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Zimbabwe's
prices rise 900%, turning staples into luxuries
Michael Wines, The New York Times
May
02, 2006
http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/05/02/africa/zimbabwe.php
No, not per
roll. Four hundred seventeen Zimbabwean dollars is the value of
a single two-ply sheet. A roll costs $145,750 - in American currency,
about 69 cents.
The price of
toilet paper, like everything else here, soars almost daily, spawning
jokes about an impending better use for Zimbabwe's $500 bill, now
the smallest in circulation.
But what is
happening is no laughing matter. For untold numbers of Zimbabweans,
toilet paper - and bread, margarine, meat, even the once ubiquitous
morning cup of tea - have become unimaginable luxuries. All are
casualties of the hyperinflation that is roaring toward 1,000 percent
a year, a rate usually seen only in war zones.
Zimbabwe has
been tormented this entire decade by both deep recession and high
inflation, but in recent months the economy seems to have abandoned
whatever moorings it had left. The national budget for 2006 has
already been largely spent. Government services have started to
crumble.
The purity of
Harare's drinking water, siphoned from a lake downstream of its
sewer outfall, has been unreliable for months, and dysentery and
cholera swept the city in December and January. The city suffers
rolling electrical blackouts. Mounds of uncollected garbage pile
up on the streets of the slums.
Zimbabwe's inflation
is hardly history's worst - in Weimar Germany in 1923, prices quadrupled
each month, compared with doubling about once every three or four
months in Zimbabwe. That said, experts agree that Zimbabwe's inflation
is currently the world's highest, and has been for some time.
Public-school
fees and other ever-rising government surcharges have begun to exceed
the monthly incomes of many urban families lucky enough to find
work. The jobless - officially 70 percent of Zimbabwe's 4.2 million
workers, but widely placed at 80 percent when idle farmers are included
- furtively hawk tomatoes and baggies of ground corn from roadside
tables, an occupation banned by the police since last May.
Those with spare
cash put it not in banks, which pay a paltry 4 to 10 percent annual
interest on savings, but in gilt-edged investments like bags of
corn meal and sugar, guaranteed not to lose their value.
"There's a surrealism
here that's hard to get across to people," Mike Davies, the chairman
of a civic-watchdog group called the Combined
Harare Residents Association, said in an interview. "If you
need something and have cash, you buy it. If you have cash you spend
it today, because tomorrow it's going to be worth 5 percent less.
"Normal horizons
don't exist here. People live hand to mouth."
President Robert
G. Mugabe has responded to the hardship in two ways.
Although there
is no credible threat to his 26-year rule, Zimbabwe's political
opposition is calling for mass protests against the economic situation.
So Mr. Mugabe has tightened his grip on power even further, turning
the economy over to a national security council of his closest allies.
In addition, he has seeded the government's civilian ministries
this year with loyal army and intelligence officers who now control
key functions, from food security to tax collection.
At the same
time, Mr. Mugabe's government has printed trillions of new Zimbabwean
dollars to keep ministries functioning and to shield the salaries
of key supporters - and potential enemies - against further erosion.
Supplemental
spending proposed early in April would increase the 2006 spending
limits approved last November by fully 40 percent, and more such
emergency spending measures are all but certain before the year
ends.
On Friday, the
government said it would triple the salaries of 190,000 soldiers
and teachers. But even those government workers still badly trail
inflation; the best of the raises, to as much as $33 million a month,
already are slightly below the latest poverty line for the average
family of five.
This will only
worsen inflation, for printing too many worthless dollars is in
part what got Zimbabwe into this mess to begin with. Zimbabwe fell
into hyperinflation after the government began seizing commercial
farms in about 2000. Foreign investors fled, manufacturing ground
to a halt, goods and foreign currency needed to buy imports fell
into short supply and prices shot up.
Inflation, about
400 percent per year last November, edged over 600 percent in January,
but began to soar after the government revealed that it had paid
the International Monetary Fund $221 million to cover an arrears
that threatened Zimbabwe's membership in the organization.
In February,
the government admitted that it had printed at least $21 trillion
in currency - and probably much more, critics say - to buy the American
dollars with which the debt was paid.
By March, inflation
had touched 914 percent a year, at which rate prices would rise
more than tenfold in 12 months. Experts agree that quadruple-digit
inflation is now a certainty.
In the midst
of this craziness, some Harare enclaves seem paradoxically normal.
North of downtown, where diplomats and aid workers are financed
with American dollars, and generators and bottled water are the
norm, the cafes still serve cappuccino and the markets sell plump
roasting chickens, albeit $1 million chickens.
Everywhere else,
the hardship is inescapable.
In Glen Norah,
a dense suburb of thousands of tiny homes southwest of the city,
58-year-old Ayina Musoni and her divorced daughter Regai, 26, share
their five-room house with Regai's two children and three lodgers.
The lodgers, two security guards and a teacher, pay monthly rent
totaling $3 million, or about $14.25 in American money.
Ms. Musoni's
latest monthly bill for services from the Harare city government
was $2.4 million. The refrigerator in her closet-size kitchen is
empty except for a few bottles of boiled water. Christmas dinner
was sadza, or corn porridge, with hard-boiled eggs. For Easter,
there was nothing.
Mother and daughter
make as much as $10 in American money each week by selling vegetables,
from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. But the profits are being consumed
by rising costs at the farmers' market where they buy stock. "Like
potatoes," Regai said. "I went last week, and it was $500,000 for
a packet. And when I went this weekend, it was $700,000.
Millions of
Zimbabweans survive these days on the kindness of outsiders - foreigners
who donate food or medicine and, more important, family members
who have fled the nation for better lives abroad.
As many as three
million Zimbabweans now live elsewhere, usually in Britain, South
Africa or the United States. An economist here, John Robertson,
estimates that they remit as much as $50 million a month to their
families - the equivalent of one sixth of the gross domestic product.
Ms. Musoni's
is not a hard-luck story; in Harare, most people now live this way,
or worse. Indeed, life for many may be better in the nation's impoverished
rural areas, where subsistence farming is the only industry and
millions of people are guaranteed free monthly rations from the
United Nations and other donors. In the cities, little is free.
Unity Motize,
64, lives with her 65-year-old husband, Simeon, in Highfield, a
middle-class suburb turned slum not far south of town. The couple
occupies one room of their three-room house. The second sleeps two
sons, their wives and their two infants, all left homeless last
May after riot police bulldozed the homes of hundreds of thousands
of slum-dwellers. A 23-year-old son and an unemployed daughter sleep
in the living room.
Hyperinflation
is a cradle-to-grave experience here. The government recently announced
that the price of childbirth, now $7 million, would rise 463 percent
by October. Funeral costs are to double over the same period.
In rural areas,
said one official of a foreign-based charity who declined to be
named, fearing consequences from the government, even the barest
funeral costs at least $6 million, or about $28.50 - well beyond
most families' means. The dead are buried in open fields at night,
she said. Recently, she watched one family dismantle their home's
cupboard to construct a makeshift coffin.
"I'll never
forget that," she said. "The incredible sadness of it all."
Critics say
that Zimbabwe's rulers are oblivious to such suffering - last year,
Mr. Mugabe completed his own 25-bedroom mansion in a gated suburb
north of town, close by the mansions of top ministers and military
allies.
But the government
says it has a plan to revive the economy. That plan, the latest
of perhaps seven in 10 years, would quickly raise billions of American
dollars to end a chronic foreign currency shortage, cut the inflation
rate to double digits by year's end and an end to the recession
that has gripped Zimbabwe, halving its economic output, since 1999.
Mr. Robertson,
the economist, says that is unlikely. Zimbabweans can and probably
will endure greater hardship, he says. As a whole, the nation has
only now sunk to standards common elsewhere in Africa. But the government
may have reached the limit of its ability to do anything about it.
Cutting spending seems impossible, and raising taxes further is
unthinkable.
That leaves
one option: "much more inflation," he said. "Because this government
is always going to be printing its way out of its current difficulty."
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