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IMF'S
strange mouthings hit Bob
Comment from The Financial Mail (SA)
October 01, 2004
http://free.financialmail.co.za/04/1001/currents/bcurrent.htm
Earlier this month,
the state media in Zimbabwe quoted an unnamed IMF official as saying that
the economic situation in the country had "improved dramatically". But
a fortnight later, when the IMF released the report of the mission that
visited the country in March, the official line was revised.
Addressing the UN
general assembly in New York, President Robert Mugabe insisted that the
economy was recovering and accused the IMF of "strange mouthings, lies
and fabrications about our situation".
The report of the
IMF - which this week closed its Harare office in a sign of frustration
with Zimbabwe's political leadership - is remarkably forthright. It notes
that the 30% decline in Zimbabwe's GDP over the past five years - with
a further forecast 4,5% fall in 2004 - "mainly reflects the inadequacy
of economic policies", while the "disorderly implementation" of the land
reform programme has "sharply reduced" agricultural production. The economic
decline has had "dire social consequences", the IMF says , warning that
unemployment is high and increasing, social indicators have deteriorated
and the HIV/Aids pandemic remains "largely unchecked", with one person
in four HIV-positive. "Severe food shortages" have caused a "vicious cycle
of malnourishment and disease".
Concerns over governance,
the rule of law, human rights and property rights have "severely damaged
confidence, discouraged investment and promoted capital flight and emigration",
the report says. Citing the "disruptive effects" of land reform, the IMF
quotes an official report that found that actual resettlement of 134 452
families and 6,4m ha fell far short of government's claimed 350 000 families
and 11m ha.
Independent reports
estimate unemployed farm workers and their families at more than 1m people,
or about 9% of the population. Far from praising the "new" monetary policy
that Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono launched in December, the IMF details
a long list of essential reforms, including tighter monetary and fiscal
policies, the phasing out of concessional loans that government is using
to keep firms and exporters afloat, and abolition of the overvalued official
exchange rate of Z$824/US$ compared with an auction rate of Z$5 616. It
criticises the foreign currency auction launched in January, saying it
is "heavily managed" and should be changed "decisively" to reinvigorate
exports and contain import demand. It shows that exports, which government
says have recovered, fell from US$2,3bn in 2000 to an estimated $1,2bn
in 2003, and predicts a further decline to $1,13bn in the current year.
Foreign arrears have risen fivefold from $400m in 2000 to $2,1bn last
year and will increase to $2,6bn by end-2004.
Little of this is
new to Zimbabweans, despite the state media's efforts to present a more
favourable picture. The IMF says that though the authorities agree with
its medium-term recommendations, "they indicated no intention to ease
the excessive regulations and economic distortions" that have occurred.
It assumes that government will adopt a "more determined" anti-inflation
policy after the parliamentary elections next March and that this will
set the tone for a medium term recovery. In the interim, however, it expects
heavy pre-election spending to result in further declines in the exchange
rate and to revive inflation, forecasting year-end inflation next year
of 436%, up from less than 200% at the end of this year.
In his monetary policy
review next month, Gono may be forced to devalue the Zimbabwe dollar again,
but he is unlikely to take the IMF's advice and tighten monetary and fiscal
policy by phasing out cheap loans and special state support schemes for
business.
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