|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
Sunrise of currency reform - Index of articles and reports on Zimbabwe's new currency reforms
Monetary
reform crusade
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2006-31
Monday July
31st 2006 – Sunday August 4th 2006
THIS week the
government media diverted attention on the real causes of Zimbabwe’s
economic crisis by swamping its audiences with stories about the
alleged efficiency of the authorities’ mid-year monetary strategy
in arresting the decline.
All the 231 stories
they carried on the subject (ZBH [116] and government papers [115])
passively praised the monetary
policy, presented by Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono, without
providing informed analysis of its implications. This clearly manifested
itself in the way these media merely cheered the monetary statement
on the sole basis that Gono had simply chopped off three zeroes
on the nominal value of the old currency and introduced an entirely
"new" re-valued currency.
The celebratory
overkill coverage of the issue was exemplified by ZTV. It dedicated
2 hours 40 minutes (38%) out of the 7 hours 1 minute allocated to
its main news bulletins (except weather and sport segments) to portraying
the monetary policy as the precursor to a dramatic turnaround in
the economic fortunes of the country. In addition, all ZBH stations
(31/7) beamed the policy presentation live while ZTV rebroadcast
it after its main news bulletin.
The next day ZTV
allocated eight minutes to Gono briefing the public, businesses
and diplomats on the new measures of his policy in its evening news
bulletin (8pm) and followed this up with an hour-long ‘special programme’
after the bulletin, showing Gono publicly threatening businesses
that their operating licences would be revoked if they did not toe
his line. Notably, the station did not question the legality or
morality of his actions.
Neither did the
government media examine the effectiveness of Gono’s economic revival
plans, such as the concessions he made to exporters and gold miners,
the impact of the 150 percent currency devaluation or the reduction
in interest rates.
The Herald (1/8),
Spot FM (2/8, 8pm), for example, did not even refer to the term
"devaluation" or state by what percentage the dollar had
been devalued (except for the Chronicle 1/8). They merely cited
Gono evasively describing it as the new "exchange rate
management system".
In addition, the
official media did not question the governor’s silence on the problems
of the scarcity of goods, the hyperinflationary environment, ballooning
government debt, and the lack of jobs and restoration of business
confidence, all essential to the economy’s revival. They muffled
them in their commendation of the new currency, seen as the genesis
of an economic turnaround rather than a symptom of a failed economy.
To further buttress this notion, they passively carried daily adverts
from the central bank reinforcing this assumption.
Some of the adverts
featured childish and misleading slogans such as "zero to hero,"
"restore value in the month of our heroes," and outright
misconceptions, saying, "call it deflation or just simple convenience,
we are fighting for you to get more bang for your buck," as
if simply removing the zeroes from the old currency translated into
more buying power for suffering Zimbabweans. In fact, one advert
(also carried in the private Press) gave the impression that removing
the zeroes would also result in a corresponding drop in the price
of goods and services. Depicting a partly sliced standard loaf of
bread as costing $85 000 before the zero-shedding exercise, the
advert falsely showed it as "now only"
selling for $85, giving the impression that it had become massively
cheaper as a result of the revaluation.
This misrepresentation
of the realities of Gono’s monetary policy even resulted in the
government media passively reporting Gono accusing businesses that
increased the prices of their products and hoarded cash of sabotaging
the economy. For example, Spot FM (2/8, 8pm) reported the governor
threatening to invoke "special powers"
to deal with companies that had increased prices following the
introduction of the new currency. It did not link the spate of new
price hikes to Gono’s devaluation of the dollar.
Following the
Governor’s policy statement, The Herald carried daily updates on
the authorities’ hunt for ‘economic saboteurs’, which included graphic
images of how much had been collected and from where. By the weekend,
The Sunday Mail (6/8) reported a total of $422 billion ($422 million)
as having been recovered from ‘illegal’ dealers countrywide since
the RBZ onslaught.
No questions were
raised on the manner in which the authorities conducted the operation,
its legality or how the stop-and-search tactics were affecting human
rights.
Otherwise, the
government media coverage of Gono’s monetary statement was restricted
to flattering praise of the governor, whom they portrayed as the
scourge of business malpractice. The Herald (6/8) even made religious
reference, likening him to Jesus by describing Gono as "The
Second Coming". The paper also carried cartoons (31/7 and 6/8)
portraying him as a warrior defending the people by shooting down
the "offending" zeroes as if they had somehow manifested
themselves without the government’s knowledge.
Although the government
media carried an impressive assortment of comments on the monetary
policy (see Fig 1 and 2), it either suppressed or misrepresented
critical views on the subject. For example, while ZTV (2/8, 6pm
& 8pm) claimed that "Gweru residents welcome the
slashing of zeros which would reduce the risk of carrying large
sums of money", the residents quoted in the bulletin
expressed contrary views.
Fig 1:
Voice distribution on the public broadcaster
| Gono |
Alternative |
Government |
Business |
Zanu
PF |
MDC |
Ordinary
People |
Foreign
Dignitaries |
| 39 |
23 |
25 |
35 |
20 |
10 |
41 |
6 |
Fig 2: Voice
distribution in the government Press
| Gono |
Govt |
Alternative |
Ordinary
People |
Business |
Unnamed |
ZANU
PF |
MDC |
ZRP |
| 47 |
42 |
27 |
20 |
20 |
5 |
6 |
10 |
7 |
Notably, Gono
was the most quoted voice of all those cited by the government media.
The Mirror stable,
just like the government media, was uncritical of Gono’s monetary
policy. Its 23 stories on the topic were just unanalytical reports
of the governor’s presentation.
It was left to
the other private media to give a more critical assessment of the
monetary statement in 74 stories they carried on the topic, 53 of
which were published by private papers and the remainder by the
private electronic media.
They generally
dismissed Gono’s reforms as of no consequence, saying they did not
address the economic fundamentals that had given rise to the proliferation
of zeroes on the old currency in the first place.
To support their
arguments, they cited analysts attributing economic problems to
poor economic management, which they said had resulted in the shrinking
of the country’s production base. The Financial Gazette (3/8),
for example, viewed the revaluation of the dollar as a "quick
fix" aimed at forestalling a "looming politically
embarrassing situation in which Zimbabweans would need wheel barrows
to wheel huge bundles of cash", while the Zimbabwe Independent
(4/8) saw it as an admission by government of its failure to revive
the economy. The Independent quoted economist Blessing Sakupwanya
saying the currency reform required a stable economy and the removal
of zeroes was, "a mechanical process that we will have to do
again if inflation remains at current levels".
The Standard (6/8)
raised the same issues.
Besides reporting
public confusion surrounding the use of the new currency, Studio
7 (1/8) quoted ZANU PF and MDC MPs lamenting the short period the
central bank had given Zimbabweans to phase out the old currency.
The online agency ZimDaily did not even see the logic of printing
new smaller denominations such as cents, saying they were "worthless"
in Zimbabwe’s hyperinflationary environment considering that printing
each bearer bond cost $50 000.
In fact, while
the government media celebrated government’s clampdown on ‘illegal
dealers’ in the country, the Independent reported
that the RBZ would require an estimated $1 trillion in its "military-style
operation to harvest" the old currency from "all corners
of the country and arraign those trying to repatriate huge amounts
of cash into the country".
However, the private
media also failed to report adequately on the effects of government’s
devaluation of the dollar from Z$101,000 to the US dollar to Z$250,000,
or, as Gono described it, "a readjustment to Z$250".
While the private media put the devaluation at 60 percent – a figure
that ZimDaily (31/7) said was based on an IMF calculating system
– they did not provide details on how the method worked, or more
importantly, how this would affect prices, especially of imported
goods such as fuel.
Voice distribution
in the private media, exemplified by the private Press, was relatively
balanced as shown in Fig 3.
Fig 3
Voice distribution in the Private Press
| Govt |
Gono
|
Professional |
Alternative |
Trade
Unions |
Foreign |
Business |
MDC |
ZANU
PF |
Ordinary
People |
| 20 |
16 |
2 |
22 |
2 |
5 |
9 |
6 |
6 |
8 |
Visit the MMPZ
fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|