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Price Controls and Shortages - Index of articles
Mugabe
cuts the price of basics as bread runs out
Jan Raath, The Times (UK)
July 02, 2007
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/africa/article2017571.ece
Bread and other essentials
all but vanished from shops and supermarkets in Harare yesterday
after President Mugabe ordered a 50 per cent cut in prices. Price
inspectors and police, sometimes armed, descended on supermarkets
in the Zimbabwean capital to enforce price controls. Their intervention
followed the order issued by Mr Mugabe last week in an attempt to
get to grips with rampant inflation. The result was chaos. Bags
of sugar burst open in struggles between shoppers who had streamed
into supermarkets. Computerised checkouts jammed, unable to cope
with the rapid price changes. There was further confusion when officials
forced their way into storerooms and declared stock items to be
"illegal hoarding," and ordered all goods to be moved
on to supermarket floors. At one store where the manager tried to
restrict sales to two of each item, one worker was seriously injured
in the mayhem. Annual inflation reached 4,500 per cent in May, the
result of nearly three decades of economic policies devoid of prudence
or forethought. Economists estimate that the real figure is closer
to 10,000 per cent.
Prices are more than
doubling every month as suppliers and retailers struggle to keep
up with the decline of the currency, which at lunchtime yesterday
traded at Z$260,000 to £1. With hard currency earnings now
almost negligible, the central bank buys foreign currency at black
market prices from finance houses and prints mountains of increasingly
worthless currency to pay them. Mr Mugabe, however, asserts that
inflation is the fault of "profiteering" by retailers
in league with the British Government to oust him. Last Tuesday
the Government published an edict cutting the price of 26 essential
items by up to 70 per cent. Two days later another edict imposed
price controls on a much wider range of goods. "Reports are
that some businesses are resisting this order," said Obert
Mpofu, the Industry Minister. "We will arrest them." Mr
Mugabe's attempt to crush inflation reflects a growing sense
that economic collapse will bring about the end of his 27-year rule.
The Government has been enraged by remarks by Chris Dell, the outgoing
American Ambassador, who predicted that Mr Mugabe would be out of
office within six months. No regime "has survived five-digit
inflation", said Mr Dell. The Government was "affecting
regime change on itself," he added. Mr Mugabe issued a warning
that violation of price controls would be dealt with forcefully.
"This nonsense of price escalation must come to an end,"
he said. "We will never admit to defeat by British tactics."
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