It is a move straight out of the Mugabe playbook, and the British Foreign Office has not hesitated to call it out. Zimbabwe’s parliament has voted to extend President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s term to 2030, bypassing the constitution and effectively scrapping elections. The market signals are clear: political risk in Harare has just spiked, and capital flight will accelerate.
The extension, pushed through by Mnangagwa’s ZANU-PF party, removes the constitutional two-term limit and resets the electoral clock. Opposition figures have decried it as a brazen power grab. The UK Foreign Office issued a statement condemning the move, calling it a “significant step backwards for democracy” and urging Zimbabwe to respect the rule of law.
From a fiscal perspective, this undermines any remaining investor confidence. Zimbabwe’s economy is already in intensive care: inflation is running at over 200%, the parallel market exchange rate is a disaster, and the gold-backed ZiG currency is struggling to gain traction. The term extension adds a political risk premium to already distressed assets. International bondholders, already nursing losses on defaulted debt, will see this as a signal that reform is off the agenda.
The timing is particularly cynical. Mnangagwa’s reign has been marked by broken promises of economic recovery. The extension suggests he is not willing to face the electorate, and that is a clear admission that the government knows it has failed on its core mandate: economic stability. The Foreign Office’s statement is unlikely to change behaviour in Harare, but it does serve as a warning to other investors: the rule of law in Zimbabwe is for sale.
For the City of London, this is a non-event in terms of direct exposure. Zimbabwe is effectively locked out of international capital markets. But it is a reminder of the fragility of governance in resource-rich frontier markets. The real story here is the signal it sends to other African leaders considering similar constitutional tweaks. The market should price in a higher risk of political expropriation across the region.
Inflation in Zimbabwe is a textbook case of what happens when central bank independence is sacrificed for political convenience. The extension of Mnangagwa’s term will do nothing to tame price pressures. If anything, it will accelerate the flight to hard currency. The black market rate for the US dollar will strengthen further against the ZiG.
The bottom line: Zimbabwe has chosen the path of least resistance, and it will pay for it in lost investment and deeper isolation. The Foreign Office’s condemnation is correct but toothless. The real discipline will come from the markets, and they have already delivered their verdict.








