|
Back to Index
Comments and observations on the RBZ Nov 20 statement
John Robertson
November 26, 2008
The Reserve
Bank Governor-s continued reluctance to admit that market
distortions are likely to cause other market distortions appears
to be behind his latest intemperate attack on the business sector.
To him, the only acceptable explanations for anything are those
that ensure that all the blame is placed somewhere other than on
the Reserve Bank or the government.
The Governor-s
latest efforts start with condemnations of media campaigns that
have tried to vilify the Reserve Bank, and of smear campaigns that
have argued that he is personally to blame for Zimbabwe-s
current hardships. However, his entire defence is to argue that
the "facts clearly demonstrate how the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange
had become the epicentre of economic destruction". If the
Governor-s more colourful words are removed, the facts presented
are:
- The ZSE allowed
some stockbrokers to bid up share prices, although they had no
money to pay for them;
- The profits
made on selling the shares show up as high demand for cash that
is beyond the Reserve Bank-s ability to meet;
- The Stock
Exchange was deliberately indexing the entire stock market to
movements in Old Mutual share prices;
- Share prices
have frequently risen steeply even though none were traded;
- Old Mutual
share price movements have shown no relationship with the company-s
performance or conditions in the economy.
Dr Gono presents
these facts as accusations of professional misconduct, but most
of them are no more than descriptions of normal market activity.
The circumstances in the market itself are far from normal, but
the Governor-s only comments on that subject are intended
to deflect the blame for all distortions onto others.
Stockbrokers
are usually acting on behalf of their clients, but whether their
buying or selling orders are for their clients or for themselves,
the buyers want what they have paid for and the sellers want to
be paid. Buyers and sellers work through the stock exchange, which
is simply a market through which deals are arranged and completed
under rules designed to ensure that transactions are carried out
efficiently. What buyers, sellers and stockbrokers might get up
to is not the market-s responsibility.
This makes
the claim that this market has become the "epicentre of economic
destruction" absurd. Trying to buy something that can be sold
later at a profit is entirely normal conduct. If this profit becomes
large because of the scarcities of goods in the market and/or the
scarcities of the foreign currency needed to import them, the resulting
price increases are not the fault of the market, or the buyers or
the sellers.
But buyers do
have to work within the law: writing a cheque for an amount in excess
of the balance in a buyer-s bank account is illegal. In terms
of the law, such a buyer becomes answerable to the seller, possibly
through the courts.
Sometimes the
buyers- or sellers- conduct is chosen to reduce risks
or to prevent outright losses and yes, it is sometimes designed
to extract the best possible profits. If good profit prospects are
then exaggerated by the Reserve Bank choosing to add enormously
to the Zimbabwe dollars that can be spent, the fault does not lie
with those who make the profit.
The fault lies
entirely on the shoulders of those who created the scarcities, anomalies
and distortions in the first place. These powerful forces so directly
determine the conduct of buyers and sellers that any policy choices
that do not effectively deal with them will be no solution at all.
Scarcities account
for most of the problems. For goods that used to be in reasonably
good supply, the reasons for each and every scarcity can be traced
back to some government policy decision. The loss of Zimbabwe-s
large-scale farming companies caused reduced supplies of food as
well as most non-food agricultural commodities, and their lower
production caused lower deliveries to the manufacturers and retailers,
lower foreign earnings, lower employment, lower investment levels
and lower tax revenues for government.
Falling export
revenues did not only mean that Zimbabwe could afford fewer imports.
The country also could not afford to settle outstanding debt. Potential
lenders were quick to decide Zimbabwe could not be trusted to settle
new debts, and when the Zimbabwe government decided to cancel certain
property rights and to break the collateral link between farmers
and banks within Zimbabwe, the moves reinforced the external financiers-
decisions to keep their distance.
Several other
linkages can be identified. When policy decisions caused confidence
to fall, the Zimbabwe dollar fell too, prompting government to fix
the exchange rate. At the fixed exchange rate, mining and manufacturing
exports became less profitable, so a whole new rash of falls affected
employment, investment and tax revenues.
And when government-s
rising borrowings to make up for declining tax inflows became too
expensive because of the rising rates of interest, government set
interest rates so low that savings were effectively confiscated.
As savings disappeared, investment fell even further, forcing the
emigration of those looking for work and of many who had jobs, but
saw little future.
Just about every
identifiable problem today can be shown to have their origins in
dubious policy choices. This remains true whether the challenge
is to account for electricity and water cuts, or the loss of nurses,
teachers, doctors, engineers and accountants, or the loss of access
to lines of credit from international banks or the loss of stand-by
facilities from international development agencies.
Price controls,
justified by false claims against traders and enforced by political
violence, must be added to the picture, along with other forms of
intimidation that were intended to generate compliance and obedience.
By carefully
redefining the word "sanctions" to include every risk-avoiding
decision taken by every individual, government or agency that has
chosen not to endorse economically damaging or unjust policies,
Dr Gono has tried to shift the blame onto anyone who dares to disrespect
the sovereign status of the country and the sovereign rights of
its leaders.
Until a few
days ago, that line seemed still to be working. SADC parroted the
cries for the removal of sanctions, the Pan-African Parliament passed
a resolution to the same effect, the impartial mediator in the power-sharing
negotiations, Thabo Mbeki, followed the same line and the African
Union was also persuaded that the lifting of sanctions would result
in Zimbabwe-s economic turn-around.
But this week,
the scene has changed. At home, the Zimbabwe currency has become
almost worthless, banks have been marginalised, production in every
sector has fallen to unsustainable levels, useful wages cannot be
paid and services are collapsing. Disease outbreaks are threatening
thousands and Zimbabwe is at last being seen as a threat to regional
stability.
Regional leaders
are losing patience and support for Robert Mugabe is being far less
readily offered. The major change has followed upon his displays
of arrogance and contempt for important people who have been trying
to help. The major effect so far has been a far greater concentration
of criticism than ever before.
As news of government-s
plans to strip the remaining resources out of the pension funds
becomes more widely known, as the need for alternatives to Zimbabwe
dollars turns into a threat to the welfare of millions of Zimbabweans,
as the efforts made to stifle activity on the stock exchange gather
momentum and as food supplies dwindle, the sheer impossibility of
the situation continuing will begin to develop its own dynamic.
At this stage,
the re-appointment of Dr Gono as Reserve Bank Governor for a second
five-year term does not seem likely to make a difference. In his
latest statement he re-confirms his conviction that sanctions are
the cause of every one of the problems, so none of the measures
needed to rebuild Zimbabwe-s capacity to produce, earn, export,
attract investment or generate tax revenues are yet being addressed.
Political, rather
than economic policy changes are needed to make a breakthrough.
Hopefully the pressures will soon reach the levels needed to bring
about the necessary changes.
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.
TOP
|