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Economic
decline and decay
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-38
Monday October 3rd – Sunday October 9th 2005
THE country’s
economic meltdown dominated media coverage again during the week.
The electronic
media carried 58 reports on the issue, 41 of which appeared on ZBH
(ZTV [13], Power FM [14] and Radio Zimbabwe [14]), while the private
radio stations carried the remaining 17 (Studio 7 [8] and SW Radio
Africa [9]).
The Press carried
68 stories on the matter. Of these, 29 were published in government
papers and 39 in the private Press.
But while all
media highlighted symptoms of the country’s ailing economy, it was
only the private media that related the issues to government’s mismanagement
of the economy.
The government
media simply reported on indicators of economic distress in isolation
without holistically relating them to the country’s poor macro-economic
environment.
In fact, all
41 stories that ZBH carried avoided investigating government’s responsibility
for the country’s economic contraction. Instead, most reports sought
to give the impression that the authorities were working hard to
halt the slide and resuscitate the economy.
For example,
ZTV (4/10, 8pm) passively celebrated the latest payment of US$15
million by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) to the IMF as indicative
of the country’s commitment "to meet its international
obligations". Without giving a full picture of the
country’s indebtedness to various multilateral institutions, the
station simply claimed the move had resulted in the "firming
of the stock market".
Subsequently,
Radio Zimbabwe (6/10,1pm) unquestioningly reported that the RBZ
had launched a "foreign currency-accumulating programme
aimed at strengthening the Zimbabwean dollar" without
explaining how this would be achieved. Similarly, the station and
its sister stations (6/10, 8pm and 7/10, 6am) did not explain how
RBZ’s plans to "realign its structures"
would improve the central bank’s "effectiveness and efficiency"
in resolving the country’s deteriorating economic situation.
While Power
FM (6/10,1pm) reported that the consumer basket for a family of
six rose from $6,9 million in August to $9.6 million in September,
it failed to view the matter as indicative of the authorities failure
to arrest the economic decline.
The government
Press stories were no different. For example, 22 (76%) of the 29
reports the government papers carried simplistically attributed
Zimbabwe’s economic problems to either the ‘drought’ or ‘sanctions’
and projected government as doing everything to address the crisis.
The seven economic decline stories they carried were basically piecemeal
and failed to reconcile government policies with reality – most
particularly another plunge in the value of the local dollar, to
more than Z$100,000 to US$1.
None of the
stories the government Press carried on Zimbabwe’s relations with
the IMF openly discussed or traced the reasons behind the fall-out
between the two.
Instead, the
government Press carried six stories attacking the Fund’s planned
decision to expel Zimbabwe, alleging that Britain and its allies
were using the institution as a political tool to isolate the country.
For example, The Herald and Chronicle (6/10), vilified
the IMF for allegedly selectively applying its rules. The papers
claimed that while the Fund was considering expelling Zimbabwe,
it had not taken similar steps against worse debtors like Sudan,
Somalia and Liberia. However, in making this comparison, the papers
appeared unaware of the irony of the ‘failed state’ status of these
nations. Nor did they explain whether their arrears were, like Zimbabwe,
owed from the IMF’s critical General Resources Account (GRA) since
only arrears under this account trigger the possibility of expulsion.
No comment was
sought from the IMF.
The Herald
(7/10) reinforced its partisan coverage by dismissing as "scandalous"
businessman Mutumwa Mawere’s two letters to the IMF alleging that
money from his government-confiscated companies could have been
used to settle part of the country’s arrears.
To highlight
the notion that government was working hard to combat economic decline,
the official Press carried five reports on the fuel shortage crippling
the country portraying the authorities as having finally found a
solution to the crisis.
The Herald
(3/10), for example, tried to link news that fuel was "trickling
in" to Harare and Bulawayo to President Mugabe’s recent
assurances that fuel supplies were set to improve in the "next
few days". However, the paper was unable to explain
the volumes of fuel the service stations received or how it had
been sourced. Instead, it childishly quoted a motorist thanking
government for supplying the fuel, whose stocks, said the paper,
had "ran out in the afternoon" of the day
it was delivered.
The Sunday
Mail (9/10) story, Noczim in new fuel supply deal, also
offered precious little details on government plans to ensure a
long-lasting solution to the crisis. The government media’s lop-sided
coverage of the country’s dire economic crisis was reflected in
their sourcing patterns, which failed to balance official comments
with alternative viewpoints.
Fig 1 Voice
distribution in the government Press
|
Ordinary
people
|
Government
|
Alternative
|
Business
|
Professional
|
Foreign
|
|
11
|
14
|
3
|
12
|
2
|
1
|
Fig 2 Voice
distribution on ZBH
|
Govt
|
Business
|
Local
Govt
|
Alternative
|
Police
|
MDC
|
Zanu
PF
|
|
19
|
15
|
4
|
5
|
1
|
0
|
3
|
Although ZBH
also gave more space to business voices, these were mainly quoted
either ‘hailing’ government or expressing problems affecting their
businesses and not the national economy.
A more informative
view of the country’s parlous economic situation appeared in the
private media. For example, Studio 7 & SW Radio Africa (5/10),
The Daily Mirror and The Financial Gazette (6/10),
the Zimbabwe Independent (7/10) and The Sunday Mirror
(9/10) all carried an IMF report, which forecast that the economy
was headed for ruin unless government took "a bold change
in policy direction". The Fund projected that the economy
would shrink by 7% this year compared to 4% last year, while inflation
would rise to 400% by year-end. The government media ignored this.
Studio 7 (3/10)
and The Sunday Mirror also reported on a recent UN Conference
on Trade and Development World Investment Report which rated the
Zimbabwean economy as one of the worst in the world. According to
their reports, Zimbabwe only attracted foreign direct investment
(FDI) inflows of US$60 million in 2004 compared to US$2 billion
in Angola and US$132 million in Mozambique.
Although The
Herald (3/10) carried a similar story, it deliberately distorted
this disastrous figure by claiming a 100 percent increase in investment
over the previous year and avoided investigating why this "significant
increase…" fell short of "the US$444 million
achieved in 1998".
Apart from highlighting
the international bodies’ views on the country’s economic performance,
the rest of the stories in the private media were event reports
and analysis graphically illustrating an economy in severe distress.
In fact, the
difference in interpretative reporting between the official and
private papers on the country’s economy was summed up by their coverage
of government’s plans to pay former political prisoners, detainees
and restrictees gratuities totalling $36 billion in addition to
other allowances. While The Herald (8/10) passively announced
the development, The Standard reported analysts describing
the payouts as a disastrous "replica" of
the 1997 economic disaster triggered by the award of $50 000 gratuities
each to war veterans, which sent the economy into free fall. Studio
7 (3/10) also noted that the unbudgeted $200 billion government
intends to set aside for the Senate elections would also severely
damage the economy.
The private
press’ more diversified news coverage was reflected in its sourcing
as Fig 3 shows.
Fig 3 Voice
distribution in the private Press
|
Alternative
|
MDC
|
Business
|
Unnamed
|
Foreign
|
Professional
|
Govt
|
Ordinary
people
|
|
13
|
3
|
4
|
3
|
3
|
5
|
11
|
3
|
However, the
private stations compromised their analytical approach by failing
to balance independent commentators’ views with official comment
and other pertinent voices as illustrated by Studio 7’s sourcing
pattern. See Fig 4.
Fig 4 Voice
distribution on Studio 7
|
Govt
|
Business
|
Alternative
|
Professional
|
MDC
|
Zanu
PF
|
|
1
|
0
|
5
|
1
|
0
|
0
|
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