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ZIMBABWE:
More fuel deregulation as shortages bite
IRIN News
July 19, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48199
HARARE - Standing
for hours by the roadside waiting for a bus, or stranded in a queue
outside a petrol station that snakes for several blocks, Zimbabweans
are increasingly used to a fuel crisis that has defied the government's
efforts to resolve.
The latest stab
at the problem was an announcement last week further deregulating
procurement and distribution, and throwing the doors open to private
business to import and sell fuel at a gazetted price - an admission
that the forex-starved authorities have been unable to keep the
pumps supplied.
"We have
always encouraged this [the involvement of private fuel companies].
In fact, it will help augment the supplies that are being put onto
the market for the general public," the official Herald newspaper
quoted minister of energy and power development, Mike Nyambuya,
as saying.
The new approach
does, however, have its critics: Central Bank Governor Gideon Gono
called for fewer private companies importing fuel rather than more,
and accused some of them of misusing foreign currency allocations.
"Such abuses
include diversion of fuel funds, where, for instance, the Reserve
Bank of Zimbabwe had to battle for a full month with 15 fuel-importing
companies which had failed to account for US $12.4 million worth
of foreign exchange allocated to them," Gono said in a monetary
policy statement in May.
In the first
four months of 2005, the central bank allocated US $50.4 million
to private oil companies given the responsibility of importing fuel
by means of a "Special Purpose Vehicle". Around 120 companies
are licensed to bring in fuel, but Gono wants that whittled down
to 20.
Zimbabwe needs
around US $750 million a year to cover its fuel bill but, given
the economy's steep decline, that figure could be far less, analysts
suggest. Previously the state-owned, corruption-tarnished National
Oil Company of Zimbabwe held the monopoly on procurement.
Petrol sells
for Zim $10,000 per litre and Zim $9,600 for diesel at the official
price, and 10 times that rate on the parallel market.
Opposition Movement
for Democratic Change legislator Murisi Zwizwai predicted a boom
in the parallel market if more companies were allowed to import.
"The black
market is going to thrive as a result of the liberalisation of fuel
procurement. This defeats Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Governor Gideon
Gono's policies to reign in the black market," he said recently
in parliament.
The impact of
fuel shortages is felt throughout the economy. "Bread, for
example, is in short supply because some major bakeries depend on
fuel for production and distribution," said chief executive
officer of the Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce, Innocent Makwiramiti.
He insisted
that there was an urgent need to open the market to private companies,
saying, "The government should move in fast and invite as many
procurers of fuel as possible. The advantage is that these companies
have the capacity to source foreign currency from different sources
and, as we are aware, the government cannot go it alone because
it does not have sufficient money to pay suppliers."
Makwiramiti
suggested that the government play a monitoring role to ensure the
private sector did not overprice fuel, but warned against excessive
control, as this would discourage the industry.
Economic analyst
John Robertson said while deregulation was welcome, it was not enough
to end shortages.
"Deregulation
could help improve the situation, but the fact is that it might
take us a long while before the situation can normalise. It does
not make any sense to liberalise fuel procurement without addressing
the problem of how the government can improve the inflow of foreign
currency," he noted.
Oil prices on
the international market have been rising, making it even more difficult
for the government to pay for fuel. A barrel of oil now costs around
US $60, up from US $12 in 1999.
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