|
Back to Index
Zimbabwe
inflation data postponed 'indefinitely'
Mail & Guardian (SA)
April 11, 2007
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=304399&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__business/
Zimbabwe's state
data agency on Wednesday postponed "indefinitely" the release of
March inflation figures, which were expected to show prices in the
shattered economy spiralling to another record high.
The country's
Central Statistical Office (CSO) had indicated it would release
the politically-sensitive data on Wednesday, but a senior official
told Reuters it was still compiling the numbers.
"We are postponing
indefinitely ... we are still making further checks," CSO acting
director Moffat Nyoni said.
Soaring inflation
has become a hallmark of the economic crisis in Zimbabwe, once one
of Africa's most prosperous and stable nations.
Inflation hit
an annualised 1 729,9% in February, a record for the nation and
the world's highest rate, and analysts had expected an even worse
figure for March.
President Robert
Mugabe, under intensifying pressure to adopt political reforms to
avert a mass uprising and financial meltdown, has made the battle
against inflation the centrepiece of his government's plan to reverse
the economy's slide.
The government
has forecast inflation to slow to between 350% and 400% by the end
of 2007, but the International Monetary Fund sees the figure touching
4 000% by year's end.
Critics say Mugabe's
policies, particularly his seizure of thousands of white farms for
redistribution to landless Africans, are to blame for the soaring
inflation as well as the nation's growing poverty, high unemployment
and fuel and food shortages.
Implementation
of the land redistribution programme has coincided with a sharp
drop in agricultural production, forcing Zimbabwe to rely on imports
of the staple maize to feed its people.
Mugabe, in power
since independence from Britain in 1980, insists the economy is
being sabotaged by Western powers opposed to his land policy.
The economic crisis
has exacerbated political tensions, especially in the poor townships
around the capital Harare, a stronghold of the Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC), the main opposition party.
Police violently
broke up a March 11 anti-Mugabe prayer rally in Harare, arresting
MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai and dozens of other opposition members.
Reports of their beatings in police stations prompted sharp protests
from Western nations.
Mugabe, who has
branded the MDC a puppet of Western powers, accuses the opposition
of launching petrol bomb attacks on police stations as part of a
terrorist campaign to overthrow his government. – Reuters
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
|