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Zimbabwe
inflation hits new record
MacDonald
Dzirutwe, Reuters
January 10, 2007
http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?articleid=295321&area=/breaking_news/breaking_news__business/
Zimbabwe's annual
inflation raced to a new record in December, inflicting more pain
on workers in who recently began protest strikes against the worsening
economic crisis.
Inflation --
the highest in the world -- is the clearest sign of a recession
that critics blame on President Robert Mugabe's politically driven
economic decisions, resulting in runaway unemployment and shortages
of everything from foreign currency to food.
The Central
Statistical Office (CSO) said on Wednesday annual inflation
reached 1 281,1% in December from 1 098,8% the previous month, setting
the stage for more price increases for hard-pressed consumers.
On a monthly
basis inflation rose to 36,3%, up from 30,1% the previous month.
"The top
three items that contributed most to year-on-year and month-on-month
inflation were domestic power: electricity, gas and other fuels,"
Moffat Nyoni, acting CSO director, told reporters.
Analysts blame
inflation for strikes that have hit the health sector, warning these
could trigger wider, spontaneous street protests and fuel political
tensions in the country.
Public medical
care has ground to a halt as doctors at state hospitals continue
with a strike to demand salary hikes of more than 8 000%, leaving
hospital waiting rooms jammed with patients needing treatment.
"Government
thinks it is in full control but if things grind to a halt we could
find ourselves in a different situation altogether ... these small
things could trigger the masses into action," Daniel Ndlela,
a Harare-based economist said.
The government
has forecast inflation, which it has branded the country's chief
enemy, to retreat to 350 to 400% by the end of this year. But others,
including the International Monetary Fund, expect it to accelerate
further.
The CSO said
average inflation for 2006 measured 1 016,7%, up from 237,8% in
2005.
Zimbabweans,
struggling to cope with spiralling costs, are falling deeper into
poverty.
At a city bus
station that serves some of Harare's working class township districts,
commuters waited for hours for a ride in a few state buses still
charging slightly lower fares after increases of 100% two weeks
ago.
"Things
are very tough, so I have to save every dollar where I can,"
said James Mukore, a cleaner at a nearby office block.
"It is
very difficult to keep up with the prices, here and in the shops,"
he told Reuters in the main vernacular Shona language, his eye out
for the "cheap" bus.
In the last
two weeks there have been price rises across the board, including
rents, bread, fuel and medicines.
In shops in
the capital Harare the impact on consumers is clearly evident. Angry,
confused shoppers look dazed as they are hit by new price increases
almost daily.
The CSO said
a family of five now needed to earn Z$344 256 a month not to be
considered poor, up from Z$228 133 previously. The figure is far
higher than the average earnings for most workers of less than Z$50
000.
Mugabe, the
country's sole ruler since independence from Britain in 1980, denies
mismanaging the economy and charges that it has fallen victim to
a Western campaign of sabotage. - Reuters
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