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Mugabe signs China deals as Zim FDI tanks

Beijing - China and Zimbabwe signed several cooperation deals during a visit to Beijing by long-time Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, Chinese media reported late on Monday.

Mugabe began a state visit to China on Sunday, which has included talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping, Xinhua news agency reported.

The two presidents witnessed the signing of several deals, including on food, finance and tourism.

Mugabe was an old friend of China, Xi was quoted as saying, praising him as a leader of Africa's struggle against colonialism.

READ: China's Xi hails Mugabe as renowned leader

Zimbabwe was committed to speeding up its economic development and hoped to boost Africa-China ties, Xinhua reported Mugabe as saying.

This comes as a 59% plunge of foreign investment into Zimbabwe to US$67m in the first half of this year, the central bank said on Monday, reflecting worries over President Robert Mugabe's policies and the risk of investing in his country.

READ: Call for Zim to 'fight negative perceptions'

Official data show China has extended $1bn in loans to Zimbabwe since 2009 and trade between the two nations rose to $1bn last year from $300m five years ago.

Mugabe has increasingly leaned on China after being shunned by Western trade and financial partners. They have been put off by concern over human rights and alleged fraud in elections won by the president and his Zanu-PF party.

Announcing the drop in foreign direct investment, Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe governor John Mangudya said exports, mostly minerals and tobacco, were also down 13% in the first half of the year, to $1.3bn, compared with the first six months of 2013.

"There is therefore need for the country to create an investor-friendly environment so as to tap into these external capital resources to boost employment, production and exports," Mangudya said in a half-year monetary policy statement.

Zimbabwe's economy is experiencing a serious dollar crunch and electricity shortages. Several companies have failed to pay salaries or have closed altogether, in a country where only 500 000 out of a total 13 million people hold formal jobs.

READ: Zim creates fewer formal jobs

The economy did return to growth in 2009, after nearly a decade of recession, when Mugabe was forced to share power with his opposition rivals. But his landslide victory last year has coincided with a rapid slowdown.

The government has cut its growth target for this year to 3.1% from 6.1% previously.

Mangudya said the tough economic conditions had strained the capacity of companies and individuals to repay loans. The percentage of non-performing loans out of total loans had risen to 18.5 percent from 17 percent at the start of the year. Banks in turn have tightened their lending to customers.

"Reduced credit is leading to a decline in economic growth, private consumption, job losses and decrease in government revenue," Mangudya said.

Mangudya said liquidity problems among banks meant foreign banks like units of Barclays Bank and Standard Chartered and larger local lenders would have to raise their minimum capital to $100m by 2020 from the current $25m. Smaller banks would be required to maintain minimum capital of $25m.

Mangudya said in order to ease the dollar crunch in the economy, banks would now be required to keep only 5% of their foreign currency offshore, down from 30%.

NOW READ: Zimbabwe economy takes another dive

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