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Promise
of full shop shelves met with scepticism
IRIN News
October 03, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=74619
Predictions by Zimbabwe's
Reserve Bank Governor, Gideon Gono, that empty supermarket shelves
will soon be packed with goods are being received somewhat sceptically
by Zimbabweans.
Gono's upbeat
assessment of the country's prospects in his mid-year
monetary policy statement on Monday coincided with an absence
of bread on shop shelves because of a poor winter wheat harvest,
adding to the list of widespread shortages of basic items that includes
fuel, water, electricity and medicines. Donor agencies estimate
that more than a third of Zimbabweans are on the cusp of severe
food shortages.
The belief by Gono that
supermarket shelves will soon fill up is based on the government's
introduction of price controls in June, which forced the supply
chain to slash commodity prices by 50 percent and led to empty shop
shelves, staff being laid off and the closure of businesses.
"It is against this
background that I can say without fear of retraction or of being
misquoted that it will not be very long before we see visible supply
improvements on the ground," Gono said in his mid-term policy
review.
"We should, by the
end of this month [October], see the return of mazoe [orange syrup],
soft drinks, cooking oil, soap, milk, bread, sugar and animal feeds
on the shelves at affordable [cost to consumers], but economically
viable prices to the suppliers," he said.
A tempered
optimism
However, the
Reserve Bank governor tempered his optimism with a warning to government
against immediate implementation of the recently passed Indigenisation
and Empowerment Bill, which allows government to take a controlling
stake of 51 percent in all foreign-owned businesses, including the
British-owned Barclays and Standard Chartered banks, and South African
banking institution Stanbic, owned by Standard Bank.
"Our well-considered
advice to legislators and government is that a fine balance should
be struck between the objectives of indigenisation and the need
to attract foreign investment necessary to grow our economy, so
that the same economy starts registering growth, which will enable
the majority of our people to start experiencing real, as opposed
to the window-dressing, freelance type of participation we have
seen in some of our so-called indigenised companies," he said.
Gono advised against
what he termed "excitable but impractical overnight conversion
events", which could create a perception that the indigenisation
programme was aimed at instant gratification through "grab,
take and run" tactics.
Gono's delivery of his
monetary policy statement coincided with the return of President
Robert Mugabe from the 62nd session of the United Nations General
Assembly in New York, who arrived at the airport in the capital,
Harare, to a tumultuous welcome from veterans of the country's war
of independence.
In an address to his
supporters Mugabe said companies unhappy with the indigenisation
bill were free to leave. "The minerals are ours, we are offering
good partners - friendly partners - a share of 49 percent. If they
won't take it, hard luck; we will give it to our people."
In another broadside
against business, which is labouring under the world's highest inflation
rate of more than 6,000 percent, Mugabe warned against any price
increases. "We will have to seize those companies if they do
not abide by laid down pricing schedules. I am warning you,"
Mugabe said.
Mixed
messages
John Robertson, an economic
consultant, said the mixed messages emanating from Mugabe and Gono
made it unlikely that shop shelves would fill up any time soon.
"The President and
the governor gave different statements on major policies, with the
Head of State believing that threats would bring discipline to business,
while the governor was critical of price controls. This scenario
is not likely to result in shelves filling up quickly," he
told IRIN.
He said the country was
facing a hangover from the price controls. "Goods do not just
appear on supermarket shelves; they have to be manufactured by producers
and, in this case, many no longer have the capacity to resume production."
A government economist,
who declined to be identified, was doubtful about any recovery in
the short term. "Over the last eight years, industries have
collapsed, relocated or reduced capacity. The few that were barely
surviving before the price cuts were dealt severe blows and are
not likely to recover," he commented.
"A visit to most
supermarkets now reveals that goods on the shelves are not locally
manufactured but imported from South Africa. If the shelves are
to fill up, it will be with imported goods, as private players capitalise
on the absence of a viable manufacturing sector," the government
economist said.
Eric Bloch, an economist
and Reserve Bank consultant who has no doubt that Mugabe will sign
the indigenisation bill into law, allowing it to be gazetted, told
IRIN the governor's prediction that the shelves would start filling
up was a realistic scenario.
"The goods
are slowly trickling back on the shelves, because today I asked
my messenger to do some shopping and out of the 16 items on the
shopping list, he managed to find 11 items, including milk, candles
and laundry soap. All the commodities bought were manufactured locally."
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