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Media
business environment in Zimbabwe
Raphael
Khumalo
Extracted from
Report on International conference
on media support strategies for Zimbabwe
November 30, 2005
http://www.i-m-s.dk/Media/PDF/Zimbabwe
Background
Zimbabwe’s literacy rate of 90.7%1 is one of the highest in Africa, providing
huge opportunities for growth in newspaper circulation. However, in today’s
Zimbabwe, high literacy does not translate into wide newspaper readership
and sales. Rather, economic and political factors limit the print media’s
potential for disseminating information to the Zimbabwean populace.
Zimbabwe has a population
of 12,7million of which 64% is 15 years of age and above. To understand
how little newspapers have penetrated their potential market, one has
to appreciate that 70% of Zimbabweans able to work are unemployed. And
66% of those employed work in agriculture, where wages are barely sufficient
to cover the bare essentials. Of the remainder in employment, 10% are
in industry, whilst 24% are in the service sector.
Constraints – Business
environment Zimbabwean industry is operating at 25% of its capacity, and
has been in free fall since March 1998. A drop of 8% in capacity is expected
this year at a time when inflation is around 360% per annum. The decline
in the manufacturing sector is largely related to the non-availability
of the foreign exchange needed for importing raw materials, spares and
equipment. The country’s import cover – the extent to which national foreign
exchange reserves can cover the purchase of goods imported into the country
- fell from 75 days in 1999 to 15 days in 2003 and 2004. In 2005 there
is no cover at all, with the result that suppliers outside the country
are not prepared to supply goods on credit to Zimbabwean companies, as
they risk not being paid. This has caused a run on the little foreign
currency coming into the country, and the Zimbabwean Dollar has declined
from Z$38 to the US$ in 1999 to the current rate of Z$100,000 to the US$2.
Following the economic
downturn, publishers have had to contend with major challenges posed by
falling readership and advertising. The cost of producing newspapers has
soared, putting papers far beyond the reach of most Zimbabweans.
Newsprint
Newsprint is produced locally by Mutare Board & Paper Mills. To manufacture
newsprint, the plant needs at least US$300,000 per month in order to import
pulp. This it has struggled to do, as foreign currency allocations from
the Reserve Bank have all but ceased. For Mutare Board & Paper Mills
to stay in business, the company has resorted to buying foreign currency
on the parallel market, where exchange rates are very high. This has resulted
in newsprint going up in price by more than 832% over a ninemonth period,
in line with the fall in the exchange rate.
The current landed price of newsprint in Harare is Z$65,461,989 per tonne.
Average consumption of a 48-page tabloid such as the Independent, with
a weekly print run of around 30 000 copies, is 8 tonnes – a monthly cost
of Z$2,618,479,560. As the following break down of cover price shows,
25% of revenue earned from newspaper sales goes towards meeting printing
costs alone:
| Newspaper
prices:- |
|
| Cover
price |
Z$
55 000 |
| Value
added tax |
17.5% |
| Distribution
commission |
50% |
| Fuel
surcharge |
7.5% |
| Printing
cost |
25% |
Revenue from advertising
has to cover all other costs including, newsprint, administration overheads,
selling expenses, and staff salaries. In recent weeks, two broadsheet
newspapers - the Sunday Times and the Sunday Mirror – have become tabloids
in an effort to cut down on newsprint consumption.
Printing Charges Printing
charges from the example above are up to Z$275,000,000 per week, or Z$1,375,000,000
per month. This brings the total cost of producing newspapers in one month
to Z$ 3,993,479,560. These are huge costs that publishers are barely able
to cover. Publishers are continually reviewing print runs, advertising
tariffs and their cover prices. Each step results in fewer advertisers
and readers. Borrowing is not an option, as interest rates range from
415% to 435%. To compound matters, most advertising revenue is derived
from advertising agencies, which take up to 60 days to pay.
When faced with increases
in newsprint and printing charges, newspaper owners either increase their
cover prices or their advertising tariffs - or both. Failure to do so
would result in almost certain closure, unless publishers could somehow
access grants or low-interest loans from elsewhere.
Between 2000 and 2002,
a period that saw a referendum and two national elections3, the average
print run for the governmentowned Sunday Mail was 81000 copies per week,
while the Herald printed around 68 000 copies per day. In 1985, the circulation
figures for the Sunday Mail exceeded 150 000 copies per week. The decline
in newspaper circulation is closely linked to the decline in the country’s
standard of living; when push comes to shove, people would rather buy
mealie meal than a newspaper. To appreciate the seriousness of the problem,
it is worth noting that over a nine-month period the Financial Gazette
and Independent increased in price by 600%.
Advertising
But just because someone cannot afford to buy a newspaper, it does not
mean they are unable to read it. Fewer newspapers are being bought by
the dwindling few who can afford them, but many of these papers later
find their way into the hands of many other people. The Zimbabwe All Media
And Products Survey (ZAMPS) indicates that every newspaper bought is passed
on to between 10 and 15 people. So advertisers could still reach a wide
audience. However, in order to want to reach this audience in the first
place, advertisers need products to sell. In Zimbabwe there are fewer
and fewer goods for sale as there is no longer foreign exchange to pay
for their importation.
Major companies like Unilever, Cains Foods, the South African supermarket
chain OK, and United Bottlers will not advertise when their factories
are unable to produce products such as washing powder, chips, soft drinks
and the like. The shrinkage in newspaper advertising can be seen in the
way newspapers have become thinner, just as the supermarket shelves have
grown empty.
Distribution
Street vendors, shops, and agents sell newspapers in return for a commission.
Munn Marketing, a major distributor of private newspapers, charges publishers
50% of their sales, net of VAT. In addition, they demand a 7.5% fuel surcharge
to compensate for the high price of fuel. Munn Marketing is owned by ZIMind
Publishers (Pvt) Ltd, the company that owns the Independent and the Standard
newspapers (see ‘Media Ownership’ section of this document). There is
only one other distribution company that distributes newspapers, and that
is Publication Distribution. A company called Zieco also distributes magazines,
as does Munn.
The distribution of
government owned newspapers such as The Herald, Chronicle and Sunday Mail
is done in-house by their circulation departments, which use their own
trucks, as well as commuter minibuses and rural buses. Their distribution
networks are much wider than those of the privately owned press, as the
government owned papers have larger print runs and publish on a daily
basis. They also enjoy the support of local ruling-party politicians,
some of who have banned the distribution of privately owned newspapers
like the Independent and Standard in their areas.
The shortage of fuel
has seriously affected newspaper distribution, too. Rather than sending
trucks to places like Masvingo or Chinhoyi, it is cheaper for a distributor
to send newspapers on commuter minibuses. However, distribution by public
transport is less reliable. The government owned press has been equally
affected, even though they do sometimes receive fuel allocations from
the state owned fuel procurement company NOCZIM.
When sales of newspapers
decline, readership will decline too, albeit not at the same level. Take
the case of a family breadwinner who, in the past, would have bought a
copy of the Herald every day. That copy would have been shared with around
10 other family members. Now the breadwinner can no longer afford to buy
the paper, and decides to rely instead on the copy available at the office.
Ten readers will have been lost by this single act. Print runs have become
smaller whilst the purchasing power of populations outside the cities
of Harare and Bulawayo have been the worst affected.
Constraints – Legal
and political
The impact on newspaper production of the declining economy has co-incided
with the passing of legislation that has further restricted the publishing
industry (see ‘Media Laws’ elsewhere in this document). The Access
to Information and Protection of Privacy Act (AIPPA) prohibits any
individual who is not a citizen or permanent resident of Zimbabwe, or
any company in which one or more Zimbabwean citizens hold – directly or
indirectly - a controlling interest, to hold or acquire shares in a mass
media service. The Act also requires that all media houses be registered
with the Media and Information Commission (MIC), which issues media houses
with two-year renewable registration licenses. Those that do not comply
run the risk of imprisonment and / or heavy fines, as well as the seizure
of their equipment. Furthermore, media owners are compelled to inform
the Commission of any changes in ownership, name, language or frequency
of publication, as well as changes in editorial content and area of distribution.
In 2004, the Commission suspended the registration of The Tribune newspaper
for a year after the owners failed to inform the Commission of a change
in shareholders.
Section 71 of AIPPA
provides for the suspension, cancellation and enforcement of an operating
license for a period of one year as a result of fraud, misrepresentation
or nondisclosure of a material fact. In February 2005, a month before
general elections, the Commission closed The Weekly Times for being in
breach of its licensing conditions. Justifying the closure, MIC Chair
Tafataona Mahoso said the Weekly Times’ "core values, convictions
and overall thrust were narrowly political, clearly partisan and even
separatist"4. He said the newspaper had "hoaxed" his commission
in its license application by saying it would focus on development journalism.
The Weekly Times was closed less than two months after it launched, taking
to four the number of newspapers deregistered by the MIC since it started
licensing publications in 2002.
The success of a newspaper
is dependent on the ability of the journalists it hires to enquire, and
to gather, receive and disseminate information. As described in detail
elsewhere in this document, AIPPA makes it extremely difficult for journalists
to carry out their core business. Even if registered, journalists can
have their press cards suspended by the MIC if they are found to be in
breach of AIPPA’s restrictive code of practice.
A two-year operating
license for a media house that requires billions of Zimbabwean dollars
in start-up capital makes a mockery of the country’s quest to attract
investment and to create jobs. No serious investor will put money into
a venture that can be closed at the whim of a government official. Buying
computers, vehicles, furniture and office equipment, as well as recruiting
staff, is a costly business. The Act does not give confidence to lenders
of capital such as banks and other financial institutions that media houses
are going concerns.
A press card valid
for a year is equally problematic, as it does not allow for job security.
Not surprisingly, many good journalists have chosen to leave the country
rather than work under such conditions. The impact of their departure
on publishers has been huge, as can be seen by the lack of depth in many
news stories owing to a lack of experience and professionalism of the
journalists concerned. Journalists’ pay is dictated by the industry in
which they work. I doubt that publishers are profiting from employing
relatively inexperienced journalists as, whatever short-term benefits
may be gained from hiring these lower-paid journalists, would soon be
lost in the cost of litigation arising from their inexperience.
AIPPA requires newspaper
publishers to pay registration fees of Z$500,000 and an application fee
of Z$20 000 when they lodge their registration. Meanwhile, a Z$1000 application
fee and Z$5000 accreditation fee are payable when registering a journalist.
These fees in themselves are not a burden. However, what is a burden is
the annual levy of 0.5% on a newspaper’s gross annual turnover, which
is also required in terms of the law.
With the current legislation
in place, it is unlikely that the printing companies currently servicing
the private press will want to invest in new technology and equipment,
as returns on investment are not guaranteed. Their clients could be closed
down any time, thus presenting the printers with serious financial problems.
British company AMI
invested in the Daily News before the enactment of AIPPA (see section
on ‘Media ownership’ elsewhere in this document). It is unlikely that
such a company would invest with AIPPA now in place. AIPPA’s restrictions
on foreign ownership singles out media from the rest of the manufacturing
sector, which otherwise is a priority sector in which 100 per cent foreign
ownership is permitted, according to the Zimbabwe Investment Center.
Contrary to logic,
government is preoccupied with how it can survive and reproduce, rather
than with how it can attract foreign investment, particularly in a sector
such as the media that it considers strategic. Thus government will continue
to view foreign investment in media with suspicion and disdain.
Todi, senzenjani?
What shall we do?
Zimbabwe literacy rate of more than 90% is, itself, a huge opportunity.
How this opportunity is exploited depends on a wide range of risk factors
described above. In general, Zimbabweans expect that good times are around
the corner, and believe that newspapers can somehow make the good times
happen much sooner through their reporting. However, AIPPA and its terrible
twin, the Public Order
and Security Act (POSA), severely constrain what newspapers can report
on without risk of closure.
There are huge gaps
in the newspaper market - notably the lack of independent Ndebele and
Shona language newspapers, and the absence of affordable A4 or even A5
sized newspapers for low-income earners in the townships and rural centers.
The price of newspapers is far beyond the reach of many. AIPPA and POSA
have been applied selectively against the private press and must therefore
be repealed so that publishers can focus on business without the constant
fear of having their papers closed.
The availability of
appropriate technology would offer cheaper and even more durable newspapers.
Given the high price of film, it is time the printing and publishing industry
moved away from the use of image setters to plates. There is a serious
need for investment in computer-to-plate production of newspapers as film
for image setters is expensive and in short supply.
It is true that none
of the newspaper closures in recent years were for economic reasons. However,
the industry is not attracting investors with purely business intentions.
Rather, titles are being kept afloat by investors who seem to be seeking
to serve more overtly political agendas, as the reported buy out of the
Mirror Group by the CIO seems to suggest. The reason the Independent,
Standard and Financial Gazette remain in business is because they have
carved out a niche for themselves in reporting political and business
stories that the government controlled newspapers will not report.
Finding alternative
sources of newsprint is crucial for alleviating the current problems faced
by the print media. Providing the mill with foreign currency to purchase
pulp will not help, as the mill itself urgently needs a major overhaul
if there is to be an improvement in the poor quality of its products.
Clearly, it is difficult
to predict what will happen tomorrow, let alone what the media landscape
will look like in the medium to long term. The privately owned press is
inaccessible to many, and is only tolerated because the government wants
to give the impression that free expression is respected. However, there
is no guarantee that this semblance of normality will continue indefinitely.
*Raphael M. Khumalo
is General Manager of ZIMind, the publishers of the weekly Independent
and Standard newspapers.
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