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Inflation
and economic decline
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2006-23
Monday June 5th 2006 – Sunday June 11th 2006
ALL media continued
to give space to the country’s economic distress, which this week
was underscored by yet another record high inflation of 1,193.5%
for May.
However, the
government media continue to report these issues in isolation of
their causes. As a result, the 131 stories they carried on the subject
(Press [57] and ZBH [74]) failed to view them as an indication of
government’s failure to halt the economic plunge. Otherwise, these
media downplayed developments or simply censored them.
For example,
The Herald (8/6 and 10/6) buried its announcements on the rise in
the monthly cost of living for a family of six (from $41m in April
to $49.1m in May) in its business section (8/6) and the increase
in the rate of inflation on page 11 of its news stories (10/6).
ZBH (all stations 9/6, 8pm) also relegated news on the new inflation
figure to the tail-end of their bulletins, while the Chronicle (10/6)
completely ignored the issue.
In addition,
these media did not holistically discuss the underlying implications
of these developments on the economically burdened Zimbabweans.
The Herald (8/6)
supinely quoted the Consumer
Council of Zimbabwe making the absurdly childish call for Zimbabweans
"to rally behind the National Economic Development Priority
Programme (NEDPP) for the betterment of the economic situation"
and urging them "to exercise their right to choose and intensify
their search for affordable commodities or cheaper substitutes".
The paper did
not ask the organisation how consumers were expected to settle for
the alleged substitutes when industrial and agricultural production
was at its lowest, giving rise to shortages of basic commodities,
far less their uniformly soaring prices.
Instead, The
Sunday Mail (11/6) merely expanded on this unfounded optimism, arguing
that although the rise in inflation was "expected", there
"is a positive trend in the statistics announced on Friday"
because "food inflation has started going down". It added:
"…as more food makes its way to the market from last season’s
harvest, the impact will be felt more."
The paper then
carried three stories that sought to positively portray NEDPP as
already paying dividends.
For example,
its lead story passively reported Economic Development Minister
Rugare Gumbo expressing optimism that despite government raising
only US$350 million (14/%) of its targeted US$2,5 billion within
the first three months of NEDPP’s launch, the programme would still
succeed.
Notably, the
paper did not view this as the first serious signs of the programme
being in trouble.
The government
media’s fixation with projecting NEDPP as already working even saw
Spot FM and ZTV (5/6, 8pm) simplistically attributing plans to grant
Beitbridge town status as part of government’s efforts to fulfill
"the objectives of NEDPP" and "create a favourable
image of the country".
It was hardly
surprising therefore that none of the 82 stories the official media
carried on indicators of economic decline (ZBH [37] and the Press
[45]) linked them to government’s apparent inability to manage the
economy.
The reports
narrowly blamed the country’s economic woes on businesses and "illegal
sanctions" that the West had allegedly imposed on Zimbabwe.
For example,
Radio Zimbabwe (5/6, 6am &1pm) and official dailies (8/6) unquestioningly
reported the Ministry of Industry impotently outlawing the recent
bread price hikes and threatening to take action against bakers
without fully examining the reasons behind the increase.
This lopsided
coverage in the official media was equally evident in Spot FM’s
failure (8/6, 8pm) to reconcile vice president Joice Mujuru’s statements
blaming Zimbabwe’s economic mess on "sanctions" with its
earlier report (5/6, 8pm) in which economist Andy Hodges revealed
that Zimbabwe’s exports to the region had declined from US$700m
in 1997 to the current US$200m.
The government
media’s utterly passive story writing was mirrored by their dependence
on government voices in their coverage of the economic crisis as
shown by the official papers’ sourcing pattern. See Fig 1.
Fig. 1 Voice
distribution in the government Press
|
Govt
|
Business
|
Local
govt
|
Alternative
|
Witness
|
MDC
|
Zanu
PF
|
Foreign
|
Professional
|
|
36
|
9
|
4
|
7
|
3
|
8
|
10
|
2
|
1
|
Although ZBH’s
sourcing pattern appeared diverse as shown in Fig 2, their stories
clearly favoured government.
Fig. 2 Voice
distribution on ZBH
|
Govt
|
Bus
|
Alt
|
Military
|
Professional
|
Farmers
|
Ordinary
people
|
Zanu
PF
|
MDC
|
Local
govt
|
|
34
|
24
|
13
|
10
|
4
|
2
|
8
|
2
|
1
|
1
|
In contrast,
the private media remained forthright in their discussion of the
country’s economic decline, which they continued to blame on government’s
poor policies in the 42 stories they carried on the topic. Of these,
38 appeared in the private papers while Studio 7 aired four.
Studio 7 (9/6),
for example, reported economist Eric Bloch proposing many alternative
measures government needed to adopt to reduce inflation, which included
the "genuine will to contain corruption" and reduction
of government expenditure.
The Zimbabwe
Independent (9/6) castigated the authorities for criminalizing price
increases and disregarding the economic factors causing them. It
noted that while government continued to describe price rises as
"illegal", it was the one that had created the fertile
ground for such "illegality".
Said the paper:
"Where would industry be without the forex black market. Where
did (central bank governor Gideon) Gono get the forex he bought
with the $46 trillion he printed last year? Is government not the
chief distributor of fuel that finds its way onto the black market?
The government raised the spectre of illegality. Now it must live
with it."
And while the
official media avoided discussing the source of the problems blighting
ZESA, the private media interpreted the matter as a reflection of
government’s interference and poor management.
For instance,
The Financial Gazette (8/6) viewed the problems at the government-run
power utility as partly stemming from the authorities’ decision
to "push aside" former company chief executive Simbarashe
Mangwengwende and replace him with Sydney Gata, whom it projected
as an incompetent manager who only got the post due to his closeness
to "the centre of power".
The Standard
(11/6) noted that the problems at ZESA were due to the authorities’
failure to provide it with adequate foreign currency.
The sourcing
patterns of the private media are captured in Figs 3 and 4.
Fig. 3 Voice
distribution in the private Press
|
Govt
|
Business
|
Alternative
|
Unnamed
|
Foreign
|
Ordinary
people
|
Police
|
|
15
|
16
|
5
|
4
|
5
|
2
|
1
|
Notably, except
for government voices, most of which appeared in the Mirror stable,
almost all other sources were quoted making unflattering remarks
about the country’s poor economy.
Fig. 4 Voice
distribution on Studio 7
Visit the MMPZ
fact sheet
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