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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Sunrise of currency reform - Index of articles and reports on Zimbabwe's new currency reforms
Sunrise
of currency reform - Monetary Policy Review Statement First Half
2006
Dr G. Gono,
Governor of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe
July 31, 2006
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1.
INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
1.1 This Monetary Policy Statement is issued in terms of the Reserve
Bank of Zimbabwe Act Chapter 22:15, Section 46, and is also consistent
with the position that we stated in January, 2006, that these policy
guidelines would now be issued twice a year instead of quarterly
as was the case before.
1.2 It is also
noteworthy that this Monetary Policy Statement marks the mid point
of my term of office as Governor and with 28 months left out of
60, it is clear that the targets this Governor was given upon entry
into office in December 2003 have to be achieved within the remaining
period and failure to do so is just not a viable OPTION for my team
at the bank.
1.3 Through
this Monetary Policy Statement, therefore, we seek, as the Central
Bank, to bring back light, not just at the end of the tunnel, but
right into the tunnel for all Zimbabweans to see their true potential
as a people, and to rekindle hope and belief in ourselves.
1.4 We also,
through this statement seek to complement all other national policies
and initiatives to bring to the people of Zimbabwe, a better second
half of the year than the first.
1.5 Later in
this Statement I shall talk about Sunrise: A New Beginning / Zuva
Rabuda / Ilanga Seliphumile, with the objective of getting ourselves
to refocus and get back to work again.
2.
CHALLENGES ON THE GROUND . . .
2.1 A review of the past six months shows that on the ground there
is tremendous hardship among the majority of people; majority of
workers and students alike; majority of women; the elderly and the
frail cannot make ends meet on basics, let alone simple luxuries.
2.2 Specifically,
this Policy Statement is coming at a time of severe challenges on
the inflation front, limited foreign exchange availability, rising
unemployment, and company closures, declining productivity, declining
company viability, very low industrial capacity utilisation, diminishing
economic patriotism, reduced dignity and growing selfishness in
our midst among many other negatives.
2.3 Business
and consumer confidence, inward investment and most economic performance
indicators on the ground have also shown signs of stress during
the last six months.
2.4 Such is
the multitude of challenges facing us but surrender, capitulation,
self-pity, suicide or running away into foreign lands is neither
the solution nor an option. We have just got to face these challenges
head-on and self-correct where the ball is in our court while deepening
and broadening our engagement efforts with the external world where
we feel the ball is in their court. The idea is for us to play the
game together...its more fun that way than for the home team to
play on or against each other.
2.5 As opposed
to seeing gloom and doom everywhere, however this Statement is coming
at a time when we in the Bank strongly believe that now is the "beginning
of the end to the proverbial seven years of famine" and this
prophecy is real for some of us.
2.6 On the
back of the just ended agricultural season and other positives in
the pipeline, we believe that we are now poised to enter an era
of food self-sufficiency and are capable of further raising our
performance platform on all fronts provided we take the full course
of the medicine we are prescribing and not half measures as before.
2.7 We owe
it to ourselves, more than to anybody else outside our borders,
to get back to work as a country, and to regain our confidence as
a people.
2.8 Let us
get our politics right for those in politics, our economics of production
right for those in business, cement these two into economic patriotism,
get our social interactions and behaviors right and, our turnaround
will not take us long to accomplish.
2.9 In other
words, unless politics appreciates business and business appreciates
politics of the day, we will be in this journey for a very long
time and arduous one.
2.10 Moving
on, I want, at the outset, to congratulate and convey our sense
of gratitude to all our farmers for a job well done this past season.
We have shown that despite the many impediments faced along the
way, we still managed to produce near enough to feed ourselves.
2.11 Yes, we
will still need to import more maize for our strategic reserves
this year but the deficit is not as huge as in previous years, a
positive development which should lessen our food import burden
this year compared to last year.
2.12 His Excellency
the President, Cde R. G. Mugabe and the Hon. Minister of Finance,
Dr H. M. Murerwa have been very clear and inspiring about some of
the key action plans and policies that we ought to take when they
delivered their respective Statements to the Nation last week. Most
importantly, they identified the economic challenges we are facing
as a nation, identified indiscipline, corruption, speculation and
disruptions on farms as some draw backs in our economic efforts
and pledged that Government will be more ruthless this time round
in dealing with these ills.
2.13 We pledge
as Monetary Authorities to do our part in support of those announced
action programs and policies which are aimed at not just fighting
and winning the battle against inflation, but the entire war against
all forces pulling our economy down.
3.
QUASI-FISCAL OPERATIONS . . .
3.1 There has been a lot of discussion in many local and international
circles about our quasi-fiscal interventions as a Bank and to what
extent they have or have not been justified.
3.2 We have
done a full analysis of this interventions and the untold story
is now told in the supplement entitled: "A Synopsis of the
Impact of the Central Bank's Interventions to the Economy from January
2004 to June 2006".
3.3 We admit
that in the short-term, our money supply growth numbers have been
and remain unhealthy for short-term inflationary outlook; that the
Bank's quasi-fiscal operations would be best handled within the
budgetary framework if it can and that the Central Banks should
not micro-manage or compete with market institutions in the allocation
of resources.
3.4 Such is
conventional wisdom in orthodox times and we have no quarrels with
this line of thought.
3.5 But like
we have argued before, we continue to call on Zimbabweans to realise
that these are not ordinary times for Zimbabwe to entwine itself
with orthodox solutions. That time will come! We are coming out
of a serious dislocative land revolution whose consequences we shall
endure for a while before we are totally forgiven by the dispossessed
of yesterday and normalcy returns, before we realise that taking
the land was but only the first step; that it is production that
counts at the end of the day.
3.6 Land issues
the world over have been emotive battles and one only needs to read
the Irish Land history, the history of agriculture, civil wars and
land battles in the United States of America, in Australia and many
other unresolved cases in Africa and the Middle East to understand
that each country has had to deal with the issue in a different
way and for a period after, experienced some economic, political
and social dislocation. Some countries in Africa should take a leaf
from us and take whatever lessons they want and discard what they
do not like but face the challenge they will, with consequences
that will throw their theoretical nice wishes into the world of
reality where pragmatism will be the key word to drive those economies.
We will, God willing, all still be here, graciously ready to offer
our help from our experience but that day is coming as sure as the
sun is going to rise from the east.
3.7 The challenge
before us as Zimbabweans is to now move to the second and final
phase, that of bringing decisive finality and closure to this first
important and dislocative chapter and move on to the orderly phase
where we focus on restoring the productivity of these assets to
positive levels never seen before. This move, we need not prevaricate
for any day longer as Zimbabweans.
3.8 As for
the international community, our message is that they should not
preoccupy themselves with brooding over what or how this was or
was not done properly. The Land Issue is a done deal and begrudging
Zimbabweans or its Leadership over this matter for time immemorial
is a monumental waste of reflective energy. The international community
must accept what is irreversible and engage in politics of economics
and pragmatism as opposed to personalising these matters.
3.9 We believe
as a Bank that there are more troubled spots in the world which
should preoccupy world leaders than continue with sanctions imposed
on Zimbabwe over this land issue. Sanctions against Zimbabwe are
affecting the unborn as badly as they are affecting the living and
those unfortunate to die during this period.
3.10 Fuel challenges
affect the ambulances destined for the maternity wards as well as
elderly homes, school buses, grinding mills in rural areas in as
much as they are affecting the funeral parlours. Lack of adequate
drugs affect those who need the greatest care among us, the sick,
those with malaria, HIV/AIDS and those with child killer diseases,
and yet we claim to be a caring world with targeted sanctions.
3.11 Faced
therefore with the circumstances of sanctions and lack of international
financial support; Faced... with the drying up of voluntary funding
and support to agriculture by our banks from 2002 onwards due to
collateral concerns and stability factors; Confronted by the need
to sustain operations of certain parastatals while long-term solutions
are sought . . . ; and Faced with the choice of providing local
currency to the Grain Marketing Board to buy maize from our farmers
or let that maize rot on the roadside and yet tomorrow be asked
to look for scarce foreign currency to feed the nation, and; Faced
with the inability of conventional budget frameworks and failure
of these systems to accommodate and timeously respond to some national
emergencies and hyper-inflationary pressures, the Central Bank's
quasifiscal interventions have served the people of this country
as a survival kit against total economic collapse, against the killer
punch of sanctions and as an ongoing test against conventionalism.
Without such interventions, only God knows where we would be today
and we leave you to speculate.
3.12 Therefore,
faced with these challenges over the last 32 months, we could not, . . .
we cannot . . . and we will not stand-by as your Central Bank,
and let this economy crumble simply because our interventionist
policies will go against the grain of certain established norms;
(established by whom you may care to ask?)!
3.13 We call
upon Zimbabweans to be authors of new economic development models
for a change instead of following what others penned already.
3.14 Accordingly,
I want the Nation to know that urgent dam repairs and construction
as well as viably structured irrigation infrastructure projects,
with capacity to uplift our economic turnaround, will continue to
receive our support for as long as the market is not prepared to
take up such challenges.
3.15 Not everyone
amongst us has a very clear vision of how beautiful and economically
self-sufficient Zimbabwe can be in a very short space of time. We
fortunately do have that clear vision and believe that this is possible.
3.16 We want
it known that we will not, if confronted with future challenges
of market and budgetary failures, sit back and fold our arms in
despair and self-pity, letting key economy-wide critical infrastructures
collapse with disastrous consequences on human life. Ours is a maintenance
job when everyone else who is supposed to do their job(s) have relapsed.
3.17 Shortages
of foreign currency for the importation of food, fuel, and drugs;
for our international debt service programs and for industrial machines
and raw material imports cause sleepless nights to this Governor
and his team.
3.18 Where
we can eliminate such needs and pressures through import substitution
and self help efforts, we will not as your Central Bank, be found
wanting in our support of such efforts.
3.19 In the
medium to long-term and certainly by the end of 2008, Zimbabweans
will be happy that we endured this infrastructure development pain
earlier on rather than later.
3.20 We are
keen to see the Infrastructure Development Bank and other market
players get their act together and start playing their developmental
roles much sooner rather than later because, quite frankly, some
of these interventions squarely belong more to those institutions
than to us as a Central Bank.
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