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Talks, dialogue, negotiations and GNU - Post June 2008 "elections" - Index of articles
How
do you rein in 231 million percent inflation?
IRIN News
October 10, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=80858
Zimbabwe's official annual
inflation rate reached 231 million percent in early October, from
the July estimate of 11.2 million percent, and the deadlock in talks
between the ruling ZANU-PF and opposition parties is likely to push
hyperinflation higher.
The state-run daily newspaper,
The Herald, said the driver behind the inflation rate was wheat
shortages that forced bakers to import ingredients, which led to
a higher bread price.
After a succession of
dismal harvests, attributed to environmental factors and political
disruptions, nearly half of Zimbabwe's citizens will require food
assistance in the first quarter of 2009, according to the UN.
Several attempts by President
Robert Mugabe's government to bring down inflation - including lopping
off ten zeroes from the currency, introducing a new currency, and
price controls - have failed to put brakes on the multimillion percent
inflation rate.
The importance of a political
solution to counter hyperinflation was illustrated in the wake of
elections this year, when the opposition Movement for Democratic
Change (MDC) won a majority in parliament for the first time since
independence in 1980, and MDC leader Morgan Tsvangirai narrowly
missed winning the presidency.
"There
is a widely held perception that the Zimbabwe dollar is seriously
undervalued in the parallel market. The sharp 65 percent appreciation
of the Zimbabwe dollar on the parallel market in the immediate aftermath
of the 29 March 2008 elections suggests that this is, in fact, the
case," said a recent UN Development Programme (UNDP) discussion
document.
Independent economists
have estimated the real inflation rate at billions of percent: Zimbabwe's
financial malaise is not seen as a direct consequence of Mugabe's
2000 fast-track land reform programme, in which more than 4,000
white-owned farms were redistributed to landless blacks, it is rather
a series of injudicious decisions overlaying structural economic
weaknesses inherited from the former Rhodesia that are being amplified.
Dual
economy
At independence Mugabe's
government inherited a dual economy "characterised by a relatively
developed and diversified formal economy sitting alongside a neglected
and underdeveloped peasant-based subsistence rural economy,"
according to the UNDP discussion document, Comprehensive Economic
Recovery in Zimbabwe.
This dual economy has
not been addressed by the ruling ZANU-PF during 28 years of power,
and "with the collapse of the formal economy and the exponential
growth of the informal economy both in urban and rural areas during
the crisis period, the problem has deepened, with most economic
transactions and units now operating outside formal systems,"
the discussion document commented.
The trigger for the current
hyperinflation environment "can be traced to the so-called
'Black Friday' crash of the Zimbabwe dollar on 14 November 1997,
which was precipitated by the government's unbudgeted payment of
gratuities to veterans of the liberation war.
"This was followed
in 1998 by Zimbabwe's participation in the conflict in the Democratic
Republic of Congo, which further contributed to the ballooning fiscal
deficit," the UNDP document noted.
Inflation rose from 19
percent in 1997 to 56 percent by 2000, when the land reform programme
was launched - spearhead by the war veterans - so that by 2006 inflation
was running at more than 1,000 percent and reached hyperinflation
levels by 2007.
"Zimbabwe's inflation
is fundamentally caused by excess government expenditure, financed
by the printing of money in an economy with a real gross domestic
product (GDP) that has been declining for the last nine years. Money
supply growth has been completely decoupled from economic growth,
the inevitable result being continued and accelerating inflation,"
the UNDP said.
Between 1998 and 2006
Zimbabwe's GDP contracted by 37 percent, and by 2000 per capita
incomes were lower than those in 1960.
Accelerating
poverty
Poverty has accelerated,
according to the 2003 Poverty Assessment Study Survey (PASS II),
from 55 percent of Zimbabweans living below the Total Consumption
Poverty Line (TCPL) to 72 percent of the population by 2003, or
an increase of about a third in eight years.
A rider to Zimbabwe's
economic deterioration is the effect of the HIV/AIDS pandemic, which
UNAIDS and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) calculate may decrease
GDP growth rates by between one and two percent.
About 1.6 million Zimbabweans
between the ages of 15 and 49 years old are living with HIV/AIDS,
although prevalence of the disease declined from 20.1 percent in
2005 to about 15.9 percent by 2007.
The document
was written by Dale Doré, director of Shanduko, a Harare-based
non-profit research institute on agrarian and environmental issues,
Tony Hawkins, Professor of Economics at the Graduate School of Management
at the University
of Zimbabwe, Godfrey Kanyenze, director of the Labour and Economic
Development Research Institute of Zimbabwe, Daniel Makina, professor
of Finance and Banking at the University of South Africa in Pretoria
and Daniel Ndlela, director of Zimconsult, a Harare economic consultancy
firm.
The authors agree that
the medicine to reverse the ravages of the economic mismanagement
is likely to be as painful as hyperinflation's symptoms, and that
the precursor of a pro-poor recovery would be "sound macroeconomic
management".
"Full recovery,
defined simply in terms of a return to the peak real per capita
incomes of 1991, would take 12 years, assuming a bottoming-out of
the decline in the course of 2008, and uninterrupted growth of five
percent annually from 2009 to 2020," the discussion document
noted.
"And, given that
Zimbabwe is susceptible to drought - on average every three years
- and that with the decline of commercial agriculture this vulnerability
has increased, even the five percent annual growth in per capita
GDP may be beyond the upper bounds of probability."
There is no one-size-fits-all
remedy for hyperinflation, but there is consensus that delinking
the political manipulation of the exchange rate and monetary systems
is a prerequisite.
Drastic
measures
Professor Steve Hanke
of Johns Hopkins University in the US believes measures used internationally
to restore economic confidence and rein in hyperinflation require
"punishingly high" interest rates, causing slow GDP growth,
stagnation of living standards and the worsening of poverty during
the "stabilisation period."
Hanke contends in the
UNDP discussion document that, should there be a political settlement
in Zimbabwe, the new government has three options to consider: dollarisation,
free banking, or a currency board, all of which have their pros
and cons.
Dollarisation or randisation
- the rand is the monetary unit of South Africa, Zimbabwe's neighbour
and the continent's economic powerhouse - would entail one of the
foreign currencies being made legal tender instead of the Zimbabwe
dollar, which would die a natural death.
However, the new government
would "no longer have an independent monetary policy and set
their own interest rates, but must 'import' the monetary policy
of the country whose currency is chosen," Hanke said in the
discussion document.
A second consideration
is "free banking", used in colonial Southern Rhodesia
until 1940, in which private commercial banks issued currency notes
with 'minimal regulation'.
The third consideration
is a currency board, which would mean holding "foreign reserves
equal to 100 percent of the domestic money supply determined at
a fixed exchange rate ... as a result, money supply, and thereby
interest rates, are determined 'entirely by market forces'."
Handing over "monetary
policy to outsiders or even to market forces would be a high-risk
strategy for a fresh administration," the UNDP discussion document
said, especially in the light of Mugabe's consistent accusations
that Zimbabwe's economic decline was a result of "former imperialists"
trying to re-colonise the country.
"Furthermore, the
suggestion that Zimbabwe should abolish its central bank when much
smaller regional economies - Lesotho and Swaziland -
find it necessary to operate a central-bank system, even though
they are members of the Rand Monetary Area, is unrealistic,"
said the UNDP document.
Should there be some
sort of political settlement, the creation of an independent central
bank under a new constitution was likely to be part of the public
debate.
"Given Zimbabwe's
unhappy recent history with a politically driven central bank, the
economic case for RBZ [Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe] independence is
very powerful," the document noted.
Whatever solutions are
used to tackle Zimbabwe's hyperinflation, its legacy will haunt
the country for many years, and manifest itself in such areas as
investor confidence - both local and international - and the rebuilding
of "once strong" public institutions.
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