Zimbabwe could boost its real GDP growth from 5.0% to 6.5% and double its export growth rate by deepening economic ties with BRICS nations, according to new research by economist Benjamin Epstein.
Epstein, a speaker and analyst at the Think BRICS channel, examines Zimbabwe’s 2026 economic outlook through the lens of BRICS integration in his paper “The BRICS 25% Trade Dividend? Zimbabwe’s Prospective Growth and Potential Impact of BRICS Economic Linkages.” His research builds on the 14th BRICS Trade Ministers Meeting in Moscow, which set a target of increasing intra-bloc trade share by 25%. Epstein takes that directive and models what it means for a specific African economy navigating between cyclical recovery and structural transformation.
The research presents two growth paths for Zimbabwe in 2026. Under a base scenario, the economy grows at 5.0% real GDP, driven primarily by a 6.3% rise in mining and quarrying. Job creation sits at 1.2%, and export growth reaches 8.0%, powered largely by raw commodity shipments of gold, tobacco, and lithium. This trajectory relies on the stabilization of the Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG) currency and high international gold prices, with reserves reaching approximately US$950 million by late 2025.
The BRICS scenario tells a different story. GDP growth accelerates to 6.5%, job creation doubles to 2.4%, and export growth jumps to 16%. The difference lies not in extracting more resources but in shifting toward higher-value manufacturing and services. Epstein identifies 12 critical sectors under Zimbabwe’s “Champion Services Sector Scheme,” including information technology, medical value travel, and construction-related engineering. These sectors, he argues, can break what economists call the “commodity trap”, where raw material exporters watch their terms of trade deteriorate against manufactured goods.
Epstein grounds his analysis in real trade data rather than theoretical projections. He uses India’s trade relationship with the Southern African Customs Union (SACU) as a proxy for Zimbabwe’s potential trajectory. Between FY 2015 and FY 2024, India’s exports to SACU countries grew 68%, reaching US$9.3 billion. The regional market share expanded by 35 basis points, and the composition of trade shifted from primary commodities toward diversified value-added products, including machinery and pharmaceuticals.
This matters for Zimbabwe because, as a landlocked economy, it depends on regional trade corridors. South Africa, the UAE, and India already represent the fastest-growing trade partners for the broader Southern African region. Epstein’s data shows that Zimbabwe’s mineral earnings could reach US$7.5 billion in 2026, a 7% increase from the previous year. But he cautions that mining-led growth alone creates a misleading picture of prosperity when 85% of economic activity remains informal and outside the tax base.
The research raises pointed questions about how BRICS engagement reshapes Africa’s position in global value chains. China and the UAE already dominate Zimbabwe’s trade balance. Between 2023 and 2024, Zimbabwe ran a $1.3 billion trade deficit with the UAE and a $400 million surplus with China. Epstein argues that without structural reforms, deeper BRICS ties risk replacing old dependencies with new ones.
His proposed solution centers on Special Economic Zones, digital trade platforms, and institutional reform. The Manhize Steel plant offers a concrete example. By producing steel domestically, Zimbabwe can cut into a $1.9 billion annual import bill while positioning itself as a regional steel hub. The research also highlights lithium beneficiation as a strategic priority, with Bikita Minerals investing US$500 million in processing facilities ahead of a January 2027 ban on raw concentrate exports.
Foreign direct investment within the Zimbabwe–BRICS corridor is moving away from extraction-only models toward what Epstein calls “self-reliance frameworks.” These frameworks prioritize energy security, agro-industrial innovation, and digital financial services. India’s engineering sector, with over $37 billion in annual turnover, and its “consortium approach” to telecom exports provide blueprints for collaborative infrastructure deployment that avoids single-vendor dependency.
Epstein does not shy away from the obstacles. Zimbabwe’s public debt stands at approximately $23.4 billion, limiting access to concessional financing. A 500-megawatt electricity supply gap threatens industrial expansion. And the economy’s reliance on rain-fed agriculture leaves GDP vulnerable to climate shocks, as the 2024 El Niño drought demonstrated when growth collapsed to 1.7%.
These constraints strengthen the case for BRICS membership, Epstein argues, by opening alternative financing channels through institutions like the New Development Bank and enabling technology transfers that address infrastructure deficits.
Readers who want to examine the complete data sets, trade matrices, and policy frameworks can download Epstein’s full research paper through the links provided here:
Prospective Growth Impact of Zimbabwe
The paper includes detailed sectoral analysis, India-SACU longitudinal trade data, and projected macro-fiscal indicators for Zimbabwe’s 2026–2030 growth trajectory.
Zimbabwe’s path from cyclical rebound to durable transformation will test whether BRICS can deliver on its promise of equitable South-South partnership, or whether new trade architectures will reproduce the asymmetric dependencies they claim to replace.
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