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Price Controls and Shortages - Index of articles
Zim
shoppers stampede for food
Business
in Africa (SA)
July 04, 2007
http://www.businessinafrica.net/news/southern_africa/302349.htm
Harare - Shoppers went
on a stampede in a leading Harare supermarket yesterday, heaping
trolleys with groceries after the government slashed prices by half
in a bid to curb profiteering. In another store down the street,
gaping spaces testify to shoppers stripping shelves of soap, sugar,
bread, milk and other commodities. Zimbabwe has been gripped by
panic buying as consumers cash in on a price freeze and stock up
in anticipation of shortages likely to follow. "The reason
I am buying these things...is that I do not know what will happen
tomorrow," said Tafadzwa Musemburi, an automobile electrician
in Harare. "I was forced to borrow four-million dollars (16,000
US dollars at the official exchange rate, but 36 US dollars on the
parallel market) just to get these few things," he said pointing
to a trolley containing sugar beans, peanut butter and other items.
Commodities are fast vanishing after the government forced shops
to cut prices and ordered a freeze on increases. President Robert
Mugabe has accused businesses of profiteering and working in cahoots
with the country's enemies to incite people to revolt against his
government. Crack units of security force members and a pricing
commission have been set up to raid shops and arrest those who violate
the directive. On Monday, police raided spots where black market
dealers are known to operate and seized various groceries. "We
have started to deal with the parallel market dealers as they are
hoarding foodstuffs," police spokesman Oliver Mandipaka told
AFP, adding that 190 people were arrested for breaching the price
ceiling. Mugabe warned last week his government would seize and
nationalise businesses found to be profiteering, as well as mines
taking minerals out of Zimbabwe. "This nonsense of price escalations
must come to an end," the octogenarian president told mourners
at the burial of national hero Paul Armstrong Gunda. "Those
who are in construction and supplies, take note. We are following
you. It's not going to be an easy game. It's going to be a rough
one. We will never allow ourselves to be defeated by these British
tactics. The companies must straighten their ways because those
in gold mining are externalising gold. We will nationalise them
if they continue with their dirty tricks."
Following Mugabe's statement,
Industry and International Trade Minister Obert Mpofu ordered a
blanket freeze on the prices of all goods and services. Many shops
in the capital have followed the government order and reduced the
price of commodities such as bread from 44,000 dollars to 22,000
dollars. Analysts warn the price freeze would only worsen the lot
of industries already struggling against foreign currency shortages
and frequent power cuts. Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce president,
Marah Hativagone, told AFP: "My heart is bleeding right now
because this does not work and consumers are the ones who will suffer.
I just hope the government will see sense and revert to normal business
practices." Hativagone said many companies would be unable
to pay their workers after being forced to reduce their product
prices. "Our laws do not allow us to cut wages or salaries."
Retail shop assistant Tapiwa Madzikana is not certain what the future
holds. "What will happen to us after all the goods disappear
from the shops, nobody knows and noboby seems to care," he
told AFP on Sunday. "Right now it is better to buy what you
can and stock or re-sell it because very soon the shelves will be
empty. As you can see for yourself some sections of the shop are
already empty." The Zimbabwean government introduced price
controls five years ago to fight a burgeoning black market in staples
like cornmeal, cooking oil and bread, but has failed to stem spiralling
inflation.
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