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Economic
issues
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly
Media Update 2007-8
Monday February 26th 2007 – Sunday March 4th
2007
THE government
media failed to tackle the country’s economic problems as reflected
by their sketchy coverage on the developments surrounding government’s
planned social contract and the discord among the authorities over
government’s relations with the IMF. They carried 26 stories on
these issues, of which 16 featured in the government Press and 10
on ZBC’s stations.
For instance,
there was no in-depth inquiry on the implementation and likely success
of the social contract, particularly in view of the sharp differences
between government, business and labour – key partners in the planned
project – over the causes of the country’s economic decline. Neither
did these media explain why the implementation of the contract,
initially scheduled for March 1st, was deferred.
They also failed
to reconcile the planned contract with previous efforts to bring
together government, business and labour under the Tripartite Negotiating
Forum (TNF) to resolve the country’s economic crisis. In fact, there
was no clarity on how the social contract would relate to the TNF.
Instead of addressing
these issues, ZTV and Radio Zimbabwe (27/2, 6pm & 8pm) simply
projected government and some businesses as already implementing
the contract.
They passively
reported that government had signed a memorandum of understanding
with bus operators – "within the central bank’s idea
of a social contract" – in "an effort to
curb the rampant hiking of fares". The report only
relied on Transport Minister Chris Mushowe and failed to seek comment
from the operators or provide useful details on the agreement.
The Herald
and
Chronicle (28/2) also carried vague reports on the matter.
Like ZBC, they did not clarify whether the agreement was part of
the main social contract proposed by the Reserve Bank.
Rather, The Sunday
Mail (4/3) added more confusion to the matter when it failed to
explain how the social contract related to layers of other government
economic committees such the Economic Recovery Council (ERC), whose
brief is "to deal in part with the controversial
pricing systems that are feeding the upward inflation spiral".
Reportedly, the ERC comprises ministers, permanent secretaries
and representatives from the private sector under the auspices of
the National Economic Development Priority Programme.
Otherwise, the
government Press merely supposed that the social contract would
succeed since the concept had been "successfully"
effected in other countries such as the US, Germany and Israel
without accounting for the different operating environments under
which the scheme was implemented.
The official media’s
reluctance to openly discuss the confusion surrounding the authorities’
management of the economy resulted in ZBC censoring the introduction
of new denominations of bearer cheques by the central bank. Neither
did ZTV or Radio Zimbabwe report on the IMF’s continued suspension
of Zimbabwe and its unflattering observations about the country’s
struggling economy.
Although Spot
FM (2/3, 1 & 8pm) reported the matter, this was in passing and
in the context of President Mugabe’s dismissal of the IMF as irrelevant
to the country’s economic revival. No attempt was made to examine
the implications of his rebuke of the Fund on the country’s relations
with the institution.
Similarly, while
The Herald and Chronicle (2/3) reported Mugabe dismissing
the IMF’s suspension of the country as inconsequential, it did not
link this to Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono’s efforts to re-engage
multilateral institutions in his economic turnaround strategies.
The government
papers’ 13 reports on symptoms of economic decay were also uncritical.
None of them viewed the indicators of economic decline as a result
of government’s economic management practices. It was in this context
that The Herald and Chronicle (2/3) buried the introduction
of the new $5,000 and $50,000 bearer cheques in its business section
and avoided interpreting the development as reflective of the authorities’
failed policies. The rest of the papers ignored the matter and only
carried central bank adverts on the security features of the new
cheques.
The government
media’s uncritical coverage of the topic was reflected in their
dependency on government voices as shown by the official papers’
sourcing pattern (Fig 1).
Fig. 1 Voice
distribution in the government Press
| Govt |
Alternative |
Business |
Ordinary
People |
Professional |
Foreign |
| 17 |
5 |
3 |
3 |
1 |
4 |
By comparison,
the private media fared better in the 34 stories they carried on
the economy. Of these, 26 were in the private Press while the private
electronic media carried eight.
For example, the
private Press and SW Radio Africa explored several obstacles that
apparently rendered the realisation of a social contract as being
impractical. Central to this, they argued, was the mistrust and
antagonism between government, business and labour.
The Zimbabwe
Independent (2/3), for example, observed that as long as government
maintained "several bad laws" that criminalised
Zimbabweans, the social contract would not work as citizens would
always feel that "President Mugabe’s government is not
‘in the interest of all Zimbabweans’".
In fact, in its
front page story the paper attributed the authorities’ failure to
launch the social contract on March 1st as evidence that
there was "no shared vision in the country".
Earlier, The
Financial Gazette’s comment (1/3) disagreed with President Mugabe’s
observations about the IMF, arguing that the fund was a "necessary
evil" that economically troubled countries such as
Zimbabwe could not do without. It said this was because donor funds
"are being indexed on an individual country’s standing in
global financial institutions" while membership to
the IMF also sent a positive image to investors.
The Private Press’
critical nature was also reflected in the 10 stories that it carried
on indicators of economic decay. Almost all the stories identified
government policies as the main causes of economic decline.
For example, not
only did the Independent give front-page prominence to the introduction
of new bearer cheques, it interpreted the development as confirmation
that the Reserve Bank’s plans to launch a new currency pinned on
the hopes of a stabilising economy had collapsed due to worsening
economic conditions.
The private electronic
media echoed similar views.
The private papers’
critical approach was mirrored by their attempts to balance official
comment with alternative views (Fig 2).
Fig. 2 Voice
distribution in private papers
| Govt |
Alternative
|
Business |
Ordinary
People |
Foreign
|
MDC |
Unnamed |
| 11 |
11 |
3 |
5 |
1 |
1 |
5 |
Notably, the private
electronic media – like ZBC – dented the credibility of their coverage
of the economy as a result of their unbalanced sourcing. Whereas
ZBC depended on government and business comments almost to the exclusion
of independent views, the private electronic media relied on labour,
analysts and the opposition and ignored government voices (Fig 3).
Fig. 3 Voice
distribution in the electronic media
|
VOICES |
ZTV |
SpotFM
|
RadioZim |
Studio7 |
SW
Radio Africa |
Zimbabwe
Times.com |
New
zimbabwe.com |
| Mugabe
|
- |
2 |
1 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| Government |
2 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| Business
|
2 |
5 |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
| Labour |
- |
- |
- |
1 |
1 |
- |
- |
| Alternative |
- |
1 |
- |
4 |
2 |
- |
- |
| MDC |
- |
- |
- |
- |
1 |
- |
- |
| Ordinary
people |
- |
- |
- |
- |
- |
1 |
- |
|
TOTAL |
4 |
4 |
1 |
5 |
4 |
1 |
0 |
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sheet
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