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Not
enough money to feed the hungry
IRIN News
September 17, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=74340
Harare - The amount set
aside by the Zimbabwean government to feed at least four million
people identified as food insecure is "a mere drop in the sea",
say analysts. Finance minister Samuel Mumbengegwi announced in early
September that the government had set aside Z$347 billion (about
US$1.02 million at the parallel market rate) to buy food for 600,000
households it had identified as hungry, due to poor harvests after
a combination of drought and critical shortages of inputs. The government's
budget allocation would "buy less", said John Robertson,
a Zimbabwean economist, because of the rapidly depreciating Zimbabwean
dollar and foreign exchange shortages. Rates on the black market
have been rising steeply, with one US dollar now costing about 340,000
Zimbabwean dollars, an increase of around Z$120,000 per US dollar
since the additional money for relief was announced. Renson Gasela,
an expert on agriculture and a former chief executive officer of
the state-owned Grain Marketing Board (GMB), pointed out that "in
real terms" the money allocated by the government for the rollout
of food would only buy about 40,000 metric tonnes (mt) of cereals.
In order to avert widespread hunger, particularly in the worst affected
provinces of Masvingo and Matabeleland South and North, the government
has already bought 500,000 metric tonnes (mt) of grain from Zambia
and Malawi, leaving a net deficit of over 600,000mt to meet the
national requirement, according to the official daily newspaper,
The Herald. Mumbengegwi also set aside Z$800 billion (about US$2.3
million) to import maize, and for the GMB to purchase grain from
farmers.
The newspaper said the
allocation would put the government "in the driving seat in
terms of drought relief purposes, ahead of non-governmental organisations
[NGOs] and international donors, such as the World Food Programme
(WFP)". The amount seems small compared to the US$118 million
appeal launched by WFP to provide immediate assistance to 3.3 million
of the 4.1 million people that UN agencies estimate will be facing
severe food shortages from now until March 2008. The remainder will
be supported by NGOs, including the Consortium for the Southern
Africa Food Emergency (C-SAFE). "The reality is that the central
bank's foreign currency coffers are severely strained and, as has
been happening in the past, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe will be
forced to go to the black market to scoop out the much needed foreign
currency," Robertson told IRIN. The time factor would also
be critical in procuring the food, as the Zimbabwean dollar was
depreciating in value at a fast pace. Robertson speculated that
since the government was "heavily burdened by both domestic
and external debts" it could be left "with no option but
to print more money and, in the process, push up inflation".
The government-controlled Central Statistical Office maintains that
inflation is slightly over 7,000 percent, but the Consumer Council
of Zimbabwe, a watchdog body, has said it had reached more than
13,000 percent. In late June the government ordered prices to be
cut by 50 percent and forced businesses to comply, but the exercise
backfired as it led to widespread shortages in shops and in the
manufacturing industry, with commodities surfacing in the black
market at exorbitant prices.
Gasela said
the GMB's silos were "virtually empty" because farmers
were reluctant to sell the little they harvested for the poor prices
the government was offering. The government backtracked on its price-control
policy in August, and since then prices have shot up again, further
compromising food security: basic commodities such as maizemeal,
the staple food, are now beyond the reach of the poor. Maize prices
in US dollar equivalents in three monitored markets - Harare, the
Zimbabwean capital; Bulawayo, in the southwest, the second city;
and the eastern city of Mutare - rose by 23 percent on average,
from US$1.24 per kg in July to US$1.52 per kg in August, according
to the USAID-funded Famine
Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS-NET), which used the official
revised exchange rate of Z$15,000 to US$1. Rural residents have
begun to work for food. Tapiwa Goronga, 48, a resident of Chikomba
district, southwest of Harare, walks 15km to the village shopping
centre three times a week, where he does odd jobs for the owner
of a grinding mill, for which he is paid three kg of maizemeal.
"I did not harvest anything this year and the grinding mill
is my only hope, otherwise my four children and wife would starve."
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