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Fiscal
policy review
Media
Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Extracted from Weekly Media Update 2007-35
Monday September 3rd - Sunday September 9th 2007
September 13, 2007
The government
media failed to provide any informed analysis on the essence of
government's supplementary budget in the 62 reports they carried
on the matter: ZBC (43) and government papers (19). They played
down the supplementary nature of the budget that is a legal requirement
to approve additional, unforeseen government spending. As a result,
they failed to categorically link the budget to unbridled government
overspending and did not explore the causes for this.
Neither did
the government media mention, let alone clarify to its audiences,
that the supplementary budget was nearly eight times bigger than
the original one, a clear indication that the authorities were no
longer in control of their spending or the economy.
These media
failed to reconcile their previews featuring business, workers and
ordinary people as being optimistic that the budget would revive
the economy, improve disposable incomes and address the severe shortage
of commodities with what the budget eventually offered. In fact,
after the budget presentation the government media continued to
portray the budget as a panacea to the country's economic
ills, but never went back to the workers to find out whether their
expectations had been met. Neither did they carry independent verification
about whether the new tax-free threshold of $4m announced by Finance
Minister Samuel Mumbengegwi would cushion the country's diminishing
workforce from the plague of hyperinflation.
They also failed
to measure the adequacy of the authorities' devaluation of
the local dollar from 250 to 30,000 to the US dollar, considering
that parallel market rates were fetching up to eight times more.
Instead, they
diverted attention from these important questions with simplistic
reports that either repeated Mumbengegwi's presentation, or
rhetorically welcomed it as being "people-centred" without
qualification (The Herald and Chronicle 7/9). Such passive coverage
also manifested itself in reports in The Herald and Chronicle (7/9)
and on Spot FM's morning news bulletin (7/9) that the $37.1
trillion budget fell short of the $225 trillion that government
ministries had requested. They did not view this as a sign of hyperinflation,
nor questioned how the deficit would be managed. Instead, ZBC's
reporter Douglas Rinomhota merely editorialised: "It was a
delicate balancing act by the Finance Minister as he sought to curb
inflation [and] at the same time boosting production in the economy"
(Spot FM, 7/9, 8am).
Critical comments
on the budget by analysts accessed by these media were largely suffocated.
For example, the official dailies (7/9) muted observations by economist
Luxon Zembe that the untaxed income and the dollar's devaluation
were too little with positive comments from former Finance Minister
Herbert Murerwa and a University of Zimbabwe lecturer. Spot FM (7/9,
8am) adopted the same stance, relegating Zembe's reservations
to story seven in the eight-item news bulletin.
Although the
official media's sourcing pattern seemed relatively balanced
(Fig 1&2), it belied the superficial manner in which they reported
the topic.
Fig 1: Voice
distribution on ZBC
Govt |
Alternative |
Professioanl |
14 |
24 |
7 |
Fig 2: Voice
distribution in the government Press
Govt |
Busines |
Alternative |
Professional |
Ordinary
people |
MDC |
Unnamed |
7 |
16 |
4 |
4 |
8 |
1 |
2 |
In contrast,
the private media critically assessed Mumbengegwi's budget
in the 23 reports they carried on the topic. Of these, 12 were carried
by the private electronic media and 11 by private papers. They questioned
the effectiveness of the budget, which they largely presented as
a non-event. In addition, they highlighted the inadequacy of the
new untaxed income; the extreme mismatch between official and parallel
market exchange rates; and government's failure to satisfy
its own appetite for cash. While the Zimbabwe Independent (7/9),
questioned how government intended to close the "yawning chasm"
between the budget and expenditure requests by government departments,
ZimOnline (10/9) cited analysts saying the demands reflected the
seriousness of Zimbabwe's economic rot and raised grave questions
over official inflation data.
Economist John
Robertson described the demands as "frightening when you compare
them to the original budget estimates for 2007". Contrary
to government media's unsubstantiated claims that workers
welcomed the budget, Studio 7, ZimOnline (6/9) and the Independent
accessed comments from workers' organizations criticising
the budget, especially the inadequate level of the tax-free threshold.
The Standard (9/9) concurred, noting that the tax relief was "something
of a pyrrhic victory" for ordinary workers as government had
announced a 20% increase in the prices of some goods and services.
The sourcing
patterns of the private media are shown in Figs. 3 and 4.
Fig 3: Voice
distribution in the private electronic media
Govt |
Alternative |
ZCTU |
3 |
4 |
1 |
Fig 4: Voice
distribution in the private Press
Govt |
Business |
Alternative |
ZCTU |
MDC |
Unnamed |
7 |
6 |
3 |
2 |
2 |
1 |
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