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Economic
decay
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly
Media Update 2007-3
Monday
January 22nd 2007 – Sunday January 28th 2007
THE
media published 169 stories on Zimbabwe’s crisis-ridden economy.
ZBC carried
56 reports, the government Press 51, while private papers carried
48 stories and the private electronic media 14.
The reports
highlighted commodity shortages, the runaway cost of living and
increased labour unrest. However, all the media failed to give a
holistic picture on the commodity price hikes, which they only covered
randomly.
The government
media especially, carried the increases – such as that of sugar
– as mere announcements and avoided discussing them in the context
of government’s failed interventionist economic policies.
However, in
a rare display of unison, all the media’s 30 previews on the monetary
policy statement (official media [19] and private media [11]) agreed
that central bank governor Gideon Gono faced a mammoth task in reviving
the economy and called on him to devalue the local currency.
In fact, ZBC
went further by carrying reports that quoted property experts, importers
and stock exchange officials expressing displeasure at the delays
by the Reserve Bank to present the monetary policy, saying it was
hurting business and fuelling speculative behaviour.
But that is
where the similarities ended. While the government media dodged
exploring the root causes of the economic crisis, the private media
squarely blamed the authorities.
For example,
although the government media reported on an announcement by national
power utility ZESA that it was broke and warned consumers of worse
power cuts to come, they did not view the disclosures as an indication
of government’s bad corporate governance. Instead, these media unquestioningly
allowed the authorities to blame those outside the official circle
for the problem.
The private
media were not docile. For example, the Zimbabwe Independent
alone carried six opinion pieces that projected a gloomy picture
of the country’s economic future unless government adopted effective
policies.
For instance,
its columnist Eric Bloch argued that the "near-total
demise of the economy is almost wholly due to government policies
and economic mismanagement".
His sentiments
reflected the tone of the stories the private media featured diagnosing
the country’s economic ills.
Their critical
approach was reflected by the amount of space they gave to independent
comment as shown by the private papers’ sourcing pattern in Fig
1.
Fig.
1 Voice distribution in the private Press
| Govt |
Alternative |
Local
Govt |
Business |
Farmers |
Professional |
Ordinary
people |
Unnamed |
| 14 |
26 |
4 |
11 |
3 |
1 |
11 |
4 |
In contrast,
government papers as shown in Fig 2, basically viewed the problems
from the authorities’ perspective.
Fig. 2 Voice
distribution in government papers
| Govt |
Business |
Zanu
PF |
Alternative |
Farmers |
Police |
Unnamed |
Local
Govt |
Ordinary
people |
| 28 |
7 |
6 |
10 |
5 |
3 |
7 |
5 |
10 |
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sheet
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