US$71m govt debt cripples Zimsec

Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 02 October 2025
📘 Source: NewsDay

THE Zimbabwe Schools Examination Council (Zimsec) is grappling with serious financial and infrastructural challenges that are threatening the integrity and smooth delivery of national examinations, a parliamentary report has revealed. The Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Education released the report following an assessment of Zimsec’s examination infrastructure, operational capacity and financial constraints. Zimsec’s ability to expand and modernise its examination infrastructure is hampered by recurring budget deficits and delayed government disbursements.

According to the report, Zimsec is owed a staggering US$71 million by the government as of March this year. The arrears, stemming largely from delayed reimbursements under the Basic Education Assistance Module (Beam), have severely hindered the council’s ability to develop secure and efficient examination infrastructure. During a visit to Zimsec’s Norton headquarters, the committee was briefed on the urgent need to raise US$4 million to install a secondary examination processing line and back-up equipment.

The investment is seen as critical to reducing the council’s current single-point-of-failure risk in printing and marking operations during overlapping examination cycles. Zimsec officials revealed that security contracts with the Zimbabwe Republic Police were straining the council’s budget, with each police officer costing US$22 per day, resulting in annual security costs exceeding US$1 million. Additionally, during peak periods, Zimsec spends up to US$13 645,19 daily on hired transport and pays US$100 per day for archival storage at Bindura University due to space shortage.

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“During its assessment of examination infrastructure and financial constraints, the committee visited Zimsec’s Norton headquarters and was briefed on the urgent requirement to mobilise US$4 million for a secondary processing line and backup equipment suite,” the report said. “This investment was said to be critical to ensuring uninterrupted printing of examinations and marking operations during concurrent cycles. Inclusive of Beam arrears, total government fee arrears stood at US$71 million as of March 2025.” The committee said the arrears directly derailed planned capital projects, including the Midlands permanent office site, bought in 2012 at a cost of US$145 000 and remains undeveloped as a result of lack of an estimated US$850 000 construction budget, while the Lupane regional hub requires US$1,2 million to break ground.

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Originally published by NewsDay • October 02, 2025

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