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inflation could tear apart proposed social contract
ZimOnline
February 14, 2007 http://www.zimonline.co.za/Article.aspx?ArticleId=876
HARARE - Zimbabwe's
runaway inflation could rip through a fragile partnership being
proposed by the country's monetary authorities to resolve a seven-year-old
economic crisis, analysts said on Tuesday.
The analysts
said the southern African nation’s annualised inflation, which the
Central Statistical Office this week said had quickened to a record-busting
1 593.6 percent in January up from 1 281.1 percent last December,
was the litmus test for the much-vaunted social contract on which
the government was pinning hopes for resuscitating the comatose
economy.
University of
Zimbabwe business school lecturer Anthony Hawkins said the greatest
challenge facing the government would be how to broker an agreement
with business and labour against the backdrop of deteriorating economic
fundamentals.
"It's going
to be very difficult to get agreement within the next two weeks,
which is the time left before the social contract comes into effect,"
said Hawkins.
The "social
contract" is premised on the need to attain mutual understanding
on prices, wages and productivity among government, business and
labour.
The need for
such a contract was the main thrust of the 2006
year-end monetary policy statement announced by Reserve Bank
of Zimbabwe (RBZ) governor Gideon Gono on January 31.
Gono shocked
the market when he refused to devalue the Zimbabwe dollar as was
widely expected and instead insisted that the three key social partners
had to reach consensus over the future of the economy.
He proposed
the freezing of prices and wages from March onwards, a proposition
the analysts said would not be viewed favourably by business and
labour given the latest rise in inflation.
"I would be
surprised if the trade unions would settle for 300 percent wage
increases at a time inflation is expected to rise above 1 800 percent
in the next month," said Hawkins.
The analysts
said timing would play a crucial role in the creation of the social
contract.
"Any contract
involving the social partners will only be effective if it comes
into force when there is evidence that prices have stabilised. Otherwise
all attempts to broker an agreement would rightly be viewed with
suspicion by labour and business," said an investment banker who
declined to be named for professional reasons.
Gono's overtures
for a social contract come against the backdrop of rising worker
discontent, which has since the beginning of the year seen strikes
by doctors, nurses, teachers, and power utility employees.
Government employees
at the weekend issued an ultimatum for a review of their salaries
and working conditions and threatened an indefinite industrial action
if their demands are not met.
The analysts
said there were two options available to the government in the event
that its proposal for a social contract failed. One of these would
be to impose the social partnership on the other parties while the
second one would be for Gono to climb down and accept a devaluation
of the Zimbabwe dollar.
The local currency
has been fixed at 250 dollars to one United States greenback on
the official market since 31 July 2006 at a time when the same American
unit is trading at 5 000 Zimbabwe dollars on the illegal but thriving
parallel market.
Gono believes
that devaluing the Zimbabwe dollar is not the solution to the country's
economic woes while industry has argued that a weak currency is
stifling plans to increase production and boost exports. - ZimOnline
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