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Price Controls and Shortages - Index of articles
Zimbabweans
watch soberly as blitz starts to wane
Dianna
Games, Business Day
August 13, 2007
http://allafrica.com/stories/200708130524.html
IT IS a sorry day when
a country runs out of beer, especially one that has so much need
for it right now.
Drinking away the realities
of life in Zimbabwe is one of the coping mechanisms that people
had access to until that, too, became a casualty of the government's
latest price-slashing drama.
The supermarkets in Harare
last week were a woeful sight as the price blitz really began to
bite. One supermarket, in a relatively upmarket area, had no power
and shoppers wandered up and down half-empty shelves in the gloom
to see what they could find.
Watching over them was
President Robert Mugabe, from a portrait high above the entrance.
There are millions of
dollars chasing very few goods at this stage. A joke doing the rounds
in Harare suggests that there are three things you should never
tell a Zimbabwean woman: that she looks like a million dollars (only
about R30), that you will stand her to a candlelit dinner, or run
her a bubble bath - the last two references to extensive power and
water cuts.
Business people report
the presence of police in factories, forcing industries to produce,
or to raise their production. But production can only continue,
they say, as long as they have raw materials.
A lack of foreign currency
for imported inputs and a shortage of fuel are constraining their
ability to produce and the bankrupt government is not in a position
to help out.
So where does it end?
In a way it already has. The government is already starting to increase
prices as factories threaten closure.
Last week the state-owned
newspapers (the only kind you can get daily in Zimbabwe) have reported
that the farmer price of beef has been increased to lure boycotting
farmers to sell, and that the state-owned Cold Storage Commission
is courting private abattoirs, which recently had their licences
withdrawn, to provide beef to butcheries. The next price control
to go was on beer - just in time for the Heroes Day holiday today.
This was joined by bread, cement and maize meal and more are expected
next week.
The government has backed
down as a result of talks with the private sector to find a compromise
on the price freeze, and it is expected that more concessions will
be announced soon.
The government will then
portray itself as the saviour of business as a way of saving face,
Zimbabweans predict.
There seems to be a prevailing
view that the crackdown, which the government insisted would continue
until the year-end, was a misplaced election tactic. But it has
backfired and it will take a lot to paper over the cracks it has
left.
It was unsustainable
in an environment where the private sector had already had so much
of the life sucked out of it. Companies, unable to survive on volumes
in a depressed economy, were relying on high margins to keep going
- and that is exactly where the government hit them.
Business people maintain
that there is no capacity in government to understand economic issues
and the few who do, such as Reserve Bank governor Gideon Gono, were
anyway opposed to the cuts.
The fuel crunch is also
biting and people predict the next climbdown may be the reversal
of the decree that only the bankrupt state fuel parastatal Noczim
can import fuel.
The reason for the deregulation
of the fuel market a few years ago was the inability of Noczim to
provide fuel, and nothing has changed.
As one businessman said:
"It's one thing not to learn from others' mistakes; it is another
not to learn from your own."
The government spin doctors
have had their work cut out for them trying to convince the population
that this is all one big western plot. Ironically, Mugabe last week
asked a forum of journalists what led reporters to publish misleading
information and sway the truth to suit powerful interests. I am
surprised that he had to ask - he is the master.
I find it disappointing
that many Africans say Zimbabwe, despite its problems, it is still
in better shape than many other African countries - as if that somehow
makes it all right.
Zimbabwe in 2007 reminds
me of Zambia in the late 1980s, early 1990s. Shelves were bare,
foreign currency was scarce, the kwacha was worthless and skills
flight was rampant.
Now Zambia is booming
and Zimbabwe is down where its neighbour was nearly two decades
ago.
The tendency to benchmark
Zimbabwe against Africa's failures rather than its successes is
surely holding back the continent's development.
If Africans are not outraged
by Zimbabwe's demise, they will not hold their own governments accountable
for similar declines and poor leadership will triumph.
Games is director of
Africa @ Work, an African consulting company.
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.
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