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Further
economic decline
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2006-15
Monday April 10th 2006 - Sunday April 16th 2006
THE government
media’s reluctance to honestly discuss the real causes on the country’s
myriad problems was also reflected by the way they tackled the continued
economic decline, which this week was underpinned by disclosures
that government planned drafting a supplementary budget.
But rather than
interpret this development as an indictment of government’s failed
policies, The Herald and Chronicle (13/4) unquestioningly
reported on the development, which they even relegated to their
business sections. They quoted an unnamed government official justifying
the planned budget saying the hyperinflationary environment had
"severely reduced the purchasing power of initial fiscal
allocations".
There was no
attempt by the papers to apprise their audiences on why the country
was now frequently surviving on extra budgets since 2000. Instead,
they simply cited analysts echoing government’s justifications.
The two stories
generally mirrored the inadequacy of the other 47 economic stories
the government papers carried. Although the reports highlighted
symptoms of economic collapse, they reported them in isolation of
the fundamental economic factors causing them.
ZBH ignored
news on the supplementary budget in the 39 stories it aired on the
economy.
Instead, like
the official papers, most its reports were either hackneyed assurances
by government and business officials that the authorities were taking
measures to ease the economic distress the country was facing or
simply highlighted the problems without linking them to government
policies.
And though Spot
FM (12 &13/4, 8am and 8pm) and ZTV (14/4 8pm) carried three
reports that quoted economists noting that inflation was likely
to maintain its upward trend due to persistent inflationary pressures
and bemoaning government’s "appetite for expenditure",
these issues were not fully explored.
Rather, the
stations glossed over these observations by simplistically claiming
that the economic situation would improve due to good rains the
country received. It was hardly surprising therefore that there
was preciously little balanced debate in the official media on Zimbabwe’s
soaring cost of living, crumbling health delivery system and problems
affecting industry.
The official
Press’ pro-government sourcing pattern is shown in Fig 1.
Fig. 1 Voice
distribution in the government Press
|
Government
|
Business
|
Alternative
|
Professional
|
Ordinary
|
|
28
|
6
|
17
|
13
|
17
|
Although ZBH
sought views from business, alternative sources and ordinary people,
they were mainly quoted highlighting the country’s economic problems
and not diagnosing them. See Fig 5.
Fig 5 Voice
distribution on ZBH
|
Govt
|
Business
|
Alternative
|
Ordinary
people
|
|
12
|
11
|
8
|
20
|
Comparatively,
the private media provided critical insight into the economic decline
in the 37 stories they carried (private Press [26] and private stations
[11]).
These media,
except for the Mirror stable, generally linked the economic
collapse to government’s economic mismanagement. They argued that
besides the urgent need for foreign capital investment in the country,
the authorities also needed to overhaul their economic policies.
This was particularly
so, said The Financial Gazette (13/4), since "little"
had accrued from government’s "much-vaunted Look East
policy".
The Zimbabwe
Independent comment (13/4) agreed, connecting the largely unproductive
‘Look East’ policy to admissions by the Zimbabwe Tourism Authority
(ZTA) that tourist arrivals from that quarter had declined by 70%,
"the sharpest decline in any source market".
The planes flying to the Far East were also reportedly making huge
losses of up to US$980 000 every month, a development the paper
quipped was the "cost of looking east".
The Standard
equally viewed the decline in tourist arrivals from Asia as an indication
of the failed government’s ‘Look East’ policy.
The private
media also carried several stories exposing worsening economic decay,
which Studio 7 (11/4) noted had forced urban dwellers to adopt rural
lifestyles.
However, the
Mirror stable remained largely characterless, seemingly afraid
to categorically discuss the actual causes of the economic woes.
For example, while The Daily Mirror (10/4) reported government’s
gazetting of the new bread price from $44 000 to $85 000, its comment
was careful not to criticise the authorities for the increase, saying:
"…no one can be blamed for the new prices".
It then advised
consumers to resort to substitutes such as rice, samp and pumpkins
without even investigating whether the so-called alternatives were
actually cheaper.
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fact sheet
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