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Price Controls and Shortages - Index of articles
Price
controls backfire again
IRIN
News
July 03, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=73064
Parallel markets are
booming, businesses and industries are buckling and consumers are
paying the price as the Zimbabwean government's attempts to forcibly
control runaway inflation backfire.
In the face of soaring
hyperinflation, President Robert Mugabe's government ordered a 50
percent cut in the prices of basic commodities last week. Defiance
of the order was seen as a move to topple Mugabe and businesses
were raided and threatened with closure on Monday 2 July.
John Robertson, an economist
based in the capital, Harare, told IRIN: "Consumers are getting
the worst end of it. While they had every reason to be happy when
the government ordered price slashes, that happiness is fast waning,
because the attempt to militantly control prices is boomeranging."
The government set up
a taskforce to monitor and enforce compliance but a mid mid-June
salary increase for civil servants, which topped 600 percent, sent
the prices of basic commodities, clothing and transport fares shooting
up.
Mugabe accused industry
leaders of attempting to discredit his government ahead of next
year's elections, calling them "snakes" and threatening
to nationalise businesses that refused to comply.
Co-Vice-President Joseph
Msika told mourners at the burial of a top military official and
liberation war veteran in Harare that prices "are increasing
in the morning, afternoon and evening", and the government
would not allow business and industry, which he described as "sell-outs,
renegades and money-mongers", to "sabotage" the economy.
"Their [business
and industry] actions call for retaliation. We will uproot this
rot within us, and if they don't agree they should close shop, or
we will do it for them and take over their businesses," Msika
said.
Many commodities on the
controlled list had already disappeared from shops, but those available
at reduced prices drew stampedes of consumers looking for a bargain,
or to resell at a profit on the parallel market. Everyday commodities
like sugar, cooking oil, bread, meat and maizemeal have become increasingly
scarce.
The
power of the parallel market
Robertson warned that
the price blitz would boost informal markets as retailers and wholesalers
redirected their stock to evade the order. "Price controls
have been attempted in the past and by now the government should
have learnt the lesson that policing business in that manner helps
nothing. The black market takes over and shops remain with things
consumers don't need."
The Herald, a government-controlled
newspaper, reported last week that tonnes of sugar and huge quantities
of other goods had been found stashed away in warehouses. It alleged
that a ruling ZANU-PF party senator was among the "culprits"
who had been hoarding, and that some retail shop managers were even
taking stock to their homes to avoid cutting prices.
According to Msika, businesspeople
were removing controlled, locally manufactured goods from warehouses
and shops to create an artificial shortage and warned that basic
commodity prices would be further reduced.
In the dormitory suburb
of Chitungwiza, about 35km south of the capital, a number of butcheries
were forced to close after being visited by the police and told
to sell at the new lower prices. "Our boss instructed us to
stop selling meat because it was no longer viable, since he had
bought it at higher prices," said Gilbert Ncube, an employee.
"That will mean
I and the other five employees would lose our only source of income,"
Ncube said, and "instead of the meat being sold under hygienic
conditions, it is now out there in the dusty streets where people's
health is in serious danger. Stalls selling meat at old prices have
sprouted outside shopping centres.
Public transport operators
have been unable to comply, arguing that they source expensive fuel
on the parallel market. Fuel station prices have not been reduced
because owners said they had to buy foreign currency on the informal
market, now at Z$120,000 to US$1, to import diesel and petrol.
Industry
takes another hit
Industry has been operating
at a third of its 2000 capacity, according to the Confederation
of Zimbabwe Industry (CZI). "There were signs of hope when
a price and incomes stabilisation commission was set up [in May]
... but now that the government has taken such a step, all hope
is gone," Robertson said.
"The economy
is going to shrink further. There is going to be reduced supply
by manufacturers to wholesalers and, in turn, to retailers,"
he predicted.
Jonathan Siyakurima,
a Harare based accountant, told IRIN: "It is clear that, out
of panic and the fear that it might lose the presidential and parliamentary
elections, due to discontent in an electorate burdened by eroded
incomes, the ruling party and government made a rushed decision
to cut prices without considering other things; unfortunately, this
is not giving us any relief."
He said the government
should have consulted business and labour. "To most of us,
the problem is not about business profiteering, or conspiring to
effect regime change, but the perennial shortage of foreign currency."
He doubted the capacity of the government to sustain the blitz,
because previous attempts had been abandoned due to the shortage
of manpower.
Most Zimbabweans have
been left reeling by an annual inflation rate of around 4,000 percent,
and unable to cope with steep increases in the cost of essential
services such as health, water and electricity, combined with widespread
shortages of basic commodities and foreign currency.
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