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The world's worst inflation
Elizabeth
Spiers, Fortune Magazine
August 14, 2008
http://money.cnn.com/2008/08/13/news/international/worlds_worst_inflation_spiers.fortune/index.htm
If purchased on the newsstand
in Zimbabwe, the issue of Fortune you're holding would have cost
you 270,543,825,555 Zimbabwean dollars. But don't worry about pulling
your Weimar-era wheelbarrows out of storage. As of July you could
pay for your magazine with three newly issued $100 billion bills.
This is what Robert Mugabe's
government considers a reasonable strategy for coping with an inflation
rate of more than 2,000,000%. Faced with the prospect of issuing
ever more cash, Zimbabwe has opted for simply issuing bigger cash.
And perhaps anticipating unwieldy arithmetic problems at the cash
register, the government has also announced a longer-term plan to
dispense with the zeroes entirely, turning $10 billion into $1.
The essential clumsiness
of these responses betrays the government's lack of experience in
remedying any policy problem with actual policy. Historically Mugabe's
favorite, if only, policy tool is small and steely and comes in
a variety of calibers. But at whom to point the gun? Market forces
fail to manifest themselves in the form of persons who can be threatened
with death and dismemberment.
Sticking
a fork in dissidents
If anyone is to blame for the economic crisis, it's Mugabe himself.
In 28 years he has managed to take one of the wealthiest countries
in sub-Saharan Africa and ruin it in a stupefying variety of ways.
He annihilated the agricultural sector (once a leading exporter
of corn and tobacco) by seizing commercial farms and giving them
to cronies who failed to use the land. In 1998 he prosecuted a kleptomaniacal
war in the Congo, spending $1 million (U.S.) a day in hopes of stealing
enough land and resources from the Congolese to make a profit. When
Zimbabweans have tried to vote him out of office, he has punished
them with violence and economic repression. A passage from "The
State of Africa," by Martin Meredith, recalls the explanation
offered to citizens for cutting off their food supplies: "First
you will eat your chickens, then your goats, then your donkeys.
Then you will eat your children, and finally you will eat the dissidents."
But most of the dissidents
left the country before anyone could stick a fork in them. The exodus
of skilled workers crippled the economy further. Businesses lost
management and assets, while unskilled workers became refugees in
neighboring countries that didn't have the money to support them-
the latter transforming Zimbabwe's economic crisis into a regional
one.
That Mugabe has any resources
left to plunder is a function of what is increasingly a remittance
economy. Zimbabwean memoirist Peter Godwin points out that members
of the diaspora are keeping Mugabe in power when the money they
send back to friends and relatives gets confiscated. "Often
that money doesn't even physically get home," says Godwin.
Zimbabwe's schools and health-care system have collapsed, but there's
enough money left to pay for Mugabe's personal priorities: his mansions,
wife Grace's shopping sprees, and loyalty-buying salary hikes for
his security forces.
While Zimbabwe's
self-destruction is extreme, other countries have managed to whip
hyperinflation. Dollarization - a switch to a foreign currency -
is one preferred remedy. Another remedy involves restraining government
spending, a practice known as "shock therapy."
The first option is politically embarrassing for Mugabe (one can't
very well issue daily polemics against the West and then adopt its
dominant currency), and Mugabe is constitutionally incapable of
the second. His only quick fix, then, as international pressure
mounts and he is forced into talks with the opposition party, is
to start from scratch - to move the decimal point a few spaces.
But as long as he stays in power, there's nothing to stop the currency
denominations from spiraling upward again as assets leave the country
on the backs of the people. When will the moment of reckoning finally
be at hand? When the bribery money runs out, as it surely will,
his control of the military will erode, and Mugabe may find himself
in a position familiar to the people he has oppressed- looking down
the barrel of a gun.
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