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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Price Controls and Shortages - Index of articles
End
of road for Reserve Bank Governor?
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Norman Chitapi (AR No. 122, 19-Jul-07)
July 19, 2007
http://iwpr.net/index.php?p=acr&l=EN&s=f&o=337220
Reserve Bank governor
Gideon Gono may not be in his post for much longer after apparently
falling out with his patron, President Robert Mugabe.
In a withering attack
on the government's June 26 decision to slash prices of basic
goods by 50 per cent, Gono publicly warned last week of a boomerang
effect, with companies shutting down because of losses.
He painted a grim future
of empty shops "leading us to needlessly draw spears against
each other" as people run out of basic necessities.
Mugabe has so far not
commented on the statement by Gono, who is also the president's
personal banker. However, it is the first direct attack by a senior
government official on Mugabe's policies. And analysts say
Gono's remarks mean he is unlikely to remain in government
much longer.
"We are seeing
the beginning of the end for Gono's roadshow," said
an official from the pressure group Crisis Coalition of Zimbabwe
in Harare this week. The official spoke in his personal capacity
and refused to be named, lest his stance be confused with that of
the coalition.
"Gono's options
are very limited indeed," said the official. "He can
either resign or stay on and be fired. Mugabe and his colleagues
are concerned with political survival. An economic recovery in the
near future, which is very unlikely, would for them be only a bonus."
When Gono took over in
December 2003 as governor of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, he famously
declared "failure is not an option" when questioned
about his capacity to resolve the country's seemingly intractable
problems. Last week, he all but accused Mugabe's government
of stabbing him in the back when it launched a blitz on businesses
for alleged "profiteering".
The Crisis Coalition
official said Gono felt gravely betrayed by the government after
he came in "as the knight in shining armour" to get
the country out of an eight-year downward spiral.
When Mugabe appointed
Gono as Reserve Bank governor in 2003, he also attacked Gomo's
precedessor, Leonard Tsumba, for following textbook economics by
refusing to print money as and when it was needed. Mugabe said he
wanted somebody who understood the country's unique situation
in the face of western sanctions which he claimed were being orchestrated
by the former colonial power, Britain.
Gono had so far been
complying with Mugabe's brand of economics, but the latest
crisis has seen battle lines drawn between himself and his patron.
Gono said attacks on
businesses and blanket price controls imposed by government on June
26 and enforced by state security agencies were "ruinous".
"It is critical
that urgent steps be taken to deal with the supply side imperatives
without which, or failure of which, will leave the country in a
worse off situation," said Gono in a letter addressed to Mugabe,
which was leaked to the press.
He accused government
of not having a plan of how to maintain production at the prices
it was forcing businessmen to maintain. "We need to define
clearly at what point we will exit from the current blitz,"
he said.
A senior ZANU-PF official
opposed to Mugabe's latest assault on business said Gono and
Mugabe had never before been so sharply divided.
"Gono has been
Mugabe's personal banker and financial advisor for many years
- since he was chief executive officer at the Commercial Bank of
Zimbabwe," said the official, who asked to remain anonymous.
"He is perhaps the only person who knows and fully understands
the nature of Mugabe's finances, but now they are sharply
divided on national policy."
If Mugabe fires Gono,
he faces a backlash from his colleagues in the Southern African
Development Community - however, that is unlikely to stop him, continued
the official.
"In terms of national
policy, they are worlds apart. The time has almost come for them
to part ways if Gono wants to save some modicum of credibility as
a professional," he said. "In political terms, he will
have to look for sanctuary in one of the factions - either in the
divided opposition or those in ZANU-PF who believe in the efficacy
of his policy recommendations."
ZANU-PF is divided into
three major factions. One supports Mugabe's sole candidature
in the presidential election next year; the other two are fighting
each other to replace the party's 83-year-old leader. Gono
is said to be aligned to the faction led by Politburo member and
Rural Housing Minister Emmerson Mnangagwa, against that led by retired
army commander General Solomon Mujuru, the husband of Vice-President
Joice Mujuru. Both Mnangagwa and Mujuru accuse Mugabe of ruining
their business interests.
The ZANU-PF politician
said Gono had wanted to build his future political career on the
back of a successful economic revival programme.
"Reducing inflation
to a single digit as he had set out to do at the beginning would
have been a good entry point [into politics]," he said. "This
would have put him ahead of competition in ZANU-PF and in the [opposition]
Movement for Democratic Change as well. Now he realises that his
political ambitions are being ruined before he has made them public."
Gono's litany of
complaints about the government, which were leaked to the public,
could be an attempt to regain some credibility ahead of ZANU-PF's
special congress in December.
In his letter to Mugabe,
Gono said there was need to respect private property and for policy
consistency to attract foreign investment, which would generate
much needed foreign currency. He attacked state-sanctioned land
invasions, which he said disrupted the nation's economic backbone,
the commercial agricultural sector. It was a criticism he had been
making publicly since 2005, five years after the land invasions
began, and when most of the land had been parcelled out, either
to government officials or to landless "war veterans".
Gono also attacked government
spending, the huge budget deficit and corruption, all of which frustrated
the battle against inflation. He has long favoured a free exchange
rate for the local currency, which is pegged at 250 Zimbabwe dollars,
ZWD, to one US dollar. This is against the more realistic black
market rate of more than 100,000 ZWD to one US dollar. Gono said
government's unrealistic rate had caused "pricing distortions
and instability" in the market.
Over the past three weeks,
police have arrested some 1,700 company representatives for failure
to comply with its decree on prices. Shops have been looted while
most fuel service stations are dry.
Opposition leaders and
captains of industry have accused Mugabe of adopting populist policies
to win over voters ahead of next year's first joint presidential
and parliamentary elections. The MDC has threatened to boycott the
ballot if there are insufficient electoral law reforms to ensure
free and fair voting.
The leader of the main
faction of the MDC, Morgan Tsvangirai, called the price cuts an
"election gimmick" to buy votes - but Mugabe sees the
recent daily price increases as business's attempt to engage
in the politics of regime change.
Mugabe has in the past
accused business of sponsoring the MDC. Now, analysts say, he has
found an opportunity to hit them where it hurts most - the pocket.
But, the analysts say, Mugabe might have shot himself in the foot,
for the resulting shortages will hurt him and his party in the elections
next year.
Norman Chitapi is the
pseudonym of an IWPR journalist in Zimbabwe.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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