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Indicators
of an ailing economy
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2004-18
Monday May 3rd - Sunday May 9th 2004
Barely three
weeks after the government media hailed the Reserve Bank governor
Gideon Gono’s monetary policy review statement as the tonic for
the country’s economic ills, symptoms of economic recession littered
media space in the week. Even the government Press, which so assiduously
assures the public of the country’s economic recovery, gave the
game away when they increased their cover prices, attributing the
hikes to increased production costs including newsprint.
The week also
witnessed an increase in the price of a loaf of bread from about
$2,000 to $2,900, The Herald (5/5), Radio Zimbabwe (5/5,
1pm), Power FM (5/5, 1pm), and The Manica Post (7/5). In
their reports, these media quoted bakers justifying the bread price
hike by citing the increase in the price of flour from $2,5 million
to $3,4 million dollars a tonne. Other factors such as increases
in wages, electricity, transport and spare parts were also cited.
However, the
government media merely presented these problems as peculiar to
the baking industry and not representative of the broader economic
environment.
The Sunday
Mail claimed that price increases were not justified because
of the "decline in the country’s inflation rate and the
cheap funds being made available to the manufacturers through the
Reserve Bank’s Productive Sector Facility".
The paper then
tried to give the impression that government policies have resulted
in phenomenal growth in the manufacturing sector. It quoted unnamed
"retailers" as saying "manufacturers
who increase prices unreasonably risk going out of business as there
is increased competition" as "indigenous
players are now venturing into manufacturing, with some of them
even running promotions to outdo established manufacturers".
The same article
quoted the Consumer Council of Zimbabwe (CCZ) calling on government
to reintroduce food subsidies on basic commodities "to
make them affordable". The implications of this were
studiously avoided. In fact, the failure by the government media
to examine the adverse effects of subsidies on the economy manifested
itself in the manner they reported the increase in the producer
price of maize.
ZBC (4/5, 8pm),
The Herald and the Chronicle (5/5) announced that
the government-run Grain Marketing Board would now buy a tonne of
maize from farmers for $750,000 up from last year’s $300,000 a tonne
while maintaining its selling price to millers at $400,000 a tonne
and to drought-stricken areas at $9,000 a tonne.
However, none
of them examined how this economically senseless decision would
affect the fiscus. Neither did they examine the inflationary effects
of offering resettled farmers free transport to ferry their produce
to the GMB, The Herald (7/5).
The private
media paid lip service to the issue. Nevertheless, they highlighted
the continued erosion of workers’ incomes due to the recent price
increases. For example, The Sunday Mirror (9/5)
pointed out that although CCZ and the Central Statistical Office
(CSO) use different figures to measure workers’ incomes, they both
illustrated the difficulties workers are encountering. For instance,
the conservative CSO figures show that a family of six, whose breadwinner
earns a minimum wage of $47,696 "needs $475 525 a month
for the food basket alone…" while CCZ figures put the
poverty datum line at "$968 525 a month".
The Tribune (7/5) carried similar CCZ figures.
The week also
witnessed the Zimbabwean currency sliding from $5,200 to $5,333
against the US dollar. The Daily Mirror (5/7) attributed
this to the central bank’s decision to allow the local currency
"to operate in free market conditions".
The paper (7/5) quoted an economist pointing out that this would
result in increases in the price of most goods, including basic
commodities. Said the economist: "All these changes will
lead to demands for higher wages as price increases will erode the
disposable income of workers and consumers and this will have an
inflationary impact on the economy".
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fact sheet
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