|
Back to Index
Dying
silently in Zimbabwe
Michael Gerson, The Washington Post
February 20, 2008
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/02/19/AR2008021902337.html
One of the most reckless
and cruel acts of government is the destruction of a currency.
During the hyperinflation
of Germany's Weimar Republic, the number of marks in circulation
went from 29 billion in 1918 to 497 quintillion in 1923. Workers
were paid twice a day and given breaks to spend their money, carted
in wheelbarrows, before it became worthless. Most Germans lost their
life savings, leaving many prepared to blame others for their impoverishment.
The Nazis blamed the Jews.
This kind of
hyperinflation is rare in history, but we are seeing it once again,
in Zimbabwe. Government officials claim an inflation rate of 66,212
percent (most months they refuse to release inflation figures at
all). The International Monetary Fund believes
the rate is closer to 150,000 percent -- about the level reached
by Weimar Germany. By some estimates, about 50 percent of Zimbabwe's
government revenue comes from the printing of money. At independence
in 1980, the Zimbabwean dollar was worth more than one U.S. dollar.
Recently, the state-controlled newspaper raised its cover price
to 3 million Zimbabwean dollars. Two pounds of chicken were recently
reported to cost about 15 million Zimbabwean dollars.
A Zimbabwean friend who
runs a business recently told me, "If you don't get a bill
collected in 48 hours, it isn't worth collecting, because it is
worthless. Whenever we get money, we must immediately spend it,
just go and buy what we can. Our pension was destroyed ages ago.
None of us have any savings left." Zimbabwean nationals who
work on the U.S. Embassy staff in Harare have seen all their retirement
funds wiped out. American government officials in the country carry
boxes of money to pay at restaurants and must begin counting out
currency at the beginning of the meal to finish by its end.
The government of Robert
Mugabe has responded with the normal economic policy of tyrants:
price controls. And these have naturally emptied the shelves in
grocery stores and caused shortages of most basic goods. My friend's
wife travels to Botswana to buy flour and sugar.
Mugabe manages to pay
off his military leaders and political cronies with hard currency
that comes from mining gold and platinum. He also sells farmland
to Chinese and Libyan speculators -- land expropriated from white
farmers, supposedly in the cause of Zimbabwean nationalism. Mugabe
is literally putting his country on the block to maintain his power.
So why don't the impoverished
people of Zimbabwe revolt? "The tragedy is that nobody is in
the streets," says my Zimbabwean friend. "People are dying
silently."
Zimbabwe's odd stability
has several causes. More than 3 million discontented people have
fled the country -- often the talented and educated -- leaving Mugabe
with less internal opposition. Many of the Zimbabweans who remain
avoid starvation with the help of international aid and remittances
from relatives in prosperous neighboring countries. Mugabe's political
opponents have generally been weak and divided -- when not being
jailed and tortured by the government. And some residual support
for Mugabe remains, particularly in rural areas, because he is an
anti-colonial hero; it is hard for many to accept the idea that
their founding father is also a corrupt, brutal incompetent.
There are, however, signs
of resistance. My friend reports that lower-level members of the
military and police seem increasingly alienated and disillusioned.
At a demonstration last year, he says, "they were unenthusiastic
and malnourished, with ragged uniforms. They pleaded with us to
go away, because they didn't want to hurt us. And then I was saluted
for the first time by the police."
And Mugabe's ZANU-PF
party is beginning to fracture. The former finance minister -- who
opposed the policy of printing money and price controls -- is running
as an independent against Mugabe in the March 29 election. Simba
Makoni is viewed by U.S. officials as a smart, honest technocrat.
He clearly possesses bravery, though not much grass-roots support.
The March 29 vote, as
usual, will be a fraud. Mugabe -- despite pressure from surrounding
nations -- will conduct a police-state election, with tight control
of the media, corrupt voter rolls and massive intimidation, including
the use of food as a tool of political control. But the opposition
has little choice but to participate. It may gain some support in
local councils and the parliament. And if opponents abandon the
electoral route, says my friend, the only alternative would be "street
action, which is fraught with problems."
And so Mugabe remains
on his bayonet throne as his country becomes the Weimar Republic
and totalitarian, all in one.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|