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ZIMBABWE:
Inflation hits record high
IRIN
News
August 18, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=48642
JOHANNESBURG
- The price of goods and services in Zimbabwe rose by at least 47
percent last month - the highest increase ever recorded in the country,
according to the Central Statistical Office (CSO).
Low-income families were experiencing "difficult times, as shortages
of basic commodities continue and price adjustments occur daily",
the Consumer Council of Zimbabwe (CCZ) reported.
Inflation reached 164.3 percent at the end of June, and last month's
record hike drove the annual rate to its current 254.8 percent.
Economist John Robertson explained that "the increase in prices
of goods and services has been driven by the scarcity of foreign
exchange".
The official Herald newspaper observed that the increase "makes
it mathematically impossible" for Zimbabwe to achieve the target
of 80 percent year-on-year inflation by the end of 2005, set by
Reserve Bank Governor Gideon Gono.
Acting CSO director Moffat Nyoni was quoted by the newspaper as
attributing the latest rise partly to the Reserve Bank, which had
reset exchange rates.
"If the exchange rate had been allowed to fall in line with inflation,
monthly [inflation] figures would have been higher over the last
year, but last month's figure would have been lower," reported the
Herald.
According to Robertson, the biggest increases were recorded in school
fees, which soared by 1,263.6 percent, and rent, which climbed by
157.3 percent. The annual inflation rate for food and non-alcoholic
beverages was 226 percent, while for non-food items it was 273.9
percent.
From US $227 in June the expenditure basket for a family of six
had shot up by at least $135 to $362 in July, the consumer council
noted. "The increase was largely propelled by ... both food and
non-food items, following last month's increase in fuel prices and
the devaluation of the local currency".
Teachers generally earn $648 a month, while domestic workers get
an average monthly wage of $21.
The CCZ said the price rises could also be partly attributed to
the "prevalence of the black market, which gives ready access to
commodities such as sugar, cooking oil, mealie-meal, flour, soap
and fuel, which have disappeared off the formal market."
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