Zimbabwe’s local products are steadily reclaiming dominance on supermarket shelves as Government and industry leaders intensify efforts to strengthen domestic manufacturing, create jobs and build industrial resilience under Vision 2030.
Speaking at the 2026 ZimBrands Awards, Industry and Commerce Deputy Minister Raj Modi said Zimbabwean brands had demonstrated remarkable resilience, innovation and competitiveness despite operating in a difficult economic environment marked by global uncertainty, geopolitical tensions and rising import competition.
“The increase in shelf space occupied by local goods, from around 10 percent to over 60 percent, is a remarkable achievement,” Deputy Minister Modi said.
“It reflects growing confidence in Zimbabwean products and shows that our industries are capable of competing effectively.”
The transformation marks a major shift from the years when imported products heavily dominated Zimbabwe’s retail sector following the country’s industrial decline during the 2000s.
At the peak of de-industrialisation, many local factories struggled with hyperinflation, foreign currency shortages, obsolete machinery, low capacity utilisation and declining investment, forcing retailers to rely heavily on imports from South Africa, Zambia and beyond.
Today, however, locally manufactured brands are increasingly reclaiming market share across sectors including food processing, beverages, agriculture, telecommunications, financial services, retail and household consumer goods.
Government says the growth of local brands is closely aligned with the National Development Strategy 2 and Vision 2030, both of which place industrialisation at the centre of Zimbabwe’s economic transformation agenda.
Deputy Minister Modi said the National Industrial Development Policy 2 provides a framework for boosting manufacturing productivity, improving value addition and strengthening competitiveness within regional and global markets.
“Our shared goal is to build an industrial sector that is productive, modern, and able to drive sustainable development,” he said.
The Buy Zimbabwe campaign, once viewed with scepticism during its early years, has become one of the country’s most visible economic localisation initiatives.
Authorities say rising shelf space for local goods demonstrates improving confidence among both retailers and consumers in Zimbabwean products.
Industry leaders argue that strengthening domestic manufacturing remains critical not only for employment creation, but also for reducing import dependence and preserving scarce foreign currency.
Analysts say local industries are also benefiting from growing demand driven by mining expansion, agricultural recovery, infrastructure projects and rising consumer spending across the economy.
The ZimBrands Awards themselves have increasingly evolved into a broader measure of consumer trust, product quality and market competitiveness.
Deputy Minister Modi said the awards remain credible because they are largely grounded in consumer experiences and purchasing behaviour.
“The brands being recognised have distinguished themselves through consistency, innovation and strong customer focus in a competitive marketplace,” he said.
Government is now urging Zimbabwean companies to intensify innovation, improve quality standards and position themselves to benefit from opportunities under the African Continental Free Trade Area.
The AfCFTA opens access to a continental market of more than 1.4 billion people but also exposes local firms to intensified competition from larger African economies.
“Zimbabwean brands must continue to innovate, improve standards, and remain responsive to market demands,” Modi said.
The Deputy Minister stressed that Government alone cannot drive industrial transformation without strong collaboration between manufacturers, retailers, financial institutions, consumers and development partners.
“Government alone cannot deliver industrial transformation,” he said, calling for stronger partnerships between the public and private sectors to sustain growth and competitiveness.
Economists say the long-term success of Zimbabwe’s industrial revival will ultimately depend on energy stability, financing access, technological upgrades, export competitiveness and stronger integration into regional value chains.
But for now, the growing visibility of Zimbabwean products on supermarket shelves is increasingly being viewed as one of the clearest signs that parts of the country’s manufacturing sector are slowly regaining strength after years of decline.