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The
crunch has arrived
Eddie Cross
January 31, 2006
When I think
about what is happening right now I wonder - when will the crunch
come? This morning I was in one of the largest food companies in
Zimbabwe. Parked outside were long lines of 30 tonne trucks - all
empty, the drivers standing by waiting for food aid to arrive. The
company staff told me that they had not had a delivery of maize
for four weeks. Other millers tell the same story. In town I passed
a man with a small sedan vehicle - he was selling 10 kg bags of
maize meal at Z$350 000 per bag. He was surrounded by a couple of
hundred desperate customers.
Bulawayo has
been without maize meal for the past fortnight - the Sunday News
headlined the shortage this last weekend.
The GMB has
a national monopoly over the purchase, storage and sale of raw maize
in Zimbabwe. We consume about 1,2 million tonnes a year as maize
meal for human consumption - it is the national staple food. That
is 110 kilograms of maize per capita.
The financial
numbers of this exercise are huge. A tonne of maize from South Africa
lands here in Bulawayo at about R1500 per tonne. At official exchange
rates this is Z$24 million dollars per tonne. The GMB sells it at
Z$600 000 a tonne - a direct subsidy of Z$23 400 000 per tonne -
a 97.5 per cent subsidy. Take into account the costs of the GMB
- interest, transport, and staff, silo management costs, unloading
and loading, sales costs and you are probably looking at a direct
subsidy per tonne of Z$28 million per tonne - Z$33,6 trillion a
year or nearly a third of total revenues from all taxes.
This is clearly
not sustainable and how the Government will deal with this is anyone's
guess but the profiteering going on in the trade is equally stunning.
That 10 kilogram bag of maize meal probably used 11 kilos of maize
at a cost to the miller of Z$6 600. His gross margin is Z$343 400
per bag - his costs probably about Z$70 000 leaving him a profit
of Z$273 400 or 78 per cent of his selling price. Not bad.
If they were
to charge an economic price for maize of Z$28 000 a kilo, the product
would probably end up on the shelves at about Z$413 000 for a 10
kilo bag. So the bulk of the subsidy on maize is actually going
to the middlemen. I run a supermarket as one of my concerns, we
cannot buy maize meal from the GMB mills and have to buy from intermediaries
who put a substantial mark up on the product. This sort of thing
is going on across the country.
So we are left
to wonder - when will the crunch come - Maize imports at US$250
a tonne will require us to find US$350 million this year for our
net import needs. If the State cannot find this money - we will
go hungry. If they do find it and continue to sell at present prices,
then the subsidy to the GMB will, by itself, push the budget deficit
over 20 per cent of GDP. This is simply not sustainable.
By my own calculations
inflation in January is well over 900 per cent and still rising.
Inflation, a runaway budget deficit, the impossible demands of the
patronage system in a shrinking economy, a hungry angry people.
We are close to breaking point in every sense. Perhaps the crunch
has come.
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