|
Back to Index
Economic
issues
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-29
Monday August 1st – August 7th 2005
THE debate over
Zimbabwe’s worsening economic crisis dominated media coverage in
the week. The print media carried 77 reports on the matter, 39 of
which appeared in the government newspapers and 38 in the private
Press. ZBH carried 37 reports, while Studio 7 had 14 stories.
However, the
government media’s coverage of the economic meltdown evaded examining
its root causes, or the measures the authorities were taking to
arrest the decline. Consequently, these media neither explained
the exact reasons behind government’s efforts to seek economic rescue
packages from China and South Africa, nor discussed the circumstances
surrounding the aid agreements.
Rather, all
the five stories that the government Press carried on the China/Zimbabwe
agreements emphasised the purported benefits of the alleged deals.
For instance, The Herald (4/8) reported that Zimbabwe and
China had "struck a telepathic understanding"
in various spheres of development that include political and economic
co-operation, which would place Zimbabwe at an advantage when it
comes to negotiating economic deals. Without providing informative
detail on the deals, the paper’s opinion piece (6/8), Attacks
on Chinese products unjustified, tried to endorse Zimbabwe’s
trade with China by simplistically portraying the Chinese as better
trading partners than Zimbabwe’s former Western associates.
It crassly claimed
that the quality of Chinese industrial products were actually better
than Western products as exemplified by the "guns of
Chinese origin" that "triumphed over the
Western-made FN rifles of the RF (Rhodesian Front)"
during the liberation struggle. It added that "Westerners"
were "peddling falsehoods" about Chinese
products "in the hope of cultivating consumer resistance
to Chinese goods" and "deal a fatal blow
to the Look East policy."
ZBH adopted
a similar slant. For instance, Power FM (1/8, 6am) & ZTV (2/8,
6&8pm) simplistically claimed that President Mugabe’s recent
visit to China would improve Zimbabwe’s economic fortunes by providing
the business sector with vast investment opportunities. These superficial
reports captured the tone of the14 stories ZBH carried on the Zimbabwe/China
relations.
The government
media’s oversimplification of Zimbabwe’s economic problems was also
evident in the way they suffocated government’s attempts to obtain
a US$1 billion loan from SA to pay for essential imports and offset
its debt with the IMF.
None of the
eight reports the government media (the government Press [6] and
ZBH [2]) carried on the loan adequately outlined the reasons why
government wanted the credit, or provided details regarding the
terms of its disbursement. So reluctant were these media to discuss
the matter that their coverage of the issue only emerged in the
context of defending the borrowing.
For example,
South African President Thabo Mbeki provided the government media
(The Herald, Chronicle, 2/8, and Power FM, 2/8, 1pm)
with a perfect opportunity to defend the loan following Mbeki’s
claims that Zimbabwe’s crippling foreign debt was "a
natural consequence of (Zimbabwe’s) liberation and independence,
which imposed on the new government a duty to deal with the
urgent needs of the formerly oppressed"
and not a result of "corruption".
Mbeki’s claims
were allowed to pass without any scrutiny.
The government
media’s unwillingness to go beyond official pronouncements to unravel
the details of the SA/Zimbabwe negotiations to bail-out Harare was
illustrated by The Sunday Mail’s failure to take the Governor of
the Reserve Bank to task on the matter. Instead, the paper passively
quoted Gideon Gono refusing to shed light on the issue on the basis
that "borrowings between nations" were "never
done through megaphone negotiations".
The government
media’s unprofessional handling of the matter and other related
reports on indicators of economic collapse was reflected in their
sourcing pattern as shown in Figs 1 and 2.
Fig. 1 Voice
distribution on ZBH
|
Govt
|
Business
|
Professional
|
Alternative
|
Ordinary
people
|
Zanu
PF
|
MDC
|
Police
|
Foreign
|
|
22
|
4
|
3
|
3
|
7
|
1
|
0
|
1
|
2
|
Fig 2 Voice
distribution in the government Press
|
Govt
|
Business
|
Alternative
|
Professional
|
Foreign
|
Ordinary
people
|
Unnamed
|
|
22
|
6
|
7
|
1
|
4
|
3
|
3
|
The government
Press also carried nine editorials either echoing or magnifying
government policies.
The private
media were more analytical in their coverage of Zimbabwe’s economic
woes. For example, the nine stories they carried on Zimbabwe’s trade
relations with China critically examined the alleged successes of
Zimbabwe’s economic embrace with China.
The Financial
Gazette (4/8) and Zimbabwe Independent (5/8) argued that
apart from Chinese political support, Zimbabwe had failed to secure
the desperately needed rescue package.
The Independent
noted that although Mugabe had returned from China clutching more
bilateral and preferential trade agreements, including "a
paltry US$6 million for grain imports" enough to feed
the starving multitudes for three months, "it leaves
Mugabe with nothing for fuel and power imports."
The Financial
Gazette concurred, adding that the much-publicised visit was
"a significant failure" since the figure
was "a far cry from the US$420 million the country needs
to bridge a massive grain deficit".
The Independent
also contended that while President Mugabe claimed China was Zimbabwe’s
"great friend", the Asian country had "stronger
economic and cultural ties with the West" which it
was consolidating. And while Mugabe boasted about the success of
his ‘Look East policy’, said the paper, latest figures showed that
Zimbabwe’s total trade with the Chinese was only US$264 million
annually, an amount which can "barely buy five months’
supply of fuel."
The private
media also updated their audiences on the negotiations surrounding
the SA/Zimbabwe loan in the 17 stories they carried on the issue.
They revealed that SA had attached strict conditions to the loan
Zimbabwe was seeking. Studio 7 (3/8) and the Independent, for
example, quoted SA government spokesman Joel Netshitenzhe saying
the loan should benefit Zimbabweans "within the context
of an economic recovery programme and political normalisation".
The same sentiments
were echoed in another story published in the SA-based Business
Day and reproduced by the Independent and The Daily
Mirror (5/8). The story claimed that part of the deal was aimed
at averting Zimbabwe’s expulsion from the IMF, a move confirmed
by Netshitenzhe. He was quoted as saying the IMF had already given
Zimbabwe four weeks’ grace period, following talks between SA and
the international lender.
As the week
closed, Studio 7 (7/8) quoted the South African Sunday Times
claiming that Pretoria had given Mugabe a "week to agree
to democratic reforms in return for a financial aid package of up
to US$500 million".
The openness
in which the private media debated Zimbabwe’s economic ills was
reflected in the private Press’ sourcing pattern as shown in Fig
3.
Fig 3 Voice
distribution in the private Press
|
Govt
|
Business
|
Alternative
|
Professional
|
Ordinary
People
|
Zanu
PF
|
MDC
|
Foreign
|
Unnamed
|
|
16
|
3
|
3
|
4
|
2
|
1
|
2
|
21
|
3
|
The private
papers carried six critical editorials of government’s economic
management. In addition, they carried 22 other stories that highlighted
the increasingly poor performance of the economy.
Although Studio
7 was also revealing in its coverage of the country’s economic meltdown,
which included four reports on indicators of economic decline, it
failed to balance alternative voices with official comment. See
Fig 4.
Fig. 4 Voice
distribution on Studio 7
|
Govt
|
Professional
|
Alternative
|
Ordinary
people
|
Zanu
PF
|
MDC
|
Foreign
|
|
0
|
1
|
6
|
3
|
0
|
4
|
5
|
Visit the MMPZ
fact sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|