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Price
increases and the Diaspora dollar
Media Monitoring
Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Media Weekly Update 2004-23
Monday June 7th – Sunday June 13th 2004
THE government-controlled
media also glossed over the real situation relating to the country’s
economic ills, including a crippling foreign currency shortage.
Instead of reporting a massive increase in the price of mealie-meal
and a less severe increase in bread, these media focussed on efforts
by Gideon Gono, Governor of the Reserve Bank, to harness foreign
currency from millions of Zimbabweans in the diaspora through the
Homelink Money Transfer Agency. As a result, they largely ignored
inflationary symptoms such as the commodity price increases, which
continue to erode workers’ disposable income.
Although the
private weeklies have tried to keep abreast of the sign of economic
distress, they have since been out-sprinted by commodity price increases
and have consequently failed to fully update their audiences on
time. Nevertheless, The Financial Gazette revealed that the
price of bread was set to rise to between $3,300 and $3,600 per
loaf in response to a hike in the price of flour from $2,4 million
to $4,1 million a tonne. The paper quoted industry players as having
attributed the hike in the price of flour to the shortage of wheat
and the depreciation of the Zimbabwean dollar against major currencies.
The bakers warned that if the situation persisted, bread would cost
more than $4,000 a loaf by December.
But The Herald
(7/6) misled its readers by claiming that bread had fallen from
$2,900 to between $2,800 and $2,500 a loaf - on the very same day
that some retailers started selling a loaf at above $3,000.
Besides the
commodity price increases, the media also carried various reports
on industrial action by workers, particularly those from parastatals
such as Zimpost and TelOne, demanding salary increments. However,
the media treated these industrial disturbances in isolation, failing
to view them in the context of the macro-economic crisis facing
the country.
The government
media tried to gloss over the country’s economic ills by narrowly
presenting the Homelink facility as the ultimate panacea to Zimbabwe’s
foreign currency woes (The Herald, 7/6). ZTV (11/6, 8pm)
claimed that Homelink "has received a positive response
from inside and outside Zimbabwe". Seven people, including
Zimbabweans purportedly living abroad, were quoted praising the
system.
But a report
by SW Radio Africa (11/6), actually alleged that "outraged
Zimbabweans" in Britain were planning "mass
protests" against Gono’s scheduled visit to that country
to solicit foreign currency, although it did not cite any Zimbabweans.
The Sunday
Mirror did not report on the issue but surprisingly lambasted
the MDC for organising the protests, asking: "How does
the MDC justify its active opposition to a programme that promotes
the national interest and still claim to be seized by the need to
promote the same?"
The government
media’s simplistic portrayal of the noble nature of Homelink resulted
in the distortion of some basic home truths. For example, their
coverage of the matter seemed to imply that those living and working
abroad had been encouraged to do so as a result of deliberate government
policy so they could remit foreign currency, instead of reporting
the fact that they had been driven away by a harsh economic and
political environment.
Thus Power FM
(12/6, 6am) quoted RBZ official Herbert Nkala saying the Homelink
facility was being launched "in recognition of the importance
of Zimbabwe’s exported human capital to national development".
The radio station noted that while between US$20-30m was currently
being realised by the country through the facility, "conservative
estimates say that US$100m a month can be generated from people
living abroad… surpassing conventional commodities such as tobacco"
However, Studio
7 (11/6) was more inquisitive, taking to task one of the RBZ’s advisory
board members, Eric Bloch, to explain the apparent rationale behind
government’s contradictory policy of begging for foreign currency
from the same people it was denying the right to vote and help shape
policy at home.
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fact sheet
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