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Zimbabwe
budget offers scant hope of "rebound"
MacDonald Dzirutwe, Reuters
November 30, 2007
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2007%5C12%5C01%5Cstory_1-12-2007_pg5_45
Zimbabwe's 2008 budget
seems bereft of concrete measures to curb hyperinflation and ill
suited to provide the economic rebound it promises a population
faced with growing hardship.
The southern African
country, facing the uncertainties of presidential and parliamentary
elections next year, is in the grip of a punishing recession. It
endures the world's highest inflation rate at nearly 8,000 percent,
rising unemployment and shortages of foreign currency, fuel and
food.
Finance Minister Samuel
Mumbengegwi said on Thursday the worst was over and the economy
was set to rebound, with growth of 4 percent in 2008 after nearly
a decade in decline. Inflation would average below 2,000 percent
as farming output improves.
But critics said there
were no concrete plans given to support economic growth, while Mumbengegwi's
failure to devalue the Zimbabwe dollar would affect export earnings.
In what he called the
"people's budget", Mumbengegwi offered tax relief to workers
and allocated 7,840 trillion Zimbabwe dollars ($261 billion at the
official exchange rate but $5.2 billion on the parallel black market)
in spending.
The figure is nearly
200 times total spending and borrowings for 2007, which analysts
say showed the inflation outlook had worsened.
Shunned by the West over
policy differences such as President Robert Mugabe's seizure of
white-owned commercial farms for blacks and the threat to nationalise
foreign-owned firms, Harare has relied on borrowing locally and
printing cash to fund its budget deficit.
"This government
will certainly print and borrow more money," Tendai Biti, the
main opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) secretary-general,
said.
"This will trigger
off more inflationary pressures (and) more inflation means further
theft on the people's savings and incomes," said Biti.
Conditions are harsh.
Urban workers have had to contend with burst sewers, frequent water
and electricity cuts and crumbling infrastructure while prices have
started rising again.
The World Bank says Zimbabwe's
economy is the fastest shrinking outside a war zone and has contracted
by about 40 percent in real terms in the past eight years.
Industry plunged into
deeper crisis in June when Mugabe imposed a tough price freeze to
halt sharp increases.
This forced manufacturers
to stop producing, fearing heavy losses, while shops were emptied
of basic goods.
The government has poured
funds into the agriculture sector. Although it has dubbed the 2008
farming season "mother of all agriculture seasons", analysts
said shortages of goods like fertiliser, fuel and seed could still
hit output.
Mining, now a top foreign
currency earner following the collapse of agriculture, faces shortages
of foreign exchange, uncertainty over ownership, power cuts and
flight of skills.
"The major constraint
is on production on the real sectors which are faced with many challenges
and by and large the minister did not address that and his projections
will not be met," said ZABG Bank chief economist David Mupamhadzi.
Wildcat
strikes
Workers who have embarked
on wild-cat strikes this year are seen staging more boycotts as
the economic crisis worsens, ratcheting up tensions and pressure
on Mugabe, who however faces a weak and divided opposition at the
polls.
Mumbengegwi offered some
tax relief to workers but critics said it was too little and would
be quickly eroded by inflation.
Mugabe, 83 and in power
since independence from Britain in 1980, denies charges of mismanaging
the economy and dismisses critics suggestions that his prolonged
stay in power would hurt Zimbabwe's chances of turning around the
economy.
"I don't see any
change for me, maybe things will be worse because prices are increasing
at a faster rate now," said Simon Bakare, a salesman at a Harare
clothing shop. (Editing by Ralph Boulton)
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