|
Back to Index
Cost
of living rockets as maize shortage bites
IRIN News
January
10, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=57026
BULAWAYO - The month-on-month cost of
living for an urban family of six in Zimbabwe has surged by 43.1
percent, while basic commodities, such as cooking oil, maizemeal
and flour have been "consistently unavailable" on the formal market
since the onset of the festive season, said the latest report by
the Consumer Council of Zimbabwe (CCZ).
Zimbabwe's hyperinflation, which saw
levels persist stubbornly above 1,000 percent in 2006, has resulted
in a family of six now having to spend US$1,406 to subsist in January,
as opposed to the US$982 monthly income required in December 2006.
The CCZ noted that the steepest increases were recorded in education
(261.9 percent), bread (179.7 percent), white sugar (166.7 percent)
and cooking oil (78.3 percent).
The latest figures released by Zimbabwe's
central statistics office showed that year-on-year inflation had
risen by 182 percentage points in December from 1,098 percent in
November, hitting a new record high of 1,280 percent.
In Bulawayo, Zimbabwe's second city,
the unavailability of staple foods has been forcing people to purchase
more expensive foodstuffs and has drawn people from outlying rural
areas to the city in search of maize, a staple food.
Communal farmer Lindani Siwela arrived
in Bulawayo a few days ago to look for maize, but found none. "I
had no option but to buy whatever I felt would, at least, satisfy
my family. I went for potatoes and spaghetti, but I had to fork
out a lot of money ... At least I now have something for the family,
but because, naturally, we are sadza [maizemeal porridge] eaters,
I urge government to find a solution to the maizemeal shortages
and provide millers with grain, so that we can have sadza once more.
The last time we had it was shortly before Christmas."
A 10kg pocket of potatoes retails for
about Z$40,000 (US$160) - a monthly salary for those who have a
job. Unemployment in Zimbabwe is estimated to be about 80 percent.
According to the consumer council, when commodities are available,
1kg of margarine costs Z$5,724 (US$23), 2kg of flour costs Z$2,364
(US$9.50) and 750mm of cooking oil retails for Z$4,666(US$18.50).
Grain millers in Matabeleland, a drought-prone
region in southern Zimbabwe, told IRIN the state-owned Grain Marketing
Board (GMB) had failed to supply maize because it had no grain reserves.
Arnold Mutemi, of the Grain Millers Association,
said, "Some of our members last got allocations from GMB in the
second week of December and all their stocks were sold out during
the run-up to the festive season. Now we are stranded. Save for
a few who have gone an extra mile to source grain from the parallel
market, most of us have virtually no maize, and that means we can
not produce any maizemeal - that is why we are experiencing this
shortage."
Ndimande Masotsha, a traditional leader
in Tsholotsho, a district about 110km northwest of Bulawayo, told
IRIN, "Our village has not had any [maize] deliveries for a long
time now. The miller who normally supplies us says there is no maize
at the GMB. There is nothing in the shops and people are worried.
"It is the lucky ones, who have relatives
who work in South Africa or Botswana who brought them maizemeal,
who still eat sadza. Otherwise, most of us have now survive either
by begging from those who have or by eating other secondary foods,"
Masotsha said.
Agricultural Minister Joseph Made dismissed
the reports of maize shortages. "Besides reserves from our last
harvest we have Operation Maguta, which has gone a long way in ensuring
food security, so I am not aware of the so-called shortages that
you claim," he told IRIN.
In 2006 soldiers were deployed in Operation
Maguta to supervise agricultural production on farms and, in some
cases, forced farmers to produce maize.
Once known as the breadbasket of southern
Africa, Zimbabwe's farming system was disrupted in 2000, when President
Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF government embarked on a fast-track land
redistribution exercise that sought to give land to thousands of
blacks from impoverished communal areas by removing more than 4,000
white commercial farmers from their estates. The European Union
and the United States subsequently imposed limited sanctions on
top government officials for human rights violations, and Mugabe's
disputed re-election in 2002.
Inadequate government support for the
new farmers, such as supplying fertiliser, farming equipment and
seeds, has had a severe impact on food production.
The government has consistently denied
the existence of food shortages. In late 2006 the GMB said Zimbabwe
was expecting a surplus above its annual cereal requirement of about
1.9 million metric tonnes. However, independent estimates suggested
that only 800,000mt of maize was produced, or less than half the
country's annual requirement.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|