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Monetary
policy and economic Mayhem
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2005-41
Monday
October 24th – Sunday October 30th 2005
THE government
media’s status as unquestioning megaphones of government policies
was illustrated by their timid follow-up coverage of the recent
monetary policy review statement by Reserve Bank governor Gideon
Gono.
All eight of
their stories consisted of passive endorsement for the measures.
The Herald (24/10), for example, simply hailed the introduction
of floating the local dollar against foreign currencies saying analysts
believed the development could be the "lasting solution"
to the country’s economic woes without discussing
the confusion the policy had precipitated in the market.
As a result,
it did not go beyond the chaos the policy pronouncement immediately
triggered as reflected in its revelations showing that some banks
started quoting the local currency at between $75 000 and $100 000
against the US dollar, while others still clung to the old official
rate of US$1:Z$26 000. Neither would the paper (28/10) evaluate
the economic prudence of Gono’s plans to introduce a new currency
in a hype-inflationary environment characterised by acute shortages
of fuel.
ZBH totally
ignored analysing the implications of the monetary policy. In addition,
it greatly underreported the economic crunch facing the country,
devoting only nine stories to the matter (ZTV two, Power FM six
and Radio Zimbabwe one). The stories were tit-bits that steered
clear of reporting the continued shortage of fuel in the country
and the fresh wave of price increases in commodity and service delivery.
The government
Press, which only carried two piecemeal reports highlighting economic
decline, also avoided reporting on the galloping cost of living.
The papers’
reluctance to openly discuss the country’s economic crisis resulted
in them relying on government voices in their reports. See Fig 4.
Fig 4 Voice
distribution in the government Press
|
Government
|
Business
|
Professional
|
Alternative
|
Foreign
|
|
10
|
1
|
4
|
1
|
1
|
Nonetheless,
ZBH carried 54 reports showing that inadequate funding, shortage
of farming inputs and equipment, skewed government policies, and
poor producer prices for farmers, among other factors, would compromise
the country’s capacity to feed itself and paralyse its ability to
produce for the export market. However, the reports did not reconcile
this reality with Gono’s expectations that Zimbabwe should not import
food next year.
Only the private
media demonstrated some analytical capacity in the 17 stories (private
Press, 14, and Studio 7, three) they carried on the monetary policy.
The Independent
reported that the floatation of the dollar had "hit serious
operational difficulties" as bank officials felt there
"wasn’t enough liquidity on the market to buy foreign
currency at the new high rates".
The paper also
noted that banks, who had "cut their foreign currency
departments or phased them out completely, were caught unawares
by the new policy" and were busy reorganizing.
The Sunday
Mirror reported that "uncertainty" had
gripped the new system after the central bank "stepped
in to stem skyrocketing exchange rates", which had
threatened to send the local currency plummeting by 340% against
the major currencies. Bank officials told the paper that the Reserve
Bank had ordered banks to trade at rates of about Z$60 000 against
the US dollar because higher rates were "unbearable for
people and for government." The paper quoted analysts
denouncing Gono’s intervention, saying it "defeats the
whole purpose of having a market- determined exchange rate."
Studio 7 (28/10),
which first reported the story, expressed similar sentiments.
Apart from this,
the private Press carried 12 other stories of economic decline that
included increases in the price of basic commodities and transport
fares.
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fact sheet
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