Hugh Paxton in Harare
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In Robert Mugabe’s Harare, the streets are not paved with gold – they are paved with discarded Zimbabwean dollar bills. And nobody is bothering to pick them up.
With the highest inflation rates in the world and financial chaos at both government and street level, local currency has become a conundrum, even a joke, to many Zimbabweans. Eighty per cent are unemployed and living below the poverty line, according to figures from the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions.
Blessed Mbhoko, a young professional in Harare, has resorted to cutting branches from decorative street trees to fuel a meagre breakfast fire in his kitchen for porridge. “I wake up with no idea what anything will cost. My pirate taxi driver is also in the dark. All we can agree is that my trip to work will cost more,” he said.
As the brutal government crackdown on opposition continues and widens its net, there is no indication that what Gideon Gono, the Reserve Bank Governor, has dubbed “the inflation monster” and “economic HIV” will be curbed, or that the Zimbabwean ordeal will end.
Last week Mr Gono belatedly declared that inflation had reached the 2,200 per cent mark. The declaration had been due the previous month but allegedly had been postponed to avoid embarrassment to President Mugabe as he embarked on a state visit to offer economic advice to Namibia.
The International Monetary Fund described Mr Gono’s statistics as “understated” and said that the inflation figure was closer to 3,000 per cent at the end of February. Economic analysts in Zimbabwe say that the actual rate of inflation could have reached 4,400 per cent and have revised their predicted year-end tally from 5,000 to about 7,000 per cent.
Mr Mugabe, 83, continues to swing verbal fists at the West, particularly Britain, and blames sanctions for his country’s economic and social collapse. The sanctions, imposed by Western powers after widespread malpractice in the 2002 presidential polls, specifically target Mr Mugabe and members of his inner circle and have a negligible influence on the economy, opposition groups say.
Running a business in a hyper-inflationary environment brings with it huge problems, unknown in the West for decades. Old Mutual, the Anglo-South African insurer, has had to change its local dividend payout in just six weeks from just over Z$20 a share to nearly Z$1,250 a share.
Commodity prices have soared in response to Mr Gono’s latest inflation figures.
A 10kg sack of porridge flour, a dietary staple essential to the survival of many Zimbabweans, increased from Z$6,200 to Z$62,000 overnight. The official cost of corn rose 700 per cent. Two litres of cooking oil rose from Z$55,000 to Z$75,000 and fresh milk quadrupled in price.
Yet salaries remain stagnant, with the bulk of civil servants earning Z$200,000 a month. While the ruling elite drive shiny Mercedes and BMWs, life for the ordinary Zimbabwean has become a grim daily battle to survive.
Shops and supermarkets witness scenes reminiscent of the cartoon series Wacky Races as shoppers run to grab products before hurrying staff can attach the day’s latest increased price tags. Tills, cash machines and wallets struggle to accommodate the huge number of bills now needed to purchase basic commodities.
Government response to inflation seems set to feed Mr Gono’s dragon. In a move that has been seen as a 90 per cent devaluation of the currency, a parallel exchange rate of Z$15,000 has been hastily established. It is available only to exporters and the select few.
Stubbornly pegged at an official exchange rate of $1 to Z$250 for ordinary Zimbabweans, the black market exchange market offers $1 for Z$25,000. Z$250 will buy a small boiled sweet and Z$25,000 is a quarter of what will cover a frugal breakfast excursion to a café. The government scheme is to “creatively” encourage exports by purchasing foreign currency at the special “parallel market” exchange rate of Z$15,000. Thus the bank is losing Z$14,750 for every single American dollar that it buys.
Subsidies are nothing new and neither are their disastrous consequences. For more than a year, the Grain Marketing Board bought maize at Z$52,000 a tonne, then sold it on to millers for Z$600 per tonne. “The grain company is still bleeding,” Paul Nyakazeya, a business journalist, said. “The entire economy is fraught with massive distortion. Government purchases fuel at 59 (US) cents and sells at a loss-making Z$325; it costs bakers Z$6,000 to bake bread that the government insists they sell at Z$824.” Another journalist pointed out that a plate of porridge is more expensive than a gram of gold: “This is the season of madness.”
Tutsi Malima is a Zimbabwean who fled into exile in Namibia after Mr Mugabe’s police forced him to personally demolish his home and family clothing shop during the “Drive Out The Trash” shanty town clearance campaign that left more than 500,000 people homeless. “At independence we were the bread basket of Africa. [We’ve gone] from bread basket to basket case.”
Like him, more than two million Zimbabweans have taken refuge in neighbouring African states since the takeover of white-owned farms began seven years ago, sending the economy into freefall. An exile organisation said that a further 400,000 are “waiting it out in England”.
With Mr Mugabe showing no sign of relinquishing power and southern Africa’s “quiet diplomacy” proving impotent to precipitate regime change, the wait shows every indication of being a long one.
Rising sums
$444m foreign investment in Zimbabwe in 1998
$2.5bn Zimbabwe’s foreign debt last year
$109m foreign debt in 1999
2,200% offical rate of inflation
3,000% Rate of inflation estimated by the IMF
Z$250 official exchange rate for US$1
Z$25,000 black market exchange rate
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Are you guys serious?? The problem in Zimbabwe is not going to be solved by looking back on who did or who is to blame. The leaders in Zimbabwe just have to put aside their political differences and just tackle the situation, Mugabe or no Mugabe! I'm a Zimbabwean and to be perfectly honest I care more about the lively hood of the people who live in Zimbabwe than which party is in power. People can continue to blame the British Government or Tony Blair but the reality is that they have got their have their own country to worry about, a country that has been having continuous economic growth for the last 10yrs, compare that to Zimbabwe? Economically the UK is doing well but I do not see the Government buying its ministers flashy cars but Zimbabweâs economy is a shambles and it citizens are suffering to say the least but the Government goes out and buys these flashy car. I think it is so obvious that the Zimbabwean Government is on a different planet from the ordinary Zimbabwean citizen!!
Tichaona, Brighton, England
Live in shame or die with dignity.
The choice is to live in shame like Botswana, which claims independence and stability, with impressive figures of high GDP and low inflation. A country virtually under foreign ownership and control for only a minute and insignificant proportion of the country's wealth is indigenous. Feeding off the crumbs from the table in fear of upsetting their former colonial masters and precious 'foreign investors' who dine on the country's wealth.
Or die in dignity like Zimbabwe, boasting indegenous control of disused factories, unproductive farms, hungry families being fed by a foreign based populace. The fight for self determination of destiny was always going to be a very grim affair.
The situation of haves and have nots has not changed since pre 1980, the whites have only been replaced by blacks.
Munyaradzi, coventry, u.k
Is it not time that the British government who presided over the country during the height of colonialism and in the "free and fair" elections to Mugabe now do something. Their heavy handedness showed no limits when dealing with the previous Rhodesian government. Now that the chickens have come home to roost they seem totally inept and unwilling to intervene. Sudenly it is an African problem to be sorted out by Africans and in particular SADC. Well we all know how Africa deals with Africa and that is to continue to condone any sort of tyranical rule so long as it does not mean having to actually face up to fact and admit to the world that one of their own is guilty of all of this.The British government can go to war in Iraq but doesn't have enough world power to sort out Mugabe!!! I will continue to watch this scene with utter incredulity at the bigotry shown by both the British and the SADC leaders whilst a human tradgedy unfolds.
Andrew, Johannesburg, South Africa
The Zimbabwe Economic meltdown did not just happen because President Mugabe is at the helm. After the land reform program which the UK did not like because it dispossesed theri kith and kin London went out full throttle to organise the EU and their Anglo Saxon cousins in US, Canada, New Zealand and ofcourse the genetically modified Australians to gang agains Zimbabwe and made sure they starved it of Balance of payment support from the Brettton Institutions to which Zimbabwe is a member. It is a miracle that Zimbabwe is still standing after seven years of Blairs econmic onslaught. We might be having problems here but we are proud to be what we are no longer a colony! Stop attacking our neighbours for taking a different view from the Anglo Saxony view. We are proud of the independence of mind of President Mbeki for he knows if Mugabe goes, he is the next target of the Anglo Saxon imperial dominance and they would want to tame him. Long live President Mbeki!
For Zimbabwe we will survive
bongani ncube, Harare, Zimbabwe
The British would have preferred Bishop Muzorewa who was far more moderate but perceived as a puppet by the local population. Surely fellow African states in the Commonwealth share a large portion of the responsibility for this tragedy by refusing to take any meaningful action. Zimbabwe is extremely dependent on South Africa and Mbeki could stop this dire situatation very quickly, but he does nothing whilst people starve. Is there any wonder that the West despairs at the leadership in Africa.
Jane, Banstead, Surrey
And of course let us remember that the World says it is Africas problem; Africa says it is SADC's problem; SADC says it is Zimbabwes problem;
Mugabe says Zimbabwe is his problem and he will solve every one of his problems.
The marxist in charge of Zimbabwe has no private sector getting in his way, he has rid the nation of the white colonists and soon he will have solved the problem of democracy.
He has succeeded at everything he set out to do.
Which leaves us with one question:
Is a state which has achieved every one of its governments goals a failed state?
Chris Cross, Harare, Zimbabwe
One should perhaps remind oneself that it was the British who quite deliberately and directly placed Robert Mugabe on the throne he occupies today. Furthermore, by acting, as the ex colonial power, with even less aplomb than might the French under the same circumstances, successive British gvernments have shown themselves woefully inadequate in situations where responsible foreign policy would have been, to say the least, helpful.
Rodrigo, Norwich, UK