GMAT Test Centers in Zimbabwe

GMAT Testing Location

We have found 1 GMAT test centre in Zimbabwe, located in Harare. For specific test dates of 2019, please refer to the end of this page.

GMAT Test Centers in Zimbabwe

Adept Solutions

7 Philips Rd
Belgravia
00 2634 Harare
Zimbabwe
Phone: +263 242 252 675

Test Center Information

DIRECTIONS
If you are coming from the City Center along Sam Mujoma you drive past South African Embassy , you turn to your RIGHT into Phillips Avenue( ie the second Road from the
[Robots/Traffic Lights]), Second Complex to your immediate Right, No 7 Phillips Avenue.

GMAT Exam Dates in Zimbabwe

Unlike some paper based exams, the GMAT is computer based. Therefore, there are no fixed test dates for GMAT. Wherever you are in Zimbabwe, all test centers are open from Monday through Saturday throughout the year. Some even offer the exam every day of the year.  However, some test centers are not open on Sundays and national holidays. For example, most college-based test centers might be closed for extended periods around holidays. For precise testing dates in Zimbabwe, please visit test-maker website – https://www.mba.com/.

More about Zimbabwe

Economy

There is no doubt that the proclamation of the Republic in Zimbabwe (1980) and consequently the accession to the government and parliament of the representatives of the African population marked a decisive turning point in the order of southern Africa; however, for the former Rhodesia, the cessation of discrimination and racial segregation certainly did not mean the end of the enormous inequalities between whites and blacks, derived from an economic and social structure marked by colonialism in such a clear and global way that very few comparisons can be found anywhere in the world. Here, in fact, the white community had managed to fit into every modern productive structure and to secure the total levers of command, while the African population had been segregated in specially assigned areas. The country, which potentially has great wealth (mineral resources, plantations, diversified industries and environmental heritage), went through a short period of development in the 1980s, thanks to a certain economic and social liberalization and the influx of foreign capital. fundamental for a country that has emerged from an exhausting civil war. Mugabe’s government ensured the continuity of economic policies: therefore, avoiding a sudden change of cadres of European origin in the administration, undertook a restructuring of the agricultural sector and a redistribution of colonial lands. However, the results of the reform disregarded the expectations of the population, especially the poorest. Throughout the 1990s, reforms were launched with a view to creating the conditions for economic development. However, in 2002 to a disastrous agricultural season, the sanctions of the European Union, following the failure to comply with the Abuja agreement (which provided for the cessation of illegal land occupation), the blocking of aid by the World Bank and the exit from the Commonwealth. The country thus plunged into a deep crisis: GDP began to decrease year on year (it fell by 35% between 2003 and 2007) and in 2007 it recorded a decline of 6%, reaching US $ 11,977 million; that per capita was US $ 54.6. In 2006 the government introduced the seventh ambitious economic recovery program in ten years, but the following year unemployment remained at very high values ​​ (80%) and inflation stood at 10,452.6%. These conditions, combined with recurrent droughts and the epidemic of AIDS, have only aggravated the chronic shortage of food and energy products, leading to the ruin of a country that was considered the second economic power in southern Africa after South Africa.