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Indicators
of economic decline
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly
Media Update 2005-36
Monday September 19th – Sunday September 25th
2005
THE country’s
continued economic meltdown also featured prominently in the week
with both sections of the media highlighting indicators of economic
decline.
However, most
of the 68 stories that the official media carried (ZBH [43] and
government papers [25]) were piecemeal and failed to address holistically
the causes behind the economy’s freefall.
ZBH’s reports
in particular were largely reactionary and premised on fault-finding
rather than problem-solving. For instance, ZTV (21/9, 6pm) did not
investigate the economic rationale behind pharmaceutical companies’
drug price increases by more "300% since the beginning
of the year" or relate the increases to the country’s
economic meltdown.
Rather, the
station resorted to regurgitating government threats against the
firms with its reporter commenting: "…government has
warned the sector to stop increasing prices in this manner."
Threats against
industry also appeared in The Herald (22/9). The paper supinely
reported the central bank claiming that it was owed about US$212
million by exporters "who have either not remitted their
export receipts or submitted their foreign currency declaration
forms". Without investigating the reasons for this,
the paper simply quoted the RBZ threatening exporters to "immediately
pay up" by "end of business on Friday September
30 2005" or risk "punitive"
penalties such as "forfeiture of entitlement to foreign
currency accounts retention until such a time that outstanding amounts
have been paid".
ZTV (22/9, 8pm)
carried a similar story. However, it did also quote the chief executive
officer of the Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce (ZNCC), Innocent
Makwiramiti, saying that although some businesses were guilty of
this, he also held the RBZ liable for "inefficiency…when
processing papers…"
The private
media was more revealing in its 23 stories (private newspapers [17]
and Studio 7 [6]) on the country’s economic problems. The reports
tackled issues such as government’s continued failure to solve the
fuel and foreign currency shortages and the country’s failure to
attract foreign investment due to government’s controversial policies.
For example,
The Standard reported analysts saying, contrary to claims
by Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa that the country had "bottomed
out" and was "ripe for economic take off",
Zimbabwe was headed for the worst times as "industrial
capacity utilisation has deteriorated to between 25 and 30% while
many firms are filing for bankruptcy".
Studio 7 (21/9)
carried a similar story and quoted economist John Robertson attributing
the poor showing of some industries to the decline in agriculture
since businesses that relied on raw materials from agriculture were
"almost out of business."
The Independent
revealed that the country’s platinum mining giant Zimplats had threatened
to close down due to government’s contradictory economic policies.
The paper reported that government had made a "sudden
U-turn" by revoking an agreement with the mining giant
that exempted Zimplats from paying withholding tax. Now the government
wanted the platinum miner to pay the tax, calculated at $400 billion
including penalties.
Zimplats’ chief
executive officer Greg Sebborn told the paper that the "impact"
of the latest development "will be severe, not only to
Zimplats’ operations but on investor perceptions in general"
as the "agreement was specifically crafted to attract
large-scale investment in the country".
In addition,
the paper, Studio 7 (22/9) and SW Radio Africa reported on the fresh
controversy surrounding the origin of the US$120 million that government
used to offset its US$295 million arrears to the IMF to avoid expulsion.
These media reported Zimbabwean businessman Mutumwa Mawere as having
written to the Fund, including the World Bank and UN, complaining
that government had used "proceeds" from
his "expropriated companies", which "generate
US$100 million per annum" to pay the arrears.
None of the
media carried concrete evidence from Mawere to substantiate the
claims.
However, Studio
7 (24/9) reported the IMF saying it would investigate the source
of the funds but would not say whether or not the investigations
were prompted by Mawere’s complaint.
The government
media ignored the matter. The Sunday Mail, for example, only
reported Reserve Bank Governor Gono defending his decision to pay
the IMF instead of "putting the money to local use"
as demanded by industrialists because the business community
had "‘pleaded’ with him to make the payment".
He also told ZTV (22/9, 8pm) that had Zimbabwe been expelled from
the Fund, "the catastrophe (would have been) beyond what
the ordinary man realises".
Meanwhile, as
the media, especially the government ones, spiritedly debated the
‘disappearance’ of eight soccer players in the UK following a friendly
match between Highlanders and CAPS United football clubs in Bradford,
it was only Radio Zimbabwe (23/9, 8pm) that linked the disappearance
to the economic decline.
It reported
that the players were "suspected to be seeking economic
refuge."
Visit the MMPZ
fact sheet
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