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Economic
issues
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-27
Monday July 18th – Sunday July 24th 2005
THE government
media continued to deal superficially with Zimbabwe’s shrinking
economy, characterised by high inflation and shortages of basic
commodities and foreign currency, in the 81 stories they carried
on the topic. Fifty-three appeared on ZBH while the remaining 28
appeared in the government Press.
These media
particularly used the monetary policy statement by Reserve Bank
Governor Gideon Gono to downplay the country’s poor economic performance
and generalize its alleged achievements.
In fact, most
of the 48 stories these media carried (ZBH 28 stories, government
Press, 20) on Gono’s presentation and the ongoing fuel crisis were
uncritical reports that oversimplified Zimbabwe’s economic problems.
This resulted in The Herald and Chronicle (18/7) and
Power FM (18/7, 6am) reporting that government had secured more
foreign currency to buy fuel without stating where the money was
coming from or whether it would bring the crisis to an end.
For example,
none of the reports investigated the effects of Gono’s devaluation
of the dollar to Z$17 500 to the US dollar, or question the practicability
of Gono’s target of an inflation rate of 80% by year-end. Nor did
they query government’s policy U-turn in allowing individuals and
companies to import fuel or (with the exception of The Sunday
Mail) test government’s logic of allowing selected service stations
to sell fuel in foreign currency in the face of a blitz on foreign
currency dealing.
For example,
The Herald’s comment (22/7), Devaluation will increase
forex inflows, merely said the monetary statement "seeks
to stabilise the economy and consolidate the turnaround efforts".
ZTV (21/7, 8pm)
simply claimed that the monetary statement had been "hailed
for its concerted effort to address the economic challenges facing
the country". Radio Zimbabwe and Power FM (22/7, 6am
& 1pm) adopted a similar slant. They claimed that "Zimbabweans
from all walks of life" had "praised"
the monetary policy for focusing on the country’s economic "challenges".
However, only Science and Technology Minister Olivia Muchena was
quoted in their reports.
Subsequent bulletins
continued passive endorsement of the monetary policy.
However, The
Sunday Mail (24/7) did query the logic of allowing some service
stations to sell fuel at US$1 a litre while the rest sold it at
Z$10,000 a litre. It called on government to increase fuel prices
again, saying at the current rate, individual importers and companies
would sell at a loss, which would fuel the black market.
The sober analysis
of The Sunday Mail comment basically echoed the tone of the
44 reports that the private Press carried on the topic.
The stories
contradicted government papers’ projections of an improved economy
and presented Gono’s monetary policy as emergency measures that
were unlikely to provide a lasting solution to the country’s myriad
economic problems.
For example,
all 13 stories the private media carried on the monetary policy
(nine of which appeared in the Zimbabwe Independent), expressed
reservations about the measures outlined in it.
The Standard
quoted analysts dismissing as "unrealistic"
Gono’s prediction that the recent rise in inflation, to 164 percent
in June, would fall to about 80 percent by December. Analysts also
said Gono’s measures were unlikely to overcome current commodity
scarcities.
The Zimbabwe
Independent said Gono was putting on a "brave face"
because as long as government spending was not curtailed, inflation
could gallop to 400% by December. It also pointed out that authorising
fuel dealers to sell in hard currency was one step towards the "dollarisation"
of the Zimbabwean economy, a move President Mugabe has resisted,
insisting that only the Zimbabwe dollar should be used as legal
tender in all formal transactions in the country.
The Independent
and The Financial Gazette (21/7) also revealed that such
was Zimbabwe’s untenable economic position that government was seeking
a US$1 billion rescue package from South Africa to finance essential
imports and offset its international debt. Studio 7 devoted seven
of its eight economic stories to the matter.
The government
media ignored this development. Instead, The Sunday Mail
allowed Gono to trivialize the matter and evade explaining the real
purpose of meeting his SA counterpart, Tito Mboweni.
However, The
Herald (23/7) appeared inadvertently to expose Gono’s growing
desperation over Zimbabwe’s economic crisis when it reported him
as "imploring the diplomatic community not to isolate
Zimbabwe, but to assist the country as it seeks to redress its socio-economic
crisis" during an address on the state of the economy.
The story, buried
on page 8, claimed Gono "stressed" the importance
of keeping Zimbabwe "relevant" in the international
community, saying it "would not benefit anyone"
to have the country "thrown out of the IMF",
which meets next month to decide Zimbabwe’s fate.
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