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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Price Controls and Shortages - Index of articles
Price
controls prove counterproductive
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Maria Chitova (AR No. 121, 12-Jul-07)
July 12, 2007
http://www.iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=336961&apc_state=henh
The Zimbabwean government's
decision to enforce 50 per cent price cuts for basic commodities
to counter inflation has had the opposite effect from that intended.
Shoppers have cleared
the shelves - hastening the very shortages they were anticipating
- and retailers say they cannot replenish their stock because the
price cuts have not affected the wholesale sector. With the market
collapsed and no new orders being placed, their suppliers face the
prospect of downsizing.
On June 26, after a week
when price rises skyrocketed even by the standards of Zimbabwe's
4,500 per cent annual inflation figures, International Trade Minister
Obert Mpofu ordered retailers to shift prices back to the levels
they were at eight days earlier. On average, this translated into
cuts of about 50 per cent.
Speaking the following
day, President Robert Mugabe accused business of trying to provoke
"regime change" by hiking food prices and creating unrest.
"This nonsense
of price increases must come to an end immediately," he said,
warning that his government would nationalise companies which failed
to comply.
The pace of inflation
has accelerated in recent months. At the end of May, prices were
100 per cent higher than they had been at the end of April. The
annual inflation figure for May stood at 4,500 per cent compared
with the same month in 2006.
Several businesspeople
have been arrested since a subsequent order was issued on June 28
extending the price controls to goods and services beyond the basics.
However, the business
sector has been largely compliant.
"We are law-abiding
citizens. We will do what we have been ordered to do," said
Callisto Jokonya, president of the Confederation of Zimbabwe Industries,
after meeting the price-monitoring task force that the government
has set up to keep tabs on the situation.
"We are calling
on all our members to comply with the directive."
The venom in Mugabe's
voice during his June 27 speech appears to have made the business
community sit up and pay attention.
"When we were first
given the directive, we did not take it seriously. To us it was
just one of the usual threats by government," a top executive
of the major supermarket chain Spar told IWPR. "But after
Mugabe's speech, we knew he meant business. The tone and atmosphere
in the business community changed drastically. We hadn't seen
him so mad in years.
"We just had to
comply or be nationalised. No one wanted to be caught in between
and be made examples."
In the short term, the
government is trying to head off the consequences of its price controls
by issuing a further order that outlaws bulk buying. However, restrictive
measures are unlikely to be enough to address the problems created
by an attempt to hold prices down.
Retailers like Spar have
already felt the pinch. The company executive, who did not want
to be named, said the shops were losing a lot of money by implementing
the cuts.
"It is a lot of
money and we still need to pay our workers and meet our other costs,"
he said. "We might have to retrench big time if nothing is
done. Most supermarkets are owned by indigenous businesspeople,
not foreigners as Mugabe alludes.
"We have told ourselves
that when the products are finished on the shelves and if the suppliers
don't reduce their prices, we will just not order and we might
be forced to close some of our outlets. This will make life even
more difficult for our workers and thousands others. Already, beef
is no longer available in most shops."
Economists are warning
that by focusing on the retail side, the government risks blocking
up the trading system by making it impossible for traders to buy
more stock from their suppliers.
"If there is no
cushioning to make sure the price cuts go back to the source level,
it will lead to retrenchments and company closures. It will be disastrous
for government," said economist Witness Chinyama.
Chinyama said that ordering
companies to drop their prices, the government was looking only
at their income and ignoring the real costs of production.
"There should be
a balance between revenue and costs. Whether the increases were
justified or not, any end producer has to buy at a cost and put
on a mark-up. But since the directive, they have made huge losses,"
he said.
One immediate consequence
will be higher unemployment as retailers stop placing orders, and
suppliers and manufacturers have to mitigate their losses by shedding
staff.
"Reports indicate
that quite a number of companies are downsizing. Others have closed
altogether," said Lovemore Matombo, the head of the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions. "The government might have to come
up with more innovative ways of solving the economic crisis. The
measures being implemented will only serve to worsen the plight
of ordinary workers. Many workers have already been told of salary
cuts because of non-productivity."
One possible government
intervention might be to offer subsidies to the producers of basic
commodities to keep them in business. But there is a danger that
this measure in turn could be funded by printing more banknotes
- leading directly to accelerated inflation, the very thing
the authorities want to keep in check.
"If they try to
subsidise, there is also the inflationary side to consider -
how will they fund the subsidies without printing money?"
said Chinyama, who predicted that the government was likely to be
resistant to the other option - raising interest rates -
because that would increase its domestic debt.
Another Zimbabwean economist,
who did not want to be named, recalled the long history of government-imposed
price controls, which have had unexpected and ruinous consequences
from ancient Roman times to the French Revolution and Communist
states such as the Soviet Union and China.
John Robertson, an economist
based in Harare, predicted that businesses would not be able to
cover their costs and would stop producing.
"The directive
is more damaging to the consumer than the government realises. The
desired effect will not be realised. If the government insists on
the policy, we will see company closures and huge retrenchments,"
he said.
Already, he said, the
country was heading for severe shortages. Instead of benefiting
from price controls on staple products, shoppers facing empty shelves
would have to turn to the black market where prices are unchecked.
Maria Chitova is the
pseudonym of a reporter in Zimbabwe.
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