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Gono
juggles Zanu PF fiction and brutal reality
Dianna
Games
October 31, 2005
http://www.businessday.co.za/articles/article.aspx?ID=BD4A107445
SOUTH African
Reserve Bank governor Tito Mboweni would not want to swap jobs with
his struggling counterpart across the border for all the money in…
well, Zimbabwe anyway.
Gideon Gono,
Zimbabwe’s central bank boss, is on a weird roller coaster ride,
which, if he survives it, is not likely to be over until at least
2008 — the earliest anyone can expect President Robert Mugabe to
step down.
As point man
on the economy, who has to keep the wheels turning so the ruling
party can keep the wolf from its door, Gono must sometimes wonder
whether he will be able to restore his integrity when it is all
over.
Desperate times
call for desperate measures, and he has a considerable bag of tricks
— which is commonly known as a monetary policy statement.
Business awaits
Gono’s policy statements with bated breath. Companies now know that
such pronouncements, usually coming with little warning and having
immediate effect, usually herald turbulent waters of the kind that
can make or break a company.
And so it was
with the latest one just over a week ago in which he announced a
brand new foreign-exchange regime. This effectively opened up the
ailing currency, tightly controlled by the government for many years,
to market forces. Within hours, the currency started heading from
Z$26000 to $1 towards the Z$90000:$1 that the black market had been
offering lately.
Many people
thought Gono’s previous policy statement, issued in July, was a
bold move. In it, he devalued the currency from about Z$6000 to
the dollar to Z$17500 for a range of transactions. Within weeks
it had sunk to Z$26000, where it remained until the recent liberalisation.
And even with
this new wind of change blowing through the currency market, the
story is that the Reserve Bank, alarmed by the speed of devaluation
into the Z$90000 zone, has instructed banks to maintain the currency
at around Z$60000 to the dollar.
It will obviously
take a while for government officials to get the hang of this liberalisation
thing. After all, it was not that long ago that the president considered
any suggestion of devaluing the currency a treasonable offence.
The rumour mill
has attributed the change of heart to interventions by Mboweni and
Finance Minister Trevor Manuel, which, relative to some loan conditions
the SA government allegedly put on the table, seemed quite palatable
to Mugabe.
The liberalisation
is a desperate move to bring hard currency into the formal economy
from the more lucrative informal trading market. There are those
who will gain, such as exporters who are now allowed to keep 70%
of their foreign exchange earnings in hard currency for 30 days,
up from 50%. But the effect on inflation is likely to be dramatic.
Gono’s statement
acknowledged this. He climbed down from his official prediction
of year-end inflation of 80% and single digits by 2007, conceding
that it was more likely to be around 300% by December. Given that
it doubled from 164% in June to 360% in September, and that the
year end is almost upon us, he doesn’t have a choice but to concede
the point.
While Gono battles
it out, trying to juggle reality and Zanu (PF) fiction for his countrymen’s
consumption, the president has other fish to fry. And no, those
fish are not the country’s fuel shortage, the fact that millions
face starvation, the plight of the hundreds of thousands he has
made homeless, massive unemployment and a sinking economy.
The far more
pressing issue for Mugabe is the elections for his new 66-member
senate — for which he forced the hapless finance ministry to find
funding in the midst of the economic misery.
Preparations
for November’s elections are in full swing. The central bank is
busy printing money for campaigning and electoral officials are
tinkering with the constituencies to ensure they reflect a positive
Zanu (PF) result. Of course, a lot of money could be saved if the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change followed its leader Morgan
Tsvangirai in boycotting the election.
With three years
(at least) to go before there is any prospect of a change of leadership,
Mugabe, faced with the possibility that the fallout of the crumbling
economy might somehow topple him from power, needs another bulwark
against dissenters in his midst. The senate is his vehicle of choice
and he even gets to appoint 15 of its members, including 10 chiefs.
As in Malawi,
where politicians have been focused on opposition attempts to impeach
the president rather than on how to feed an estimated five million
Malawians facing starvation, it is a case of fiddling while Rome/Lilongwe/Harare
burns.
*Games is
director of Africa @ Work, a publishing and research company.
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.
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