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ZIMBABWE:
Economic gloom deepens despair
IRIN News
August 19, 2004
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=42757
JOHANNESBURG
- Four in five Zimbabweans went without food at least once last
year, according to a new survey.
The results of the Afrobarometer survey, released on Wednesday,
said more than half of all adult Zimbabweans (54 percent) thought
current living conditions were "bad", and the present generation
thought they were worse off than their parents (52 percent).
The Afrobarometer is an independent survey conducted by the Institute
for Democracy in South Africa, the Centre for Democratic Development
of Ghana and US-based Michigan State University. An estimated 1,200
Zimbabweans across the country were polled in May 2004 on how they
felt about prevailing economic conditions and the performance of
political leaders.
About 82 percent of respondents said they had been short of food
at least once in the past year, a figure much higher than in any
of the 15 other African countries covered by the survey.
The report also confirmed a recent finding by the International
Monetary Fund: Zimbabwe had the fastest shrinking economy in the
world, causing citizens to become "one-third poorer in the last
five years".
Once the breadbasket of the region, Zimbabwe has now become the
worst food-deficit country in Southern Africa.
In 2003 food aid was distributed to over 5.2 million people - more
than half the population - and in April this year the UN's Food
and Agriculture Organisation forecast that the country would produce
only half its food needs for 2004/5.
"Only a decade ago, Zimbabwe's healthcare system was among the best
in Africa. Today, severe shortages of drugs and medical equipment
are pushing hospitals and clinics close to ruin. Between 1999 and
2002, while infant mortality rates held steady in South Africa and
declined in Malawi, they jumped by 15 percent in Zimbabwe," the
survey said.
The "very rapid deterioration" in food security and medical care
had "coincided with the period of land seizures, drought, and the
manipulation of food relief supplies as an instrument of political
control".
Inflation climbed to 620 percent in November 2003. Unemployment
currently stood at just over 60 percent and 91 percent of respondents
in 2004 said their families had been short of cash at some point
during the previous year.
After four years of political upheaval Zimbabweans were losing faith
in democracy, the survey found.
Whereas in 1999, many Zimbabweans firmly opposed the idea of one
party rule (74 percent), by 2004 they were much less certain (58
percent).
There was also growing wariness of multiparty competiton as respondents
said it "often or always ... leads to conflict".
According to Afrobarometer, two-thirds of adult Zimbabweans thought
"problems in this country can only be solved if [opposition] Movement
for Democratic Change and ZANU-PF sit down and talk with one another".
They preferred reconciliation to either continued ZANU-PF resistance
to talks (19 percent) or MDC's call for new elections (8 percent).
Just four percent of ordinary Zimbabweans mentioned land reform
as a priority national problem, while 76 percent said land acquisitions
should be done by legal means, with compensation for owners.
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