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Zimbabwe's
government backtracks on wage freeze before national strike
Associated
Press
September 16, 2007
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/09/16/africa/AF-GEN-Zimbabwe-Wage-Freeze.php
HARARE, Zimbabwe: Zimbabwe's
government backtracked on a wage freeze, the official media reported
Sunday, just days before labor unions hold a national strike protesting
it.
President Robert Mugabe,
in a decree Aug. 29, froze wages, school fees and service charges
for six months alongside a price reduction ordered in June.
The main labor
organization, the Zimbabwe
Congress of Trade Unions, called a countrywide strike for Wednesday
and Thursday to protest the wage controls and other economic policies
that have led to record unemployment and chronic food shortages.
The state Sunday Mail
newspaper, a government mouthpiece, said details of amendments to
the Aug. 29 decree will be finalized Tuesday to allow for wage negotiations
between employers and workers and subsequent pay increases.
"We are working
on amendments as far as incomes are concerned," Labor Minister
Nicholas Goche told the newspaper.
The government's recent
price reductions and other measures to tame the world's highest
rate of inflation have left shelves bare across the nation of basic
foods and essential goods. Official inflation is given as more than
7,600 percent though independent estimates put real inflation at
close to 25,000 percent. The International Monetary Fund has forecast
it reaching 100,000 percent by the end of the year.
Acute shortages of food
and gasoline have fueled illegal black market trading of virtually
absent commodities selling at 10 times the government's fixed prices.
The wage freeze, coupled
with the failure of the measures to hold down prices, triggered
an outcry from workers and labor groups, core supporters of the
opposition Movement for Democratic Change and its founder, former
labor leader Morgan Tsvangirai.
Since prices of all goods
and services were slashed by about half in June the government has
allowed 20 percent price hikes across the board and higher increases
in specified cases such as hotel, bar and restaurant charges.
The main labor organization
said the wage freeze ensured workers were to remain "engulfed
in poverty."
"There is no rationale
in freezing salaries when prices of commodities were reviewed upward,"
the labor federation said in a statement calling this week's two-day
strike.
In the past, national
strikes have crippled the already crumbling economy even though
they have been poorly supported by the 20 percent of workers still
in jobs who were frightened of losing them as well as by state harassment
of employers and labor unions.
Formal unemployment is
about 80 percent. The promised easing of the wage freeze was expected
to create fresh demands from embattled businesses for further price
increases.
Price cuts were first
greeted with widespread popular support, but it has waned sharply
as shortages of corn meal, meat, bread and other basic foodstuffs
worsened and stores with little to sell drastically cut their opening
hours, forcing shoppers to undergo an often fruitless daily hunt
for essentials.
Supplies of most goods
have dried up, with businesses arguing they are being told to sell
products at below costs of production.
On Saturday, the government
imposed 60 percent customs duty payable in hard currency on imported
clothing and some household appliances.
It insisted the move
would stimulate local manufacturing, saying raised hard currency
duties of 100 percent of the value of imported cars earlier this
year made the imports unaffordable and increased the output of local
car assembly companies.
Cheap clothing is mainly
imported from neighboring countries for resale at back street shops
and flea markets by unemployed women known as "border traders"
as their sole source of income.
Previously, import duty
on cars, appliances and clothing was negligible.
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