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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Sunrise of currency reform - Index of articles and reports on Zimbabwe's new currency reforms
The
economy: Fantasy and reality
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2006-30
Monday
July 24th 2006 - Sunday July 30th 2006
THE official
media’s passive endorsement of government policies was illustrated
this week (before the momentous news of the Reserve Bank Governor’s
monetary reforms)
by their sanitised coverage of the authorities’ programmes to revive
the country’s troubled economy. Their stories on the subject did
not test the wisdom of these plans against reality. For example,
almost all the 60 reports they carried on the mid-year fiscal policy
review and the presentation of a supplementary budget by Finance
Minister Hebert Murerwa (ZBH [34] and government papers [26]) diverted
attention from the review’s shortcomings by merely celebrating its
formulation as if it was a solution in itself.
As a result,
these media ignored the economic circumstances that had obliged
the authorities to present a record-breaking supplementary budget
in the first place and failed to question the government’s extravagant
operating costs, which were three times that forecast in Murewa’s
original budget.
Neither did
they question how the budget would be financed.
For example,
there was no attempt to question the source of government’s optimistic
predictions of a 23 percent growth in agricultural production for
2006, or an expected stabilization of inflation (Spot FM
27/7, 8pm). These pertinent questions were muted in the government
media’s single-minded defence of the budget. Instead of querying
how the authorities would tackle its ballooning debt, or reverse
dwindling production, The Herald (29/7), for example, just
dismissed government’s insatiable spending as negligible. It argued
that although "at first glance" it seemed
"government domestic debt has ballooned totally out of
control, from $15,9 trillion at the end of last year to $46,1 trillion
at the end of June", once the figures were adjusted
for inflation, it would show that the debt "merely rose
by a trivial 0,19%".
To support their
unquestioning coverage of the matter, the government media roped
in ruling party MPs, including uncritical comments from analysts
and members of the public welcoming the supplementary budget, saying
it was "a step in the right direction" (ZTV
27/7, 8pm).
Contrary views
on the matter were silenced. For example, MDC MP Tapiwa Mashakada
was cut mid-sentence when challenging government’s positive projections
of growth in the problem-plagued agricultural sector (ZTV 27/7,
8pm). Questions raised by another MDC legislator, Tendai Biti, seeking
to know where the money to finance the budget would come from considering
that the "revenue base is shrinking", were
buried in the comments of four ruling party MPs praising Murewa’s
fiscal policy (ZTV 27/7, 8pm)
Similarly, The
Herald (28/7) relegated Mashakada’s dismissal of the policy
review – which he said had "merely outlined the challenges
facing the country without offering practical solutions"
– to the tail end of a report welcoming the fiscal policy.
Consequently,
facts and figures cited in the fiscal policy remained unverified.
For instance,
there was no vigorous debate on the adequacy of government’s tax
relief for workers, upped from a non-taxable income base of $7 million
per month to $20 million. Instead, ZTV (27/7, 8pm) parried the dismissal
of the figure as still "far below the poverty datum line"
by economist Andy Hodges with editorialised comments from its reporter,
Robson Mhandu, who welcomed it as "good news to shout
home about". The report claimed a ZBH survey revealed
that "most" people were happy that
"the widening of the tax bands will leave them with more disposable
income".
In fact, the
official media did not reconcile the new tax-free threshold with
the country’s hyperinflation of 1,184 percent or the skyrocketing
consumer basket, which Spot FM (27/7, 1pm) ironically reported as
having shot up to $78 million per month for a family of six in July.
The government
media’s ineffectual coverage of Murerwa’s budget was not isolated.
They also showed similar professional negligence in the 41 reports
they carried on President Mugabe’s perception of Zimbabwe’s economic
problems during his official opening of the second session of the
Sixth Parliament. The stories, 20 of which were aired by ZBH and
the rest by government papers, either hinged on massaging the President’s
ego or merely downgraded Zimbabwe’s myriad economic difficulties
to corruption. This then provided ammunition to these media to vilify
the informal sector, which they portrayed as the source of the country’s
economic problems.
The Herald
(27/7) front-page report, Trillions stashed in homes: Only 15% of
cash circulating in Zimbabwe’s formal sector epitomised this stance.
The story was based on unnamed sources and did not disclose the
source of its claims. It simply stated that the "bulk of
the $43 trillion in cash circulating in Zimbabwe cannot be accounted
for" meaning "the economy is now largely being
driven by the informal sector where most have turned to illicit
deals such as parallel market trading, hoarding of basic commodities
for sale at inflated prices…"
Although the
paper tentatively attributed the increased activity in the sector
to the "dwindling formal sector where thousands of people
have been retrenched …", it did not attempt to establish
the cause of this problem.
Instead, its
columnists, such as Victoria Ruzvidzo (27/7) and Caesar Zvayi (28/7),
continued criminalizing the informal sector while simultaneously
exonerating government from its failure to decisively deal with
the problem. Ruzvidzo, for example, only commended how "Mugabe
spoke passionately about corruption" and how "he
has taken the onus to attack the vice head on" without
reconciling this with any successes his government, especially under
the Anti-Corruption Commission, had scored against the scourge.
Earlier, ZTV
(25/7) passively reported Industry Minister Obert Mpofu calling
for the arrest of traders selling bread "above stipulated
prices". And as if taking a cue from the minister,
Spot FM (28/7, 8pm) accused industry of "profiteering"
and "hampering efforts to revive the economy".
However, the
41 stories the government media carried on indicators of economic
decline belied these media’s impression that the economy was on
the mend, or that its distress stemmed solely from corruption. On
the contrary, the stories (ZBH [26] and government papers [15])
revealed the economy as suffering from numerous afflictions ranging
from a galloping cost of living, low production and poor investor
confidence.
Despite this
however, the reports just highlighted the problems in isolation
of their causes.
The passive
nature of the government media’s reports is reflected in their dependence
on government voices. See Fig 1 and 2.
Fig 1 Voice
distribution in government papers
| Government |
Business |
Alternative |
Ordinary
People |
MDC |
Unnamed |
| 37 |
7 |
21 |
6 |
3 |
2 |
Fig 2 Voice
distribution on ZBH
| Government |
Business |
Alternative |
MDC |
ZANU
PF |
Ordinary
People |
Foreign
Diplomats |
| 48 |
9 |
31 |
4 |
10 |
19 |
1 |
Most of the analysts
the government media quoted also endorsed government policies.
In contrast, the
private media critically assessed the budget in their 22 stories
on the subject, 20 of which appeared in the print media. They argued
that rather than give hope, the fiscal policy actually spelt further
doom for the economy as it would spawn a hefty deficit and put government
into additional debt of $253 trillion, a situation that would fuel
inflation.
For example, the
Zimbabwe Independent (28/7) described the $253 trillion supplementary
budget as "startling" since it "bloats
this year’s (original) budget to a colossal $451 trillion, a figure
which surpasses last year’s initial targeted expenditure of $123.9
trillion". It added that this was "the only
time in the history of Zimbabwe that a supplementary budget has
exceeded the original budget". The paper also noted
the authorities’ policy inconsistencies. It observed that Murerwa’s
admission that inflation will remain high, ending the year between
950%-1,000%, contradicted Gono’s forecasts of "between
280% and 300%".
The private media
also provided more opportunity for alternative views to be aired.
For example, NewZimbabwe.com (28/7) reported Tsholotsho MP
Jonathan Moyo rubbishing the supplementary budget as "scandalous"
and "proof that the government has totally lost control".
He speculated that government would print more money to finance
it.
Studio
7 (27/7) and The Standard (30/7) quoted other analysts expressing
similar opinions.
Like the government
media, the Mirror stable expressed confidence that government’s
fiscal and monetary policies would turn around the country’s economic
fortunes. Thus, it simply regurgitated Murerwa’s policy presentation
without analysis.
However,
The Sunday Mirror (30/7) was sceptical of government’s promises
to end corruption and stated that people "want to see
action and not cheap talk".
Except for the
Mirror stable, the critical pattern of the private media
remained unbroken in the 14 stories they carried on Mugabe’s parliamentary
address. They noted that although his speech is the closest he has
come to acknowledging the perilous state of the economy, he still
diverted attention from his government’s poor management of the
economy by blaming others.
The Financial
Gazette (27/7) noted that Mugabe was yet again in denial mode, blaming
the usual suspects: "the dishonest and hypocritical anti-Zimbabwe
strategy of the current British government" and "reactionary
elements amongst us" while the online news agency, Zimdaily,
(26/7) criticized Mugabe for failing to "articulate how
his party intends to resolve the national crisis."
The Independent
blamed Zimbabwe’s problems on "politics"
and chastised Mugabe, saying productivity "can not be
achieved by looking for scapegoats such as Western sanctions and
transitory droughts" but through a "comprehensive
political settlement, improvement of relations between Zimbabwe
and the international community and (the) political will to solve
the country’s economic problems".
But the Mirror
stable maintained its uncritical approach, feeding into the official
media propaganda that corruption was the chief cause of the country’s
economic crisis. For instance, The Daily Mirror (26/7) hailed
the opening of Parliament "amid pomp and fanfare".
Otherwise, the paper (27 & 28/7) devoted its efforts to vilifying
the Tsvangirai-led MDC faction for boycotting the event (27 and
28/7).
In addition, the
private media used indicators of economic decline to support how
government continued to mismanage the economy. They carried 26 stories
highlighting this.
The private media’s
sourcing patterns are shown in Fig 3 and 4
Fig 3 Voice
distribution in private papers
| Government |
Business |
Alternative |
Ordinary |
Zanu-
PF |
MDC |
Other
parties |
Foreign |
| 36 |
4 |
20 |
6 |
4 |
3 |
1 |
1 |
Notably, 17 of
the 36 government sources recorded by the private Press came from
the Mirror stable.
Fig 4 Voice
distribution in the private electronic media
| Jonathan
Moyo |
Alternative |
Govt |
MDC |
| 1 |
6 |
2 |
5 |
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