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Economic
issues
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2004-44
Monday November 1st - Sunday November 7th 2004
THE government
media’s insincerity in reporting the economic situation in the country
was exposed by the manner in which they magnified positive highlights
of the Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono’s third quarterly monetary
policy review while smothering the sticky issues emanating from
his presentation.
The obsession
of these media with presenting Gono’s policies as having resuscitated
the country’s ailing economy resulted in them censoring his pertinent
warnings against fiscal indiscipline, such as unplanned government
expenditure.
In addition,
they exploited the visit to Zimbabwe by a Chinese government delegation
– ostensibly to seek areas of bilateral co-operation – as proof
of the economic success story of government’s "Look East Strategy",
meant to explore new export markets in Asia.
Symptoms of
continued economic decay, illustrated by erratic fuel supplies and
a flourishing foreign currency black market, were ignored in an
effort to present government economic policies as having steered
the country’s economy out of the woods.
Neither did
the official media reconcile President Mugabe’s "look-East"
policy with Gono’s efforts to court the IMF as part of his economic
turnaround strategy.
These issues
were only dealt with in the private media. However, like the government
media, they also failed to fully report on the recent wave of price
increases of most commodities and services amid claims of a drop
in the inflation rate to 251,5 percent in September.
Nevertheless,
the private media’s coverage of Gono’s monetary policy was more
professional, as they evaluated his successes against his failures.
For example,
while the Zimbabwe Independent (5/11) quoted analysts as conceding
that Gono had succeeded in stabilising the inflation rate, bringing
a degree of discipline to the financial sector and has been instrumental
in slowing the downward spiral of the productive sector, it noted
that the RBZ boss had failed to deal decisively with other key economic
problems through errors of judgment or inability to come up with
effective policies.
Among these,
said the Independent, was Gono’s failure to deal effectively with
the "exchange rate problem that has hurt exporters and put
some of them out of business", his inability to find a lasting
solution to foreign currency shortages and his vulnerability to
political manipulation by the ruling ZANU PF.
The paper’s
editorial cited government plans to pay unbudgeted gratuities to
liberation war collaborators and detainees and compulsorily acquire
foreign-owned agro-processing concerns in the Lowveld and Eastern
Highlands under the land reform programme as some of the "dangers
lurking" in Gono’s efforts to revive the economy.
But the government
media avoided these issues.
Rather, The
Herald (2/11) remained content to gloss over Zimbabwe’s deep-seated
economic problems saying, "the tone set by the RBZ chief Dr
Gideon Gono in his maiden monetary policy statement of December
2003 has reaped benefits that have seen our economy on the right
direction to normalcy".
Selectively
using the fall in inflation, it thus argued, "prices have not
been increasing at astronomic levels".
This selective
coverage, meant to portray Gono’s policies as the right tonic for
the country’s economic woes, further manifested itself in the way
ZTV (01/11, 8pm), Power FM (02/11, 6am), The Herald (2/11), the
Chronicle (4/11) and even the privately-owned Financial Gazette
(5/11), also failed to ask pertinent questions about the viability
of the RBZ’s proposed Zimbabwe Allied Banking Group (ZABG), under
which all of the country’s collapsed banks would be amalgamated.
The two government
dailies observed that the proposed banking group "could arguably
be the best thing that has happened to the banking sector",
while ZTV quoted economic analyst Albert Machando contending that,
like the South African ABSA bank, ZABG had the potential to become
a regional giant that would "also help the nation should the
foreign banks decide to sabotage the government".
The Financial
Gazette (4/11) concurred, saying ZABG "had brought more clarity
and removed the uncertainty that had stalked the [banking] industry
since upheavals began late last year".
However, Studio
7 (2/11) quoted economist Peter Robinson saying the recapitalisation
of collapsed banks at a cost of $2 trillion would cause serious
inflationary pressure for the economy.
An unnamed financial
writer quoted on SW Radio Africa (7/11) agreed.
Said the writer:
"The crisis is that we are going to have a conglomeration of
six or seven weak banks moulded into one bank in the hope of creating
a stronger one. This doesn’t work. A loose knit conglomeration of
small banks that are not strong will also create a bigger bank that
does not have a good balance sheet and that cannot be able to survive
in a market like ours…"
The Daily Mirror
(5/11), the Independent and Standard (7/11) stories raised similar
concerns.
Moreover, the
Independent (5/11) claimed that Gono had lied to a parliamentary
portfolio committee that no bank would collapse, as he had started
planning "months ago to form the ZABG by merging collapsed
banks".
This drew a
vitriolic response from The Sunday Mail (8/10) columnist Lowani
Ndlovu.
Ndlovu’s rebuttal
of the Independent story was, however, more conspicuous by its personal
spiteful insults on the "idiocy" and "kind of stupid
conclusion drawn by that newspaper’s dunderheads from what they
claimed to be ‘information gleaned from central banks" than
for the coherence of his argument.
Earlier, The
Herald (6/11) also tried to dismiss the private media’s pertinent
criticism of the apparent shortcomings of Gono’s policies by peddling
unsubstantiated claims that there was "a sinister campaign
to discredit the economic gains scored by Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe
governor Gideon Gono", which it said was "fuelled by the
opposition MDC, its newspapers, some economists and Western countries".
It then falsely
claimed that Gono’s "reforms" had resulted in "constant
fuel supplies (and) stabilisation in the foreign currency markets".
However, The
Daily Mirror (4/11) disputed such claims, saying the current fuel
shortages created "suspicion that the country’s foreign currency
woes are worse than the public has been told".
Said the paper:
"The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe has made it clear that given
that the country is virtually on its own, the foreign currency allocation
priority is fuel and electricity. So, we wonder where the foreign
currency allocated to fuel procurement is going".
If the government
media were not reporting glowingly on the purported successes of
Gono’s monetary policy, they were parading the signing of eight
deals between government and the Chinese as indicative of the positive
results brought by the authorities’ "look-East" investment
drive (ZTV, 4/11, 8pm, The Herald and Chronicle, 5/11).
In fact, ZBC
carried about 52 stories extolling the relations between Zimbabwe
and China and calling on business people to exploit trade opportunities
presented by that country.
The broadcaster
even claimed that since Zimbabwe was granted an Approved Destination
Status by China, it has recorded a 40 percent increase in the arrival
of Asian tourists as at June 30 2004. However, the report did not
explain what this percentage represented in real figures.
Visit the MMPZ
fact sheet
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