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Economic
Issues
Media Monitoring
Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2005-13
Tuesday
April 12th - Sunday April 17th 2005
ALTHOUGH ZBH
carried 22 reports on the commodity price increases and shortages,
it failed to view the issues as symptomatic of the country's economic
meltdown. As a result, it reported the increases in isolation without
giving a holistic picture of the situation on the ground or relating
them to the country's macro-economic situation. Neither would the
broadcaster openly discuss the causes of the commodity shortages
and price hikes.
Instead, ZBH
continued to accuse manufacturers of deliberately increasing commodity
prices and causing shortages. For example, Radio Zimbabwe
(13/04,6am)
claimed that "people" had accused "industrialists of sabotaging
the economy because they were disappointed with the results of the
elections." Without giving the business community the right of reply,
the station took the issue further in its 8pm bulletin of the same
day and attributed the fuel shortages in Bulawayo to the "country's
detractors", who caused shortages "every time the country comes
out of elections." To add to these unsubstantiated conspiracies,
ZTV (13/04,8pm) quoted one unnamed Bulawayo resident accusing the
MDC of causing fuel shortages by allegedly calling for the imposition
of sanctions against the country.
ZTV found an
ally in the form of The Daily Mirror (11/4) in peddling such ideas.
The private daily's comment spuriously accused the MDC of working
with businesses to sabotage Zimbabwe's economic growth "so that
President Mugabe vacates State House and a former trade unionist
moves in". The government Press was not any different. None of the
17 stories the papers carried on the subject hardly explained the
real causes or extent of the economic distress. Rather, the official
papers as illustrated by the business section of The Herald (13/4)
appeared to downplay the inflationary environment bedevilling the
country. While the paper announced the drop in the March annual
inflation rate by 3.5 percentage points from the February annual
rate of
127.2 percent,
it tried to belittle the rise in the-month-on month inflation for
the same period. The paper dishonestly noted that the month-on-month
inflation rate for March had "slightly" increased to 4.2 percent
from 3.1 percent in February. But an analysis of the statistics
show that the monthly inflation had actually increased substantially
as the 1.1 percent jump represented a 35% increase in just a single
month.
The Herald's
reluctance to unravel the truth resulted in the same issue of the
paper reporting vaguely about a deal that the financially-troubled
government-controlled airline, Air Zimbabwe, is reportedly poised
to sign with the South African Airways, aimed at improving the economic
fortunes of the local airliner. The paper merely hinted that the
"deal - if signed - could see government's shareholding in the parastatal
being heavily diluted" without analysing the causes behind the government
decision to finally surrender its yet-to-be disclosed stake in the
airline.
This unquestioning
approach was also evident in other government papers. For example,
the Sunday News (17/4) failed to ask the logic behind the holding
of a million litres of fuel at the Beitbridge Border post by the
Zimbabwe revenue authorities while the fuel situation in the Southern
region, especially in Bulawayo, remained critical. Neither would
The Sunday Mail fully explain the reasons behind the shortages of
basic commodities in the country. Its supine tone was reflected
by its over-reliance on government sources for comment as Figure
3 shows.
Fig 3 Voice
distribution in the government Press
|
Government
|
Business
|
ZANU
PF
|
Alternative
|
Ordinary
people
|
|
12
|
3
|
1
|
9
|
4
|
Notably, all
alternative voices quoted mainly echoed the official stance. However,
the private Press carried 25 stories that questioned government's
economic policies and highlighted numerous economic ills afflicting
the country mainly due to the shortage of foreign currency.
Studio 7 adopted
a similar slant in its six reports on economic issues. And contrary
to government media's sanitized socio-economic picture, the private
radio station, and indeed The Daily Mirror (14/4) and Zimbabwe Independent
reported on a survey by the Zimbabwe Food and Nutrition Council
conducted in collaboration with the Health Ministry, which recorded
chronic malnutrition levels of around 47 percent in children living
on commercial farms.
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fact sheet
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