|
Back to Index
Economy
and confusion
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media
Update 2006-49
Monday
December 4th 2006 - December 10th 2006
THIS week the official
media evaded addressing the confusion and policy contradictions
characterising government's management of the country's
ailing economy. Most of the 42 stories they carried on the matter
and related developments (ZBC [34] and government papers [8]) just
papered over the administrative mess with simplistic positive projections
of a recovering economy.
This was evident in the
way they rehashed conflicting official pronouncements on the quasi-fiscal
role of the central bank, the re-licensing of money transfer agencies,
and the extension of the National Economic Development Priority
Programme (NEDPP) without question. As a result, there was no interpretation
on the implications of such policy differences on the economy.
For example,
The Herald (5/12) failed to reconcile Finance Minister Herbert Murerwa's
condemnation of the Reserve Bank's "quasi-fiscal
operations" in his Budget speech with President
Mugabe's defence of the bank's activities. The paper
and its Bulawayo-based sister publication, the Chronicle (5/12)
merely reported Mugabe contradicting Murerwa: "I
don't believe in this nonsensical theory about quasi-fiscal
activities", adding that the country "must
not rely on textbook economics to push its development agenda".
There were more surprises
at the weekend when Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono took the unprecedented
measure of publishing a multi-page supplement in all the Sunday
newspapers defending the bank's activities. The supplement
vehemently condemned government's profligate spending and
made use of numerous confidential inter-ministerial memos as evidence
that the bank's financing of government programmes outside
the provisions of the Budget was actually a result of specific instructions
from Murerwa and in some instances from Cabinet. It noted that the
bank had only been responding to its obligations to fulfil directives
issued by government ministries.
However, The
Sunday Mail (10/12) deliberately censored any attempt at analysing
this extraordinary outburst, providing the clearest indication yet
of the warfare between the Ministry of Finance and the Reserve Bank.
Instead, the paper limited itself to reporting Gono defending his
bank's activities on the basis that there were
"capacity constraints at parent ministry . . . parastatal
or local authority levels" saying some of the
country's "landmark events . . . would not
have taken place" without the bank's support.
ZBC steered clear of
this glaring indicator of the confusion characterizing government's
economic management.
Instead, it reserved
its energies to reporting favourably on government's economic
programmes, slavishly quoting government officials' utterances
without question. Undesirable economic developments were attributed
to "illegal" sanctions and "unscrupulous"
business people. For example, most of the analysts evaluating the
Budget aired on ZBC were those that generally endorsed it. Those
that offered contrary views were barely heard.
For instance,
while Spot FM (6/12, 8am) and ZTV (10/12, 8pm) prominently reported
economists and ZANU PF legislators celebrating the Budget, MDC MP
Tendai Biti's argument that the fiscal policy was repetitious,
mediocre and lacked creativity was suppressed and only accommodated
at the end of their bulletins. Also, there was no querying government's
fickle policy on Money Transfer Agencies (MTAs). This follows a
government decision to re-register seven agencies that it abruptly
closed two months ago following alleged "non-performance,
non-compliance with the exchange rate and control regulations"
(Spot FM 4/12, 1pm). The Chronicle (5/12) simply reported
economists hailing the move saying it "may boost
foreign currency inflows" as the MTAs closure
"was not really a wise move" since
it fuelled the foreign currency black market.
The government
media also failed to address the basis on which government planned
to extend the lifespan of NEDPP from December 2006 to March 31 2007
or link it to its chaotic implementation of policies. The Herald
(5/12), ZTV and Spot FM (7/12, 8pm) passively cited the authorities
using the programme's extension as evidence of its success.
The Herald passively quoted an unnamed government official claiming
that although NEDPP had not met some of its targets, it
"has not failed." Similarly, ZTV and Spot
FM reported the Minister of Economic Development claiming that NEDPP
had "registered success" and government was satisfied
"that some economic challenges were fixed through the quick-fix
solution". The minister did not provide the public with any
of NEDPP's successes nor was he asked to. Moreover, these
media did not explain how the extension of NEDPP fitted in with
government's announcement the previous week that it was now
"finalising the new medium-term economic blueprint"
dubbed the Zimbabwe Economic Development Strategy.
In fact, despite
an earlier report in The Herald (6/12) revealing that $715 million
allocated by Murerwa to the Prices and Incomes Stabilisation Programme
was six times short of the total requirement, The Sunday Mail (10/12)
presented the allocation as adequate and indicative of government
commitment to "deal with price increases".
The official
media's shallow coverage of the economy was mirrored by their
dependence on official voices as captured in Fig. 1 and 2.
Fig.
1 Voice distribution on ZBC
| Govt |
Zanu-PF |
Business |
Alternative |
MDC |
Farmer |
Unnamed
|
Ordinary
People |
Traditional
Leaders |
| 38 |
15 |
17 |
14 |
5 |
1 |
6 |
6 |
2 |
Fig.
2 Voice distribution in the government Press
| Govt |
Alternative |
Business |
Zanu
PF |
Judiciary |
Professional
|
MDC |
Local
govt |
Ordinary
people |
| 16 |
8 |
4 |
4 |
1 |
1 |
2 |
2 |
4 |
The
private media also failed to holistically examine government's
policy confusion, especially in the wake of Mugabe's criticism
of his Finance Minister and to a lesser extent Gono's defence
of his bank's activities. However, the 62 stories they carried
on the economy (private papers [45] and private electronic media
[17]) were generally critical of the authorities' management
of the economy. Of these, 12 mainly discussed the RBZ's quasi-fiscal
operations while the rest focussed on symptoms of economic distress.
For example,
while The Financial Gazette (7/12) noted that Mugabe's criticism
of Murerwa was "against broad support" the Finance Minister
had received in his efforts to put an end to the Reserve Bank's
interventions, it did not discuss the matter in the context of the
authorities' policy contradictions. Similarly, the Zimbabwe
Independent's comment (8/12) only doubted whether Gono would
stop his quasi-fiscal activities, which it claimed, were a "major
source of (his) political power", while its
Muckraker columnist wondered why Murerwa "doesn't quit"
when he had been told "to go and hang".
The Standard (10/12)
did attempt to follow-up the 16-page Reserve Bank supplement that
appeared in its own paper by quoting Murerwa confirming he had authorised
the central bank's spending. But it failed to give its readers
a proper understanding of the unprecedented nature of the dispute
and how this matched up with Mugabe's attack on Murerwa.
The private electronic
media largely ignored these issues. Most of their stories were restricted
to debating the Budget and highlighting indicators of economic decline
such as dwindling industrial production, commodity shortages and
skyrocketing price increases.
The private
media's critical examination of the country's economic
problems was reflected by their attempts to balance official comment
with alternative views as shown in Fig. 3 and 4.
Fig.
3 Voice distribution in the private Press
| Govt
|
Alternative |
Business |
Professional |
Foreign |
Ordinary
people |
Unnamed |
MDC |
Zanu
PF |
| 16 |
12 |
6 |
1 |
1 |
2 |
5 |
2 |
1 |
Fig.
4 Voice distribution in the private electronic media
| Govt |
Unnamed |
Ordinary
People |
Alternative |
ZANU-PF |
MDC |
| 7 |
4 |
1 |
10 |
1 |
2 |
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
|