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Inflation and monetary policy miracles
Media Monitoring
Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2004-03
Monday January 19th - Sunday January 25th 2004
The government-controlled
media's enthusiasm to portray the sickly Zimbabwean economy as finally
recovering from its myriad ailments found expression again this
week through its narrow and simplistic interpretations of the effects
the recently announced Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe's monetary policy
has had on the country's economy. A decrease in inflation in December
by 20.8 percent to 598.7 percent from the November rate of 619.5
percent was the latest economic indicator the government-controlled
media used to support its arguments that the country's economy was
on the mend.
Such fixation
with the drop in inflation, as if that on its own was the key to
success, without relating it holistically to other yet unresolved
economic fundamentals, deprived audiences of the government media
a greater insight into the complications the economy has to overcome
if it is to recover. As a result these media devoted most of their
time to praising the Central Bank governor, Gideon Gono, for inducing
a drop in inflation instead of questioning whether government would
abandon its disastrous policies, which have largely been blamed
for the country's economic troubles, to complement the Reserve Bank
of Zimbabwe's (RBZ) efforts. Although The Herald (22/1) half-heartedly
touched on the subject, when it noted that "most economic analysts
feel it could be still too soon to predict (the economic) recovery
course as more focus will be on assessing government's credibility
and consistency in its policy implementation", its slant was
largely unquestioning as it sought to present the drop in inflation
as an illustration of the effectiveness of the monetary policy.
Likewise, ZTV
(20/01, 8pm) pointed out that the drop in inflation showed that
the "economy has begun to respond positively to the monetary
policy" adding (21/01, 8pm) that this was a clear indication
the "country's economy is on the path to recovery." However,
the private media disputed this. For instance, Studio 7(22/01) quoted
economic commentator Tony Hawkins attributing the drop in inflation
to the fact that prices of goods went up by "11 percent in
December" compared to October and November last year when prices
increased by over 32 percent. He described government- controlled
media's attempts to directly link the RBZ's fiscal policy to the
decline in inflation as "nonsense because figures were compiled
before the monetary policy was even announced."
The Zimbabwe
Independent (23/01) agreed, and observed that even the excitement
over the drop in inflation rang hollow because the country's inflation
was still "600 percent higher than our trading partners".
In its comment, Gono's magic wand won't do the trick, the paper
observed that all the positive publicity about Gono's strategies
were likely to fizzle out because the country was not only failing
to attract tourists and foreign investment, but also lacked badly
needed financial support from key multilateral financial institutions.
Said the paper: "He (Gono) may tinker at the margins"
but "sooner or later he will have to face the hard facts that
under the current regime a mismanaged economy, macro-economic distortions,
corruption and shortages have become a way of life."
The Sunday Mirror
(25/01) concurred. It pointed out that leading economists "remained
pessimistic as to whether the problem of inflation has finally been
averted" arguing that unless all stakeholders are fully committed
and collaborate to complement current central bank efforts "the
current 'honeymoon' would soon hit a brick wall". The Daily
Mirror (21/01) and The Daily News (23/01) shared the same view.
The government media would still not factor in these aspects in
their reports. Besides, it also seemed to escape the professional
logic of journalists from these media, as illustrated by The Herald
(20/1) and ZBC (20/01, 8pm), that the availability of basic goods,
although expensive, was a result of government abandoning price
controls rather than the RBZ's monetary policy alone.
It was this
obsession with promoting the monetary policy as a magic potion for
the economic revival that saw ZBC (20/01, 8pm) claim that as a result
of Gono's measures prices of commodities were tumbling. There was
no attempt to look at other reasons outside the monetary policy
that could have led to prices of some commodities going down. For
example, it is common practice that retailers have clearance sales
in January when business is usually low.
As a result
of such simplistic attempts to sell the monetary policy, the government-controlled
media also found themselves glossing over the effectiveness of the
foreign currency auction system, which The Zimbabwe Independent
reported as coming "under fire" from the same businesses
that wanted it introduced because of its "unviable low"
auction prices.
SW Radio Africa
(20/01) also quoted Hawkins doubting the success of the auction
system. Commenting on the firming of the local currency Hawkins
said: " This is a very artificial situation because the level
of the amount of transaction in the market is tiny. It's been about
$2million an auction whereas a normal auction would have to be about
$15 million an auction. So you can't read anything into these figures
at this stage".
However, the
government-controlled media unquestioningly allowed government to
identify itself with Gono's attempts to revive the economy, ZBC
(21/01, 8pm), The Herald (19/1&22/1) and Chronicle (23/1). The
Herald (19/1) carried a public relations story in which ZANU PF
tried to own Gono's financial sector clean-up, a move only questioned
and interpreted in the private media as government's way of shoring
up its waning support ahead of the 2005 parliamentary polls.
The Business
Tribune (23/1) comment queried why Gono would only meet ZANU PF
MPs and not legislators from the opposition because "...the
MDC cannot be wished away as they represent a large chunk of voters."
The Standard (25/1) dismissed ZANU PF's purported new crusade against
graft as "cosmetic" meant "to hoodwink voters."
But the government media steered clear of this angle. Instead, The
Herald (19/1) attempted to summarily apportion blame for the country's
financial mess to former RBZ governor Leonard Tsumba, whom it described
as a "textbook economist", while glorifying Gono. The
paper achieved this via a simplistic comparison of the performance
of the two during their tenure at the central bank, concluding that,
"Dr Gono has the full support of Government and President Mugabe."
But it remained silent over whether Tsumba enjoyed the same support
during his tenure.
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