|
Back to Index
Economic
decline
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2006-9
Monday February 27th – Sunday March 5th 2006
ZIMBABWE’S ever
worsening economic environment, characterized by soaring cost of
living and crippling commodity shortages continued to dominate the
media. ZBH carried 65 stories while the private radio stations carried
12. The print media published 69 stories, of which 39 appeared in
the government papers while the private Press carried 30.
But while all
media gave space to the country’s economic crunch, it was only the
private media that reported the issues in the context of the country’s
poor macro-economic environment. The government media’s stories
were typically pro-government, piecemeal and avoided holistically
interpreting the issues as indicative of the authorities’ mismanagement
of the economy.
It was against
this background that ZTV (28/2) restricted National Bakers Association
Chairman Burombo Mudumo’s lucid explanation on the root causes of
the recent bread price increases to its 7am bulletin and suffocated
his comments in its subsequent main evening bulletins. Mudumo ascribed
the hike to "the current hyper-inflationary environment"
and the increase in the cost of production and ingredients such
as yeast and wheat. He pointed out that contrary to official claims,
bakers were buying flour at $35 million per tonne and not the gazetted
$25 million, adding that in any case, flour, which is a controlled
commodity, "only constitutes 20% of the cost of a loaf
(of bread)".
ZBH radio stations
ignored the matter.
The stations’
failure to diligently handle the country’s contracting economy resulted
in Spot FM (3/3, 1pm) only reporting that David Whitehead Textiles
was "operating at 7%" of its full capacity
in the context of disclosures by President Mugabe during a campaign
rally in Chegutu, where he pledged to set up a committee that would
address the company’s problems. There was no discussion on the source
of the problems. Neither did the station relate the textile manufacturer’s
woes to the country’s ailing economy.
Rather, throughout
the week ZTV tried to gloss over the country’s deep-seated economic
problems in its business news by claiming that the country’s currency
"continues to firm against major currencies".
The station
conveniently ignored the fact that it was actually the authorities
that were controlling the exchange rate in a bid to halt its continued
slide.
The government
Press’s stories were cut from the same cloth.
Like ZBH, these
papers deliberately disregarded linking indicators of economic deterioration
to government’s skewed policies and selectively blamed private businesses
for the mess. For instance, they depicted price increases in goods
and services by private companies as unwarranted and driven by profiteering
but shielded state entities from criticism following similar price
hikes. The Herald (27/2), for example, reported government
dismissing bakeries’ "unilateral" bread
price increase of between $60 000 and $75 000 a loaf from $44 000
as "illegal and mischievous". However, The
Sunday Mail (5/3) would not also seek reactions to a 1 000 percent
fee hikes by the Zimbabwe Republic Police for fingerprints, firearm
certificates and police clearance certificates.
Earlier, The
Herald (2/3) passively reported Energy and Power Minister Mike
Nyambuya justifying the imminent massive price hike in electricity
tariffs by the Zimbabwe Electricity Supply Authority (ZESA) on grounds
that the power utility’s electricity import bill had skyrocketed
to $600 billion a month from $5 billion. It did not give the percentage
price increase.
It was only
the next day that the paper revealed that ZESA had planned to raise
the tariffs by at least 670 percent, staggered over the year. Even
then, the matter was only reported in the context of the central
bank having turned down the proposed increases as inflationary,
saying it had instead recommended a 450 percent increase, to be
effected on quarterly 95 percent increases with the last 70 percent
being implemented in January 2007.
But while the
official papers criminalised price increases by private businesses
it would not give them space to defend themselves. Instead, the
Chronicle (27/2) simply urged consumers to boycott goods
and services whose prices were being increased "willy-nilly".
It also attacked the Consumer Council of Zimbabwe (CCZ) for reducing
itself to merely measuring and announcing the consumer monthly expenditure
basket "instead of fighting the illegal increases".
The Sunday
News (5/3) criticized a report by the Confederation of Zimbabwe
Industries (CZI) attributing the acute slump in industrial production
to the authorities’ "policy inconsistencies",
among other factors. The paper said it found it "shocking"
that the CZI was playing a "blame game"
when the "nation needs constructive ideas".
Said the paper: "The CZI has unwittingly answered a longstanding
question regarding the corporate sector’s patriotism…If the top
executives do not believe in the nation, which country do they pay
allegiance to?"
The government
papers’ pro-government stance was reflected in their sourcing pattern
as shown in Fig 1.
Fig 1 Voice
distribution in government papers
|
Govt
|
Business
|
Ordinary
people
|
Alternative
|
ZANU
PF
|
Police
|
Farmers
|
Unnamed
|
|
27
|
4
|
3
|
2
|
2
|
2
|
1
|
1
|
Although ZBH’s sourcing pattern appeared diverse, most of its sources
merely highlighted problems blighting the economy and barely discussed
the real causes of the economic decline.
Fig 1 Voice
distribution on ZBH
|
Govt
|
Business
|
Alternative
|
Foreign
|
Unnamed
|
Ordinary
people
|
Police
|
|
27
|
5
|
23
|
2
|
4
|
15
|
2
|
Except for the
Mirror stable, the rest of the private media generally linked
the symptoms of economic decay such as the galloping cost of living,
commodity shortages and the widening budget deficit, to the way
the authorities were running the economy. For example, while the
official media castigated bakers for bread price hikes, The Financial
Gazette (2/3) revealed that a "massive"
bread shortage was actually looming following the failure by the
state-run Grain Marketing Board to allocate adequate wheat rations
to millers. The development, said the paper, had led to the country’s
top milling companies "virtually switching off their
flour mills" and threatened the livelihoods of at least
15 000 workers in the baking and milling industry.
The next day
the Zimbabwe Independent (3/3) quoted Mudumo denying the official
claims that the new bread prices were unjustified, saying the increases
were due to high production costs. "Operating with the
gazetted price", he said, "would therefore
force many bakeries to close shop."
An unnamed baker
made similar comments on Studio 7 (28/02), adding that bakers were
currently struggling to meet demand in Bulawayo and government’s
directive that bread be sold at old prices would "worsen
the shortage."
But it was not
only the local manufacturers that questioned government policies.
The Gazette reported the IMF director of external affairs,
Thomas Dawson, attributing Zimbabwe’s dismal economic performance
to skewed government policies, particularly the central bank’s "quasi-fiscal"
activities, which he said was responsible for fuelling inflation
and the widening budget deficit. He noted that Zimbabwe’s refusal
to accept "the comprehensive" economic reforms
that the IMF has "repeatedly recommended"
had worsened the situation.
Economist John
Robertson made similar observations on Studio 7 (2/3), adding that
Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono’s efforts to seek financial and
technical assistance from the IMF would not bear fruit as the Fund
was "very, very unlikely to have any kind words"
for him because "Zimbabwe is breaking all the (economic)
rules…"
In addition,
the station revealed that so bad was the country’s economic situation
that government had put security agents on "high alert"
for fear of mass protests against the deteriorating economic
climate.
The private
papers’ critical approach was illustrated by their attempts to balance
official comment with business and alternative views. See Fig 3.
Fig 3 Voice
distribution in the private Press
|
Govt
|
Business
|
Alternative
|
Professional
|
Ordinary
people
|
MDC
|
Local
Govt
|
Foreign
Diplomats
|
|
11
|
11
|
6
|
2
|
13
|
3
|
1
|
1
|
Although the stations
did not quote government officials as shown on Fig 4, most of their
sources were commenting on official policy pronouncements reported
in other media, especially the government-controlled ones.
Fig 4 Voice
distribution on private stations
|
Govt
|
Business
|
Alternative
|
Foreign
|
Police
|
MDC
|
Ordinary
people
|
|
0
|
1
|
7
|
4
|
1
|
1
|
2
|
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
|