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Economic
decline
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2006-22
Monday
May 29th 2006 – Sunday June 4th 2006
DURING the week
the government media maintained its uncritical and lop-sided discussion
on Zimbabwe’s beleaguered economy in most of the 164 stories on
the topic, 104 of which appeared on ZBH and 55 in official papers.
Their stories
– especially those from the national broadcaster – were generally
one-sided and unquestioningly presented government as having finally
resolved the crisis through the National Economic Development Priority
Programme (NEDPP).
Notably, no
solid evidence of the benefits of the economic package was presented,
nor were there any clear explanations on what the programme entailed.
Rather, they
blindly presented NEDPP as the answer to almost every economic ill
affecting the country – ranging from fuel and power shortages, low
industrial production to problems of congestion at the Beitbridge
Border Post.
ZBH was the
main culprit. It devoted 37 stories to hailing the virtues of the
economic programme as already bearing fruit.
In fact, the
government media used the unveiling of a US$50 million fuel deal
between the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) and a French Bank, Loita
Capital, to showcase it as one of the immediate benefits of NEDPP.
The government papers devoted five stories to the deal.
The Herald and
Chronicle (31/5), for example, quoted RBZ governor Gideon Gono endorsing
the deal as part of NEDPP, saying government "will leave no
stone unturned in addressing the current challenges facing the economy".
These media
failed to question the authorities about the country’s ability to
pay for the fuel or whether this facility would satisfy national
demand and end the country’s six-year-old fuel crisis. The Herald
and Chronicle (31/5) simply quoted Gono saying the package can be
renewed "depending on Zimbabwe’s ability to service the facility".
The official
media’s subsequent stories on the matter simply amplified and celebrated
the official version of the purported benefits of the facility.
The government
media’s unquestioning coverage of NEDPP was typical of the way they
reported on indicators of economic decline in the127 stories they
carried on the matter (ZBH [82] and government papers [45]).
The stories
highlighted an economy in distress characterised by an unstable
currency, skyrocketing prices and government’s skewed economic policies,
as illustrated by the confusion over the authorities’ plans to nationalise
mines. However, the stories were unbalanced since they were reported
either in isolation of the causes of the economic quagmire, or in
the narrow context of government’s working hard to resolve it.
An example was
their coverage of the introduction of the $100 000 bearer cheque
– which according to official reasoning – is meant "to ensure
convenience to the public". Instead of reconciling this position
with the authorities’ continued failure to comprehensively address
the economic meltdown, they passively allowed the matter to pass.
Neither did they interpret Gono’s observation that government "will
not hesitate to come up with any other denomination as we deem appropriate"
as an admission of failure to turn the country’s economic fortunes
around (ZTV 30/5, 8pm; Spot FM 1/6, 7am and The Herald 2/6).
Fig. 1 Voice
distribution on ZBH
|
Ordinary
People
|
Business
|
Government
|
Alternative
|
Zanu
PF
|
Professional
|
|
9
|
38
|
23
|
32
|
15
|
3
|
Fig. 2 Voice
pattern in the official Press
|
Government
|
Business
|
Alternative
|
Professional
|
Foreign
|
Ordinary
|
|
25
|
32
|
18
|
4
|
4
|
2
|
Although the
official media’s sourcing appeared balanced, most of the analysts’
comments were pro-government while the business sources were cited
mainly discussing their operational problems.
Generally, the
country’s small private media sector critically examined the economic
crisis in the 46 stories they carried on the topic (Studio 7 [seven]
and private papers [39].
Six of these
included the fuel deal, the proposed mining reforms and the $100
000 bearer cheque, while the rest highlighted indicators of economic
collapse.
For instance,
The Zimbabwe Independent (2/6) comment viewed the introduction of
the new bearer cheque as overdue, saying its delay was as a result
of the authorities’ "apprehension that printing of higher denominations
would betray failure to manage a faltering economy and stoke inflation".
But the new note, the paper said, had given "away the lie by
the authorities" and had "awakened Zimbabweans to the
realities of a deep-seated economic disaster caused by increased
money supply growth".
The paper traced
the increased money supply growth to last year’s heavy borrowing
by government to facilitate grain and fuel imports, "implying
that cash from the central bank was used to buy foreign currency",
resulting in large amounts of cash being printed. In addition, it
warned of a similar pattern emerging, citing the RBZ’s money-printing
exercise to buy US dollars to offset an IMF debt, among other inflationary
pressures.
In fact, Studio
7 (30/5) reported an acute shortage of money in the country due
to "the inflation rate and the continued depreciation of the
local currency against other currencies". It quoted economist
John Robertson urging government to introduce higher denomination
bearer cheques to counter the cash shortages and make transactions
convenient.
And while the
official media glossed over the impact of government’s proposed
mining law, The Standard (3/6) revealed that RioZim Limited had
"frozen a US$120 million investment" until "the debate
on proposed amendments is settled". It quoted company chairman
Eric Kahari saying while holding back expansion plans would "result
in the diamond project winding down production in 2009, conditions
relating to mining investment were not conducive for implementation".
The critical
manner in which the private press generally discussed the deteriorating
economy was reflected by its attempt to balance government’s perception
with independent opinion (Fig 3).
Fig. 3 Voice
distribution in private papers
|
Government
|
Business
|
Alternative
|
Professional
|
Foreign
|
Ordinary
|
|
17
|
20
|
13
|
2
|
7
|
4
|
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