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Costs
and Causes of Zimbabwe's Crisis
Michael Clemens & Todd Moss, Centre
for Global Development
July 20, 2005
http://www.cgdev.org/content/publications/detail/2918/
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Summary
Zimbabwe
has experienced a precipitous collapse in its economy over the past
five years. The purchasing power of the average Zimbabwean in 2005
has fallen back to the same level as in 1953. For people in extreme
poverty, a collapse like this translates directly into sickness
and death. We conservatively estimate that persistence in the economic
shock will cost the lives of at least 3,900 Zimbabwean children
per year—about half the infant death toll from HIV/AIDS. The government
blames its economic problems on external forces and drought. We
assess these claims, but find that the economic crisis has cost
the government far more in key budget resources than has the donor
pullout. We show that low rainfall cannot account for the shock
either. This leaves economic misrule as the only plausible cause
of Zimbabwe’s economic regression, the decline in welfare, and unnecessary
deaths of its children.
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