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Economic
chaos
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2006-25
Monday June
19th 2006 – Sunday June 25th 2006
AS the country’s
economic ills continue to worsen, the government media continued
to avoid discussing them in the context of the government’s actual
policies as opposed to those declared. Instead, they dishonestly
portrayed measures taken by government to halt the meltdown as bearing
fruit.
It was in this
context that 34 (46%) of the 74 economic stories ZBH carried were
glowing reports on the purported success of government’s National
Economic Development Priority Programme (NEDPP) and Vice-President
Joice Mujuru’s visit to China. The rest comprised stories that largely
projected a sanitized picture of the state of the economy (26 stories
or 35%) and piecemeal reports on indicators of economic decay (14
stories).
The official Press
adopted a similar trend.
Only 11 of the
47 stories they carried on the matter focused on the galloping cost
of commodities such as bread and fuel. The remainder largely hailed
the purported successes of government’s economic turnaround efforts
or tried to blame the country’s economic decay on alleged conspiracies
by outside forces aimed at discrediting government.
Consequently,
none of the stories investigated or criticised government’s complicity
in the economy’s poor performance or holistically assessed the factors
that have led to the economic decline and the extent to which the
economy has become dysfunctional.
For example, ZTV
(22/6, 6&8pm) passively reported Zimbabwe Tourism Authority
boss Karikoga Kaseke celebrating Zimbabwe’s winning of the "prestigious"
Global Destination Award in Dubai, "the second award in six months"
after "the Best Destination in Africa (prize)" it won "in China."
There was no discussion
on how exactly such awards would benefit the economy and the international
credibility of those organizations providing the awards. Instead,
it simply projected them as indicative of the success of government’s
‘Look East’ policy.
All 23 stories
on NEDPP, which the broadcaster carried as daily updates on government’s
alleged implementation of the economic blueprint, exhibited similar
docile reporting.
This was also
reflected in the official media’s 25 stories on the increase in
commodity prices and service charges, which avoided viewing the
issues as reflective of the country’s poor macro-economic environment.
Such insincerity in handling the country’s pervasive economic freefall
saw ZBH (23/6, 7am & 8pm and 25/6, 8pm) simply present the rise
in bus fares as restricted to Gweru when it was actually a nationwide
hike.
Similarly, The
Herald (21 & 22/6) ignored quizzing government’s decision to
criminalize bakers for increasing the price of bread while simultaneously
disregarding their operational costs. This was especially so as
Bakers’ Association of Zimbabwe chairman Burombo Mudumo told the
paper that bakers were being forced to import floor at double the
price charged by local millers, because there was a shortage of
the commodity in the country.
The government
media’s lopsided coverage of the economy was mirrored by their dependence
on official voices as indicated in Figs 1 and 2.
Fig 1 Voice
distribution in the government Press
| Government |
Alternative |
Business |
Foreign
dignitaries |
Law
|
Police |
| 24 |
11 |
11 |
3 |
3 |
3 |
Fig 2 Voice
distribution on ZBH
| Govt
|
Alternative
& business |
Professional |
Foreign |
Local
government |
Police |
Ordinary
people |
| 34 |
30 |
3 |
3 |
1 |
3 |
6 |
Notably, although
the national public broadcaster also gave considerable space to
business and alternative voices, most of them were part of Mujuru’s
entourage to China and were predictably quoted supporting government
policies.
In contrast, the
private media continued to provide a different perspective on the
country’s economy in the 41 reports they carried on the subject
(private Press [32] and private stations [9]). Apart from ascribing
the country’s myriad economic problems, they also provided a clearer
picture of the state of the economy and its dim future.
For example, The
Financial Gazette (20/6) cited TA Holdings executive Chairman Shingai
Mutasa bemoaning government policies, saying: "What is lacking,
is a combination of the courage to put economics first and the will
to implement policies accordingly", adding that until then, there
was no hope for recovery.
The Zimbabwe Independent
(23/6) warned that the country could be trapped in a fuel price
spiral, as there was neither an improvement in the exchange rate
nor a significant decline in the international crude oil prices.
It also revealed
that government profligacy had reached an all time high since 1980
after its domestic debt for June soared to a record $21 trillion.
In addition, the paper noted that government had closed 2005 with
an outstanding total "external debt of US$3.9 billion against export
receipts of only US$1.7 billion".
Studio 7 (23/6)
carried a similar report.
The station (21/6)
also quoted Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce president Luxon
Zembe projecting a 100 percentage points rise in inflation from
the current rate of about 1,200%.
Economist Eric
Bloch concurred on SW Radio Africa (21/6), saying due to the current
rate of economic decline, "an ordinary family of six would need
Z$180million a month to survive" by December.
In a teleconference
on the Zimbabwean crisis aired by the station on the same day John
Robertson warned that the authorities would "soon" fail to print
notes "to keep pace with the rate at which prices are increasing"
resulting in "a massive cash crisis… ahead of us".
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sheet
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