| |
Back to Index
ZIMBABWE:
Heralding new economic dawn premature, say analysts
IRIN News
January 12, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=51081
JOHANNESBURG
- Zimbabwe's economy is unlikely to recover in 2006, despite reports
of a new deal between government, business and labour aimed at improving
prospects for stability.
While the official Herald newspaper reported that the Tripartite
Negotiating Forum (TNF) - comprising representatives of government,
business and labour - had reached an agreement on a Price and Incomes
Stabilisation Protocol, both labour and business officials denied
an accord.
Among the targets the TNF reportedly agreed to was a commitment
by the government to reduce inflation, currently running at 585
percent, to 80 percent by the end of the year. Another was that
the budget deficit be cut to less than five percent of GDP.
Economist Dennis Nikisi told IRIN these targets would be unattainable.
Reducing the deficit and reining in inflation was not possible "when
the government's domestic borrowing is at $14 trillion [US $15 billion).
How are they going to redeem that as soon as those [treasury] bills
mature? It's going to push a lot of money into the economy, resulting
in additional monetary growth and inflation that is not going to
go down", Nikisi said.
He added that government entered into its deregulation strategy
with the hope that "prices will find a disciplined level and bottom
out".
"They [government] felt that if we let go of the reins [in terms
of price controls on goods and fuel imports] ... there will come
a time when resistance creeps in and demand will lessen and things
will stabilise. But because of the endemic shortages [of fuel, basic
commodities etc] inflation is not bottoming out, it's only getting
worse," Nikisi explained.
Inflation could peak at 1,000 percent in 2006, he warned.
Zimbabwe needed sustainable sources of foreign currency, and the
support of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank. "I
don't see Zimbabwe managing to have sustainable supplies of fuel
and many other raw materials [in short supply] without that," Nikisi
added.
Confederation of Zimbabwe Industries (CZI) chief executive Farai
Zizhou also told IRIN the deficit and inflation targets reported
in the Herald were not achievable this year. He added that the TNF
would meet again on 19 January to discuss recommendations from its
technical committee on the matter, but no agreement had been reached
as yet.
Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions General-Secretary Wellington Chibebe
said the Herald article was surprising as labour had understood
government to be resistant to many of the recommendations in the
proposed Price and Incomes Stabilisation Protocol.
Zizhou noted that Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono is expected
to make a policy statement in the next week or so. "This will be
instructive as he will outline what weapons he intends to employ
to fight inflation. Part of the reason we have high inflation is
due to the central bank's effort to raise money for food imports
through the release of a mixture of treasury bills on the market,"
Zizhou noted. "A choice had to be made between high inflation and
starvation."
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
|