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IMF
sees Zimbabwe's economic collapse accelerating
Andrew Quinn,
Reuters
March 18, 2007
http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/DHRV-6ZF4V9?OpenDocument
CAPE TOWN - Zimbabwe's economic collapse
is likely to accelerate with inflation topping 5,000 percent by
year-end as President Robert Mugabe's government loses control of
a crisis already rippling across Africa, a senior IMF official said
on Sunday.
International Monetary Fund Africa
Director Abdoulaye Bio-Tchane said Zimbabwe's government had shown
little sign of coming to grips with its mounting economic problems,
promising more hardships amid sharply rising political tensions.
"It depends on how much the people
in the country can take," Bio-Tchane told Reuters in an interview.
"The question is how far it could fall.
The last four years we've seen GDP falling by more than 35 percent.
Inflation is running at more than 1,700 percent and our estimate
is by the year's end it could move even beyond 5,000
percent."
Bio-Tchane's forecast came as Mugabe's
government comes under rising international condemnation over a
violent crackdown on the opposition this week.
In response, the United States and
other nations threatened to tighten sanctions against Mugabe and
other senior Zimbabwean officials.
Mugabe, 83, has warned against any
"monkey games" by those he called the stooges of his Western critics
and said police would now be well armed to deal with violence caused
by the main opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC).
Bio-Tchane said Mugabe and Zimbabwe
Central Bank Governor Gideon Gono appeared unable to stem the economic
slide, which has turned one of Africa's most promising economies
into a basket case beset by frequent shortages of food, fuel and
foreign exchange.
"It is one step forward, two steps
back," he said, saying Gono was fuelling the crisis by expanding
the already enormous fiscal deficit to some 40 percent of GDP this
year, printing floods of new cash and subsidising struggling state-run
firms.
"They need to rein this in," he said.
"But obviously they need more than that. You can't let the economy
function if people are not free to operate, if their rights are
not secured, including human rights."
"You will always find a few people
who will benefit from this system, so therefore it may continue.
I can't give a date when the whole thing will stop or collapse.
But it will certainly continue falling. This will continue impoverishing
people, people will continue losing their jobs, continue losing
their purchasing power."
Bio-Tchane said Zimbabwe's woes were
already felt across Africa as millions of economic refugees stream
out of the country, mostly to neighbouring South Africa, while economic
growth is hampered by the loss of regional trade and investment
opportunities.
"It's holding the sub-region back,
and it is holding the whole Africa region back," he said. "This
was a booming economy, this was a net exporter of goods and services
in the past. Now exports are falling. It is a country that is a
net importer today."
He added that it appeared some countries
were helping to bankroll Mugabe through loans or other deals.
"We don't have evidence of the sources,
but clearly they are getting some financing," he said.
The IMF and other key Western donors,
including the World Bank, suspended aid to Zimbabwe more than six
years ago over Mugabe's economic policies that are blamed for the
economic meltdown.
Western donors withdrew aid and other
assistance, accusing Mugabe of widespread human rights violations
and for seizing white-owned farms, which has turned the country
from a regional bread basket to a nation barely able to feed itself.
Despite the problems, Bio-Tchane said
Zimbabwe could quickly access outside help once it made the necessary
economic reforms.
While the IMF in February maintained
its suspension of financial and technical assistance to Zimbabwe,
Bio-Tchane said efforts to repay some $129 million in arrears to
the fund had kept open its chances to obtain immediate international
help.
"They could be quickly eligible for
technical assistance. And for funds, I must say, in the case of
Zimbabwe it is really the political commitments of the government
that are preventing everyone from cooperating."
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