocks, compounded by the effects of climate shocks and harvest failures, price shocks and livestock diseases. This has led to previously resilient households becoming progressively more vulnerable as they move sequentially through preferred to less preferred to highly adverse coping strategies, which ‘mine’ human, social and productive capital, as households prioritise survival.

  • Adverse coping is widespread: These can have negative consequences for long term health and both social and economic recovery. Examples include engaging in commercial sex work (health impacts, impairs social capital), increased artisanal mining (drudgery intensive, physically dangerous), distress sales of livestock (loss of stores of value, status and ploughing pairs), increased criminal activity (theft, which impairs trust and social capital).

    The most widely adopted coping strategy was reported as reducing the number, size and quality of meals. Others included adopting barter trade, reducing cultivated area, distress sales of livestock, livelihood diversification, urban agriculture, sub-letting urban homes, and reverse migration from urban to rural areas.

  • Mitigation programmes:

    • Social protection: temporary food aid, social cash transfers. Low coverage during the pandemic – government support (15%) plus NGO support (7% of respondents in the ZIMSTAT Rapid PICES Monitoring Telephone Survey (4th Round) May 2021).

    • Economic: economic recovery and stimulus package, plus the pre-existing Government conservation farming programme, Pfumvudza/Intwasa, which distributed agricultural inputs to 51% of all households (of respondents in the ZIMSTAT Rapid PICES Monitoring Telephone Survey (4th Round) May 2021). 


Groups at risk of impoverishment due to COVID-19 pandemic

The pandemic was one amongst several negative shocks and trends. People who were previously resilient have been forced by a series of idiosyncratic (household-based) and covariant (society-wide) shocks (including economic, policy, climate change, harvest failure and livestock disease-related) to move through preferred to less preferred and then to adverse forms of coping to meet basic needs even minimally. They have become progressively more vulnerable as their asset base is eroded. Some groups have been at particular risk of impoverishment due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Chronically ill

  • Older people, people living with disabilities and chronically ill people are highly vulnerable to livelihood and wellbeing declines.

  • People on antiretroviral (ARV) treatment are worst affected as travel restrictions prevented travel to clinics, so some lost access to medication. However, in some cases, clinics organised local group deliveries, while other patients walked to clinics.

Women

  • Women relying on remittances: Migrants (usually husbands or partners) reduced or stopped sending remittances.

  • Female cross-borders traders: Border closures during 2020 and 2021 lockdowns stopped traders from accessing goods, destroying livelihoods.

School children

  • School and college closures, public examinations missed, few able to access online learning (internet data unaffordable, many did not own laptops or smartphones), private extra lessons too expensive for poor, and private colleges (offering catch up lessons) are also expensive.

  • Many school dropouts.

  • Back in school, children are often promoted to the next grade, without having knowledge gaps filled.

Youth

  • Enterprises owned by, or employing, youth (non-farm, artisans in services sector, semi-skilled workers) were seriously curtailed by lockdown measures.

Farmers

  • Some farmers have been driven into distress coping, experienced downward mobility and have, so far, completely failed to recover. They were not able to re-stock, unlike those farmers who did not have to sell their livestock.

  • Reduced market access due to lockdown, resulted in produce spoilage, loss of income.

  • Reduced agricultural extension support (government and NGOs).

  • Lack of veterinary services led to increased livestock deaths. Some farmers have failed to recover from livestock losses.

Semi-skilled workers (formal and informal sector)

  • Job losses due to COVID-19 lockdowns, included factory workers, informal traders, bus conductors, drivers and hairdressers.


Areas of concern for the poorest and potential impoverishment

Loss of remittances, especially from South Africa, drove many households into destitution. This occurred in Tsholotsho District (Matabeleland North Province), for example, where the majority of households relied on remittances before the pandemic, with receipts funding food and education expenditures. Reduced remittance flows reduced household wellbeing and drive school dropouts.

According to the Rapid PICES Monitoring Telephone Survey (Rapid PICES) Round 4, May 2021, about 11% of households nationally received remittances from abroad at around the time of the survey. This is an increase from 9% from the third round, from 5 December 2020 to 10 March 2021 (ZIMSTAT (2021); Rapid PICES Monitoring Telephone Survey (4th Round) May 2021). Although the total percentage of people receiving remittances is not known, as often informal channels are used, a study in 2006 estimated that 50% of the Zimbabwean population received remittances.

Price inflation for key goods and services (including food and agricultural inputs, transport, school fees) have made life tough for many. In Bindura District, (Mashonaland Central Province), for example, between 2019 and 2021, inflation saw prices for groceries and other essential commodities rise by 200-300% and for transport by 100-150% (reported by the local traditional leader).

 “We used to pay $1 from Manhenga to Bindura town, but now we are paying $2 to $2.50.

Transport bans compounded price inflation, with scarcity driving up prices of essentials such as cooking oil and bread by over 60% and maize prices nearly doubling between 2019 and 2021. Illegal transport operators tried to get around the bans, but their fares were too expensive for ordinary Zimbabweans (reported by both female and male farmers in Bindura). Price increases caused tensions, with some respondents believing that retailers were taking advantage of the pandemic to increase their prices.

Farm input costs also doubled, and some farmers were driven to sell livestock to pay for the fertilisers and seed maize they needed to keep farming.

Constrained access to markets (including market closures due to COVID related public health measures) meant that perishable produce spoiled, leading to farmers losing income. With national and international supply chains disrupted, some local markets became flooded (e.g., maize, sweet potatoes and tomatoes) driving prices down significantly. 

Widespread job losses (formal and informal sectors) were driven by the lockdown measures. Many chronically poor people, across all the sites, both rural and urban, relied on casual labour for their livelihoods. However, due to the COVID lockdown restrictions, opportunities in the casual labour markets drastically decreased, often resulting in destitution.

Ngwabi (21-year-old from Tsholotsho, who looks after his three younger siblings while his parents were in South Africa) says that casual labour was a source of both food (cereal, cooking oil) and cash for the family. The casual labour activities they undertake include fencing of fields, digging farming holes, slaughtering cattle as well as in community construction projects, such as community infrastructure (e.g., boreholes and dip tanks). However, during 2020 and 2021, there was little demand for casual labour and Ngwabi lamented that:

“Reduced piece job opportunities meant less income for me.”

Some entrepreneurs saw their revenue shrink and some people lost lucrative jobs and had to replace them with lower waged work. For example, Noah (24-years-old, from Nketa, Bulawayo) is an orphan and is responsible for his six dependent siblings. He previously worked at a transport company and earned enough to comfortably cover his household’s expenses. He lost this job and now earns less through his new job, repairing tyres - not enough to cover his family’s needs. He is struggling to maintain household food security and has been forced to add additional strategies, including asking for tips or overcharging his customers, as well as reducing the number of meals to one a day, to ensure their survival. 

Cross-border traders were unable to access new stock (groceries from South Africa, rice and second-hand clothes from Mozambique), driving many informal traders and ‘tuck shop’ owners out of business.

Food insecurity increased, with households reducing the number of meals consumed as well as the quantity and quality of food. Diets tended to become less diverse and less nutritious. The Rapid PICES Round 1 survey revealed that 41% of the extreme poor went without eating for a whole day. Urban households who have seen a decline in their incomes have been particularly severely affected.

Bradley (42-years-old, married with three children and two adult dependents) from Bindura reported that he is living hand to mouth. In April 2020 he lost his job at a gold mine and is now doing subsistence farming on two hectares of land. However, he has limited farm equipment and inputs to make the land productive. He has been food insecure since April 2020 and he can hardly find enough money to put food on the table. Others indicated that they sold their small livestock (chickens, goats) to buy food for the household. These distress sales were driven by a collapse in incomes and an increase in costs. Increased food prices and school closures have meant that children are home all day, increasing household food costs, as well as adding to the care burden of the parents.

While COVID‑19 accelerated the use of digital platforms in delivering education, evidence from the Rapid PICES Monitoring Telephone Survey shows that only 25% of rural school-going children continued accessing education after the school closures of 2020, compared to 70% in urban areas.

Imagine how difficult it is to get income let alone getting enough to buy data bundles to allow the children to do online learning.” Widow, 81, wellbeing category 3, Chitungwiza

Teachers and private colleges provided private tutoring to those children who could afford to pay and who were approaching their public examinations (‘O' levels and A' levels). But the differences between those able to access online learning and tutoring has accentuated pre-existing inequalities.

The pandemic increased pressure on already stretched health systems. Essential services such as vaccinations, maternal and child health services were disrupted as the Government prioritised the COVID-19 response. Around one in four households (19%, rural; 23%, urban) were unable to access medical treatment when needed due to the lack of medical personnel, amongst other reasons (Rapid PICES Round 1 (July 2020)).

Curfews restricted opening times and travel restrictions limited access to health care. This caused a provision gap, with constraints in service provision occurring alongside an increased need for services as some Zimbabwean women and children began to engage in commercial sex work to survive, leading to health risks. However, the government sought to improve staff attendance at government health facilities by providing additional funds (disbursed by the Ministry of Health and Child Care) to motivate and help health front-line workers, including nurses and doctors.

Travel restrictions also led to some people living with HIV and AIDS, especially the elderly who could not walk to the clinics, or pay for illegal transport, losing access to medication:

"Yes, people have been impacted negatively by COVID-19, especially those on antiretroviral drugs (ARVs). They face challenges in accessing their drugs from the Manhenga district council clinic due to lockdown, social distancing and the ban on transport movement. So there have been so many people who defaulted on their daily ARV drugs and this is a health concern during the COVID-19 era." Health worker, Bindura

Relatively few people have been directly affected by Covid-19 in rural Zimbabwe. A small minority contracted COVID-19 and some others faced the grief of having close relatives die of it.  For example, Natalie lost her husband and two adult children to COVID-19, with the three dying within six months of each other (see Case study: Natalie).

The vaccination programme was country-wide, reaching even the remotes areas, targeting mainly those over 18 years (Zimbabwe’s population was relatively young, and children (defined as girls and boys under the age of 18 years) constituted 48.8% of the total population (ZIMSTAT, 2013, Zimbabwe National Census, 2012). During a focus group discussion with local authority officials in Bindura Rural District, they estimated that approximately 80% of the adult population in Bindura District had been vaccinated, and they indicated that the Ministry of Health and Child Care have a programme to mop up the remaining 20%. Generally, vaccine hesitancy was low, although there were isolated cases of ‘doubters’:

“I cannot be vaccinated personally even if the government is saying it is compulsory, this vaccination thing is an experiment and trial. They want to experiment on us.” Woman, 34, wellbeing category 4, Bindura

Some people who caught COVID-19, or who contracted serious influenza, reported using home cures and herbal remedies (Indigenous plants were widely used as herbal teas, e.g., moringa and zumbani (Lippia javanica), which is high in zinc and antioxidants), especially those from poor households who could not afford health care. Many feared being tested for COVID-19, because of the damage that a positive test result, and quarantining would do to their earning power. In addition, the hospitals were not prepared to handle the rapid increase of COVID-19 cases and resources were stretched very thin.

There has been an upswing in social harms during the pandemic, with increases in gender-based violence (GBV), drug abuse, early sex and teenage pregnancy and commercial sex work. Anecdotal reports indicate that crime rates have increased during the pandemic, particularly theft. Lockdown measures have been associated with severe psychological distress.

Gender-based violence (GBV) has increased, associated with families being in a confined space for long periods during lockdown (household food insecurity, increased unemployment and financial worries, compounded by male anger, anxiety and frustration and women’s diminished agency and means of escape). The rise in incidence appears to be particularly high in urban areas, where homesteads are small.  

School closures, lasting nearly two years, have had far-reaching negative impacts. Some children from richer families were able to access online learning or work with private tutors but children from poorer families were unable to access learning. Some children worked for their parents, helping them farm or in the family business. However, widespread ‘idleness’ amongst young people has been associated with an increase in early sex, leading to an increase in STIs and teenage pregnancies.

Drug use, especially amongst the youth, increased during the lockdown. The main drugs used by poor youth are marijuana (about 80% of drug users) and crystal meth (methamphetamine), with more affluent youth using cocaine and heroin. Some cough medicines are used as drugs, particularly by the extremely poor youth (e.g., BronCleer, manufactured in South Africa, and containing codeine and alcohol).  The government has created a Drug and Substance Abuse Technical Working Group led by the Ministry of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare. This is an information-sharing platform between Government and relevant stakeholders and has been tasked with reducing the effects of substance abuse. It was established under the Government’s National Drug Master Plan for tackling youth substance abuse.

Crime rates have increased, particularly theft, with burglary increasing significantly in our four study sites (Bindura, Bulawayo, Chitungwiza and Tsholotsho), driven by increased youth unemployment, return migration from South Africa and poverty. This has occurred alongside an increase in customers for stolen goods.

Psycho-social impact of COVID-19 restrictions: Restrictions around social gatherings including funerals have meant that grieving families have been unable to seek comfort through social contact and traditional funeral rites. The inability of families to bury their dead, and particularly transporting the bodies of those who have died in urban areas to the person’s ‘rural home’ for burial, has caused great distress.


Government containment measures

Covid-19 lockdowns: The first COVID-19 lockdown in Zimbabwe was announced on 17 March 2020, when a national disaster was declared. The lockdown eased towards the end of the year, as new cases and deaths decreased. However, there was a spike in January 2021, probably due to opening the borders with South Africa, as well as an increase in social gatherings around the festive season. There was a second major lockdown from 5 January 2021 to 1 March 2021. By September 2021, infections had declined significantly and restrictions were relaxed to Level 2 in October 2021. The lockdown levels are Level 4, very high; Level 3, high; Level 2, moderate; and Level 1, low. Throughout the COVID period, Zimbabwe had two main Levels of lockdown restrictions, namely Level 4, the most severe and Level 2, which was more relaxed. Lockdown restrictions were eased, with the ban on intercity travel removed, business hours extended from 8 pm-7 am and a shorter curfew, from 10 pm-5 am. Public gatherings of up to 100 people and international travel were allowed.

Then, with the emergence of the Omicron variant of COVID-19 in December 2021, the Government imposed another strict (Level 4) lockdown to cope with the rapid increase in infections. This meant that businesses could only operate between 8 am-3.30 pm, the curfew was extended from 6.30 pm-6.30 am and limits were imposed on public gatherings, with a maximum of 30 people at a funeral. This was initially imposed for two weeks, then extended. However, by February 2022, cases had greatly declined and the lockdown was eased back to Level 2.

The lockdowns included:

  • A nationwide curfew;

  • A stay-at-home order with exemptions for those working in essential services;

  • All formal enterprises and registered informal enterprises ordered to cease operations; 

  • Inter-city travel banned;

  • Closure of borders and non-essential businesses;

  • Gatherings except for funerals were banned;

  • Schools closed, except for some examination classes.

In addition, there were preventative public health measures, which included requirements that the public wore facemasks correctly and complied with social distancing, hand sanitisation and temperature checks (Government of Zimbabwe (2021)). These preventative health measures were required for all lockdown levels.

Quarantine centres for international returnees were established by the Ministry of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare in some Provinces, particularly those with borders, such as Matabeleland South. Several were established in Harare and Bulawayo and used schools and colleges facilities.

School closures: By mid-March 2020, there were many reported cases of COVID-19 in schools, and some individual schools closed. On 24 March 2020, Government announced a nationwide closure of schools and tertiary institutions, to contain the spread of COVID-19.  Schools remained closed until September 2021 and by December 2021, another strict lockdown was in place. Schools remained closed in January 2022, with exemptions for examination classes. By February 2022, the Omicron threat had subsided, and schools reopened on 8 February 2022. Approximately, 4.6 million children have been affected by the COVID-19 closure of schools in Zimbabwe. (21 February 2021. Chipenda, C., and Tom, T., (2021) Zimbabwe’s Social Policy Response to Covid-19: Temporary Food Relief and Cash Transfers; Global Dynamics of Social Policy. CRC 1342 COVID-19 Social Policy Response Series No. 23. Bremen: University of Bremen).

Vaccination: The national COVID-19 vaccination programme launched in February 2021 (organised by the Ministry of Health and Child Care), using the Sinopharm BIBP vaccine (Sinovac and Sputnik V were also used). Vaccinations were made compulsory for State employees to reduce the risk of spreading COVID-19 to others. Those who were unwilling to be vaccinated, due to religious reasons or vaccine hesitancy, had to resign.

Livelihood groups particularly affected by travel restrictions: Farmers and traders.  Venders indicated that they had experienced police harassment.

Penalties: People could be fined by local traditional leaders and arrested and fined heavily by the Zimbabwe Republic Police. At the district and national level, the fines for offenders were reportedly ZWL 500 ($1.38) (all currency conversion as of 26 February 2022 using xe.com) to ZWL 10,000 ($27.63), depending on the offence. Those caught without wearing masks in a rural village could be fined a goat or a bucket of maize. (KII, traditional leader, Bindura).

Compliance: Compliance with the containment measures was high, with people generally appreciating that this was the only way that the pandemic could be managed, and lives saved. This was supported by clear and educational health promotional campaigns, delivered through television, radio and poster campaigns. 

Impact: The government’s strict travel restrictions and curfews had widely reported impacts. Travel restrictions made buying groceries, visiting relatives, or seeking medical treatment difficult, with negative consequences for older people, the sick, vendors, farmers and anyone who needed to access medication, and although district health workers facilitated access to ARVs and other essential medicines, access was patchy.

“The area has experienced strict lockdown measures [affecting] churches, schools, swimming pools and bottle stores. We all try to follow rules. Security guards always made sure that masks were worn properly covering both nose and mouth. Those not adhering to the rules were taken to the police station and made to pay a fine. During the first lockdown days, people used to be taken to the police camp and kept at the police station the whole afternoon and only released at the end of the day and still pay a fine.” Local businesswoman, Nketa, Bulawayo

“During the first lockdown people were not allowed in town at all for the first 21 days. If police officers saw you 5km or more away from your house you were made to pay a fine.” Pastor’s wife, Nketa, Bulawayo


Coping strategies

Diverse coping strategies were adopted, with a reduction in meals cited most frequently (the remaining coping strategies are not in rank order). But as households progressed from preferred forms of coping to adverse coping, social harms increased and the long-term damage to their ability to move back out of poverty intensified.

Reduced meals and less nutritious food: Reducing the number of meals per day was identified by almost all respondents as a key coping strategy (across four districts – rural and urban – and across all well-being categories) in response to the economic crisis induced by lockdown measures. This saw the number of meals reduced from three to two or even one meal a day. Crisis induced food insecurity was so acute for some that everyone in the household would go the whole day without eating and some urban households sought to reduce the number of mouths to feed by sending their children to their ‘rural home’, where they were looked after by grandparents or extended family members.

“I [reduced] the number of meals per day from the three, to two or even one per day when things are very difficult.” Woman, 28, wellbeing category 2, Chitungwiza

“Loss of revenue and reduced meals per day is a major challenge, my family used to have several meals per day without any limits and now I feel like it’s not fair to my wife and kids, I feel like am no longer a man enough for my family.” Male, 50, wellbeing category 3, Bindura

Some households had a less severe response by shifting to consuming ‘inferior foods’ - eating cheaper, less preferred, less nutritious foodstuffs, such as ‘muputi’ (roasted maize kernels).

Barter trade: Barter trade has increased in urban and rural Zimbabwe, and in some areas, such as Bindura (Mashonaland Central Province) and Tsholotsho (Matabeleland North Province), it was reported that cash was rarely seen. Services by artisans, such as builders, as well as casual labourers, were often paid in kind. Payment in kind is quite acceptable and the goods appreciated, especially in the hyperinflationary environment, and where banks restrict cash withdrawals, and in addition, mobile money has various taxes and conditions imposed.

Some mining families ventured into barter trade. The grocery shop owners would come to the villages with essential commodities and exchange foodstuffs like cooking oil and mealie meal with some grams of gold. This helped most families in coping with the shock.” Traditional leader, Bindura

Reduced area of cultivation: Some farmers reduced the proportion of their land that they farmed, as they could not afford to buy inputs or to pay for ploughing, leading to lower production levels. More farmers needed to buy in ploughing services in 2021 as their draught power was limited by livestock deaths from disease (widespread theileriosis or January disease and blackleg). However, ploughing services were limited and not readily available at the times required for ploughing (AGRITEX (agricultural extension) broadcasts to farmers in each locality, the optimum times for ploughing, depending on the rainfall pattern for that specific year. Usually, this period for ploughing is quite narrow.)

Livestock sales: Distress sales of small livestock (chickens, goats, pigs) became widespread in order to meet contingencies such as buying food and agricultural inputs and paying for children’s school fees and other education expenses.

Livelihood diversification: Livelihood diversification was adopted as a coping strategy by approximately half of the farmers in our study who, for instance, moved into value addition (vegetable drying, tomato preservation). Some rural people harvested thatch grass for sale. Others collected seeds and developed seed banks for themselves and for sale. Some sought casual work. Those with pre-existing horticultural enterprises increased their output, particularly those near a ready market, for example, artisanal mines. Some began brewing beer or selling cigarettes, and others moved into selling marijuana. The number of women, youth and children engaging in commercial sex work also increased, as households sought to cope with job losses and the loss of remittances as a result of the pandemic.

Expenditure prioritisation: Some poor urban households made tough choices around which expenditures to prioritise and stopped paying their rent and utility bills. This meant that they fell into arrears, leading to tension with landlords and the accumulation of debt.

Urban agriculture: Many urban households (for example in Bulawayo) sought to become self-sufficient and began to cultivate vacant plots, green belts and wetland areas in order to produce their own food and rear chickens.

Subletting of urban homes: Subletting was a common livelihood strategy before the pandemic for some non-poor households in Bulawayo and Chitungwiza. However, the proportion of non-poor households subletting increased during the Covid-19 pandemic, as other income streams failed. This included letting rooms in their houses and building backyard shacks to rent out.

Reverse migration: Reverse migration has become common, with urban households sending children or other family members to their ‘rural home’. Sometimes the whole household relocates, to benefit from the lower cost of living and greater opportunities for self-sufficiency through food cultivation.

Community initiatives: Rural chiefs assisted poor and food-insecure families through the Zunde raMambo royal court food initiative. This was to supplement government relief, which was not always adequate. For example, a local Chief in Bindura mentioned that in 2020, the COVID-19 food relief funds from the government were insufficient for all the hungry families in his domain, so his royal court provided extra grain, through the Zunde raMambo initiative.


Programmes in place to mitigate impoverishment due to COVID-19

Almost no assistance from the Government or international organisations was reported. The exception was the Government’s Pfumvudza/Intwasa conservation farming programme, which distributed agricultural inputs to 1.8 million smallholder farmers (the Input Package for a Pfumvudza/Intwasa Plot was distributed through the Presidential Inputs Programme and consisted of 2kgs seed, 12kg lime, 16kg Compound D, 16kg Ammonium Nitrate, and insecticide for pests). Fifty-one percent of all households (predominantly rural and peri-urban, although the programme can also be carried out in urban areas where space allows) have participated in the Pfumvudza programme (Findings from the 4th Round of the Rapid PICES Monitoring Telephone Survey). Of these, 84% had received extension services and training and 80% reported higher yields (ZIMSTAT (2021). Rapid PICES Monitoring Telephone Survey (4th Round) May 2021).

Social protection coverage in Zimbabwe was poor before the pandemic. It remained relatively low, with only 15% of respondents receiving government support and 7% support from a non-governmental organisation (ZIMSTAT (2021). Rapid PICES Monitoring Telephone Survey (4th Round) May 2021). This is despite severe poverty levels increasing to an estimated 49% and food insecurity increasing to around 70% (World Bank (2021). Zimbabwe Economic Update. Overcoming Economic Challenges, Natural Disasters, and the Pandemic: Social and Economic Impacts. June 2021, Issue 3. The World Bank Group). None of the participants in Poverty Monitoring Initiative mentioned receiving any social protection support, although a few of those in the destitute wellbeing category mentioned that they used to get assistance from the Department of Social Welfare, but had not received anything for the past couple of years. Several participants, in the very poor category, mentioned that some of their orphaned grandchildren received assistance under Basic Education Assistance Module (BEAM).

Pre-existing support to poor and vulnerable people

  • Support to agriculture: The Government’s Pfumvudza conservation farming inputs programme, 2020 to 2021, was cited by the majority of respondents for this study as their sole form of external support.

  • Free health care: at government clinics and hospitals.

  • Free education: Basic Education Assistance Module (BEAM) provides a school fee waiver to children identified as poor or vulnerable.

  • Food security: World Food Programme drought relief programme to vulnerable households.

  • Civil society support: Most churches assist, especially the elderly and destitute. This ad hoc assistance commonly distributes food hampers. In Bindura, the Muslim community mosque stepped in and provided low income households with food hampers.

COVID-19 response

  • Temporary food relief: Ongoing food aid distribution was scaled up during the pandemic. Distribution of food aid was constrained and the proportion of households receiving food dropped from 23% in July 2020 to 3% in August-September 2020. In urban areas, only 1% received food aid, or cash transfers to buy food, during this period, thus leaving many families food insecure (World Bank (2021). Zimbabwe Economic Update. Overcoming Economic Challenges, Natural Disasters, and the Pandemic: Social and Economic Impacts. June 2021, Issue 3. The World Bank Group).  

  • Social cash transfers: Cash transfers were central in Zimbabwe’s COVID-19 social protection response and by 13 October 2020, the government had provided cash transfers to 202,077 beneficiaries (Zimbabwe’s cash transfer programme was allocated ZWD 2.4 billion ($6.6 million) by the national stimulus package), throughout the country. However, there was a strong urban bias, with Harare (45%) and Bulawayo (15%) having the highest proportion of beneficiaries. Targeting sought to identify the most vulnerable and was based on the Ministry of Public Service, Labour and Social Welfare’s databases supplemented by means-testing with lists from the Ministry of Women Affairs, local authorities and informal traders used to identify new beneficiaries.

    Challenges centre around coverage and transfer size. Transfers rose from ZWD 180 ($0.49) to ZWD 300 ($0.82), but this was widely considered inadequate, remaining substantially below the Consumer Council’s reported monthly family basket of ZWD 14,438 ($39.89). In terms of coverage, the proportion of households receiving Covid-19 cash transfers declined from 4% in Round 3 of the Rapid PICES to 1% in Round 4 (ZIMSTAT (2021). Rapid PICES Monitoring Telephone Survey (4th Round) May 2021). This decline was true of both urban and rural areas. Though the reason for the decline remains unclear.

  • Economic stimulus: In May 2020, the government unveiled a ZWD 18.2 billion ($50.3 million) Covid-19 Economic Recovery and Stimulus Package, valued at 9% of GDP. The aim of the package was twofold. Firstly, it sought to improve the country’s economic performance and ensure recovery from COVID-19-induced shocks. Secondly, it sought to provide relief to individuals, families and businesses affected by COVID-19. It aimed to reach one million households with relief, including food-deficit mitigation, cash transfers, facilitating and financing healthcare interventions, packages to trigger social welfare, pension support, provision of cushioning allowances, and funding state institutions for Covid-19 research and manufacturing of personal protective equipment. The Government provided ZWD 739 million ($2 million) of the Economic Recovery and Stimulus Package to the Ministry of Health and Child Care to fund various interventions, such as a hiring additional 4,000 health personnel; upgrading of and appropriately equipping all central, provincial and district hospitals and other facilities to accommodate COVID-19 patients; and provision of a tax-free allowance for frontline health workers.

    None of the respondents in the Poverty Monitoring Initiative indicated that they had heard of, or received, any benefits under the COVID-19 Economic Recovery and Stimulus Package.

  •  Education programmes: Access to online learning was provided during the 2021 lockdown through the UNICEF, Ministry of Primary and Secondary Education and Microsoft’s ‘Learning Passport in Programme’. This digital platform gave teachers and pupils free online access to learning materials, although children’s access was limited by the costs of buying data bundles for internet connectivity and only 4% used mobile learning applications, 2% of children were found to have listened to educational radio programs, 1% watched educational television programmes (Rapid PICES Monitoring Telephone Survey Round 4).

Case studies

Case Study: Natalie

Natalie, a 58-year-old widow living in Nketa high-density suburb in Bulawayo, has been devastated by the pandemic. She lost her husband and two adult children (36-year-old daughter and 29-year-old son) to COVID-19, dying within six months of each other. They were the household’s breadwinners, so her income has collapsed at the same time as her outgoings increased, as she is now responsible for looking after her three orphaned grandchildren.

When her husband and children fell ill, she asked relatives for money to enable them to access medical treatment. Although one child had Medical Aid insurance, it did not cover all the costs and Natalie was also forced to sell assets, including the family car.

Losing her loved ones has been the greatest challenge that Natalie has ever experienced, and she is now lonely, poor and faces the burden of taking care of her grandchildren.

Case study: Thomas

Thomas (now 21 and single) and his three younger siblings (Rachel, 16, Maria, 14, and Joseph, 12) live in a dilapidated homestead in rural Tsholotsho. It is in serious need of repair, with cracked walls and loose thatch on the roof. They are poor and own only one acre of land, five goats, a radio and a small solar panel.

Five years ago, Thomas became his siblings’ guardian when his parents moved to Johannesburg to work as domestic workers. For some time, they sent regular remittances in the form of both money and groceries. Sadly, the remittances have dwindled to almost nothing. Life has been tough for the parents since the start of the pandemic, so much so that they wanted to return to Zimbabwe, but they are stuck as they could not afford to relocate their accumulated assets, including furniture.

Thomas reported that his siblings had had to drop out of school, as they could not afford school fees. They had started helping him with household chores and with cultivating their land. They were not able to return to school when they reopened, largely because the family could not pay the arrears in school fees. 

Previously, Thomas and Rachel found casual work around the community, fencing fields, digging holes for planting, slaughtering cattle and on community construction projects, (e.g., digging boreholes and dip tanks). This work provided them with enough income to survive, buying food, enabling them to pay to grind their maize, buy soap and pay for sanitary wear. Unfortunately, casual work opportunities have reduced drastically during the pandemic, leaving the household with very little money. The price of basic goods and services have increased at the same time.

Their farming is rain-fed and prone to waterlogging but they manage to cultivate some pearl millet and sorghum. Although they do not have cattle (and so no draught power), they do have five milking goats. They use soured goat’s milk to make a ricotta-like soft cheese, which they eat with sadza (maize porridge). They also collect thatching grass to sell. Thomas also owns a large number of pigeons, which he uses as a source of protein for the family as well as selling ‘start-up’ birds to neighbours. Rachel earns some income from commercial sex work. She visits a local bar and sometimes comes back late at night with gifts.

The family have had minimal NGO/Government support, and Thomas believes that support is often concentrated on older people, although he comments that some youths are equally vulnerable.

Methodology

This Zimbabwe COVID-19 Poverty Monitor Bulletin is informed by qualitative data collected by the Poverty Monitoring Initiative and the University of Zimbabwe. The interviews for this bulletin took place in November 2021, in four districts (two rural and two urban): namely Bindura Rural District in Mashonaland Central Province; Tsholotsho District in Matabeleland North Province; Nketa suburb of Bulawayo; and Chitungwiza, Harare Metropolitan Province. Ten in-depth semi-structured interviews were conducted in each study site (40 in total) in addition to approximately 20 local key informant interviews.

These data are drawn from the first round of a panel study, with the second round being collected in March 2022. More details on the sampling and methodology for this bulletin can be found here.


This bulletin was created in collaboration with the University of Zimbabwe and made possible with support from Covid Collective.

Supported by the UK Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO), the Covid Collective is based at the Institute of Development Studies (IDS). The Collective brings together the expertise of, UK and Southern-based research partner organisations and offers a rapid social science research response to inform decision-making on some of the most pressing Covid-19 related development challenges.  

 
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