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Zimbabwe's
inflation woes continue
Independent Online (IOL, SA)
February 12, 2008
http://www.int.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1&click_id=84&art_id=nw20080212135423575C581988
Johannesburg/Harare -
A shocking new range of price increases were announced on Tuesday
as Zimbabwe's world record hyperinflation spun further out of control,
with charges for mobile phone calls soaring by nearly 1 700 per
cent.
The official National
Incomes and Prices Commission said international calls were up to
Zim$1,2million from Zim$67 400 per minute, while local calls shot
up by 600 per cent from Zim$43 000 to Zim$300 000.
However, the new prices
were accompanied by a sharp new fall in the value of the Zimbabwe
dollars on the illegal black market exchange rate which is used
exclusively in private trade and business.
The basic rate of the
Zimbabwe dollar fell from Zim$5,5-million to the US dollar at the
end of last week to Zim$7,5-million being quoted on Tuesday. It
means a local mobile call will cost the equivalent of 4 US cents.'There
are times when tractors are used to carry 10 crates of beer'
This time last year,
one US dollar was Zim$3 000.
The prices commission
also announced that the price of a 50 kilogram bag of cement had
gone to Zim$88-million from about 4-million on the black market
in December, an increase of 1,200 percent.
Cement has been in critically
short supply for months, because factories stopped producing after
the commission forced them to sell it at less than it cost them
to manufacture.
Commission chairman
Godwills Masimirembwa said cement had become available after the
commission granted an increase in the price of coal used in the
production of cement. For months coal has been selling at the equivalent
of a couple of US dollars a ton.
Companies complain that the commission takes weeks to consider applications
for price increases and by the time it grants an increase, inflation
has taken the cost of production way beyond what they had asked
for.
The ministry
of finance in September last year barred its central statistical
office's monthly issue of inflation figures, but the central bank
announced last month that inflation at November stood at 26 000
percent. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) estimates
that by the end of last year it hit 150 000 percent.
Economists blame President
Robert Mugabe's reckless economic policies, chiefly his instructions
to the central bank to print local currency to meet any shortfall
in state spending, and on price controls.
A new Zim$10-million
note introduced last month now is just enough to buy three copies
of the state daily propaganda Herald newspaper.
Basic food commodities
have also been hit there are times when tractors are used to carry
10 crates of beer inflation, with bread rising from Zim$1,5-million
a loaf last month to 3,7-million now, the price hikes compounded
by a collapse in agricultural production triggered in 2000 with
Mugabe's seizure of white-owned farms, which drove about 4,000 farmers
and their families and about a million farm workers and their families
from the land.
Last year the regime
launched a massive drive to resuscitate crop and livestock output,
promising ample supplies of seed, fertiliser and pesticides, and
also spending US$25-million on importing 2 125 tractors, 85 combine
harvesters and other equipment for distribution among newly resettled
farmers.
It said the 2007-2008
summer cropping period would be "the mother of all agricultural
seasons."
However, the government
has since admitted that seed and fertilisers supplies were far short
of demand. On Tuesday, minister of agricultural mechanisation Joseph
Made said the Government was "concerned" with the abuse
of the recently distributed equipment.
He said tractors were
not maintained and many were being used as buses to ferry people
in rural areas, while others "spend their time parked at beer
halls.
"There are times
when tractors are used to carry 10 crates of beer when they should
be used for work in the fields. I know there are transport problems,
but that is not a passport to abuse tractors," he said.
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