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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Price Controls and Shortages - Index of articles
Businesses
reeling from price-slashing order
Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Nonthando Bhebhe (AR No. 122, 19-Jul-07)
July 19, 2007
http://www.iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=337222&apc_state=henh
"It was an act
of madness," said a manager at a Spar store in the low-income
Harare suburb of Seke. "[The] ripple effects will be felt
for a long time in Zimbabwean business. Job losses will be immediate."
Businesses in Zimbabwe
are still reeling from President Robert Mugabe's June 26 decision
to slash the prices of all commodities by 50 per cent, in a bid
to tackle skyrocketing inflation, which he claimed is being fueled
by the private sector to bring down his government. The move sparked
a stampede of shoppers, leaving companies with empty shelves. Many
say they may now be forced to close.
"This
act is the latest in a long chain of irrational political decisions
Mugabe has taken in the past few years to keep himself in power,"
continued the Spar manager. "The next will most probably be
the seizure of mines and foreign-owned businesses which he is legitimising
through the Economic
Empowerment and Indigenisation Bill currently before parliament."
Tichafa Chari,
a schoolteacher in the same area, compared the latest move to Operation
Murambatsvina, the military-style demolition of urban dwellings
in 2005 which destroyed the informal sector and left 700,000 people
homeless and two million with no source of income. It was believed
at the time that Mugabe did this to stem fears of a rebellion by
the urban poor that would unseat him.
"Operation Murambatsvina
destroyed the informal sector, and now this is destroying the formal
sector. So where do we go from here?" said Chari.
Like Operation Murambatsvina,
the current operation, according to Mugabe, is to stop the formal
sector from working with western powers wishing to effect "regime
change" in Zimbabwe.
Several senior company
executives, many from companies headquartered outside Zimbabwe,
have been arrested and have spent nights in filthy police cells
for failing to comply with the government directive to reduce their
prices.
Long fuel queues are
also back at the few service stations that have received cheap fuel
from the state-owned National Oil Company of Zimbabwe, NocZim, which
they are selling at 60,000 Zimbabwe dollars, ZWD, a litre, (just
under 50 US cents at black market prices) down from nearly 200,000
ZWD two weeks ago.
The fuel situation had
stabilised after government allowed private companies to import
and sell fuel at rates determined by the black market from which
dealers obtained the foreign exchange to import.
But since the price-slash
directive, those service stations have run dry and have not restocked.
The government has ordered all service stations to sell their fuel
at 60,000 ZWD a litre but NocZim supplies are still very low. The
national fuel procurement company has promised to increase its deliveries
to service stations countrywide.
The public transport
sector is almost grinding to a halt after government ordered them
to reduce their fares or face a cancellation of their operating
licences.
Government told public
transport operatives at a meeting last week that if one of their
vehicles was caught over-pricing, officials would cancel the licences
of not just that one vehicle but of the whole fleet.
One city commuter bus
operator said, "Really I cannot be working for the government.
It makes no sense to continue when I will be making such a huge
loss."
Motorists have also been
affected as they cannot get fuel and are being forced to either
source from the black market or leave their cars parked. Traffic
on Harare's roads has been significantly been reduced over
the last week or so.
Zimbabweans initial excitement
about the order to slash prices of basic commodities by half has
now been replaced by panic and desperation as most retail outlets
have begun to run out of goods. The first casualties of the price
slash were the butchers, which ran out of the beef and pork within
a few days of the directive. Most meat outlets in Harare suburbs
have either closed or are about to.
Highfield butcher Petros
Mawoneke was on the verge of tears when IWPR asked him what effect
the price reduction had had on him and his family.
"I just don't
know for how long I will be coming to work if the situation continues
like this. I am afraid that one day, we will be told not to report
for work anymore because we are not selling anything at the moment.
Our suppliers are no longer supplying us.
"I don't
want to think about the worst - I am trying to be optimistic but
at the same time I need to be realistic. It will just kill me if
I lose this job. How will I feed my kids - already I am struggling
and am only able to provide one meal a day. The government needs
to think about people like us and put in measures to protect us."
In response to the beef
shortages, the government last week revoked the licences of all
private abattoirs for refusing to continue supplying meat and meat
products. They had stopped slaughtering livestock in protest against
the slashing of prices which they say would bankrupt them.
Trade Minister Obert
Mpofu said the Cold Storage Company, CSC, part owned by the government,
would now have the sole responsibility of slaughtering livestock.
The CSC, however, was already facing serious financial problems
and had been operating well below its capacity.
One of the largest outlets
of pork products, Colcom Foods, has already run out of everything
except bacon, a few boxes of pork sausages, polony and smoked ham,
all of which are foods for the rich.
An employee at Colcom
Foods told IWPR that the company did not know when the next supplies
were going to be delivered. Its general manager in Harare's
Workington industrial area was recently arrested together with 33
top executives of other companies for allegedly ignoring the government
directive to reduce prices.
Long queues could be
observed at TM Supermarket in Arcadia suburb, where the prices of
basic commodities like washing soap, washing powder, Vaseline petroleum
jelly and margarine were reduced by more than 100 per cent. Reports
say the situation is the same countrywide.
Thomas Madziva, who was
queuing to buy slices of polony and bread rolls for his breakfast,
was irate.
"Why should I queue
when all I want is polony? This is getting really frustrating now.
First it was the bread queues, now it's for everything - this
is absolute madness. Our relief was temporary - we should have known
this is where Mugabe's generosity would land us."
Nonthando Bhebhe 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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