Inflation nightmare returns to haunt Zimbabwe

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HARARE, April 21, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – The price of bread almost doubled for
Zimbabweans last week, as the inflation nightmare that marked the rule of
long-time authoritarian leader Robert Mugabe returns to haunt his successor
Emmerson Mnangagwa.

There have been warnings of the mental and physical toll the rampant price
increases will have on Zimbabweans after the cost of a loaf of bread rose
from $1.80 to $3.50, and a tub of butter shot up to $17 from $8.50.

Mnangagwa pledged to revive his country’s moribund economy when Mugabe was
toppled in 2017 after 37 years in power.

But after the central bank unveiled a new monetary policy in February,
introducing a new local currency, prices of goods and services have
skyrocketed at rates unseen in a decade.

The disparity between the official and parallel market exchange rates has
been rapidly widening, triggering price hikes of up to 300 percent.

The chief of the Zimbabwe Congress of Trade Unions, Japhet Moyo, recalls
meeting a man who saw the price of medicine for his chronic illness rise so
much in two months that it now costs almost his entire salary.

In February, the man bought a month’s supply of the drugs for $95. This
month he forked out $300. His monthly salary is $320.

“I asked him how he managed to meet the rest of his monthly expenses and
he broke down weeping,” Moyo told AFP.

Moyo is angry at the government for “putting on a brave face and giving
the impression that the economy is on a rebound but on the ground things are
going in the opposite direction”.

– ‘Back to 2008’ –

The crisis has brought back memories of a decade ago when hyperinflation
peaked at a grotesque 500 billion percent, wiping out the Zimbabwean dollar.

“We are back to 2008,” said Tonderai Chitsvari, a resident in the
Kuwadzana township of the capital Harare. “It’s a miracle how people are
surviving”.

A shortage of raw materials has caused huge difficulties for the country’s
manufacturing sector.

“Last year, we spent US$2.3 billion importing things like fruits and
vegetables, soya beans, wheat… toothpaste and pharmaceuticals,” said Harare
economist Gift Mugano.

“This is a sign that we are not producing even the basics,” he added.

“We are not talking about manufacturing an aeroplane here. We are talking
about saving scarce foreign currency by growing wheat to bake our bread and
soya beans to produce our own cooking oil.”

Confederation of Zimbabwe Industries leader Sifelani Jabangwe said the
government needs to channel scarce foreign currency to shore up distressed
manufacturers.

“We need to reduce… imports and promote local production,” he added.

Formerly a regional breadbasket, Zimbabwe’s economy has been in a dire
state for more than a decade, with the unemployment level soaring to more
than 90 percent.

Many local companies have been forced to move abroad or shut up shop,
while those that remained are operating below capacity due to the lack of
foreign currency to import raw materials or upgrade machinery.

Public anger over the economy contributed to the military intervention in
November 2017 that finally brought down Mugabe, then 93.

Mnangagwa took over and went on to win disputed elections in July last
year, vowing to turn Zimbabwe into a middle income economy by 2030.

But less than three months after the vote, the economic turmoil of the
Mugabe-era returned when a new two-percent tax on electronic transactions in
October spawned shock price increases and fuel shortages.

In January of this year the president imposed a more than 100-percent fuel
price hike — purportedly to ease the shortages — but that sparked
countrywide demonstrations that left at least 17 people dead when soldiers
opened fire on the protesters.

– ‘Inhumane, unethical, unpatriotic’ –

Mnangagwa marked the country’s 39th independence anniversary on Thursday
by slamming the new round of price hikes.

“Government is alarmed by the recent, wanton and indiscriminate increases
of prices which has brought about untold suffering to the people,” he said.

It “is inhumane, unethical, unpatriotic and goes against the grain of
economic dialogue which the second republic has espoused,” he told the crowd
at a sports stadium in Harare.

Veteran independent economist John Robertson warned of the toll that the
economic chaos was having on Zimbabweans.

“Standards of living are going down” Robertson told AFP. “It’s going to
affect their health, both mentally and physically, and reduce productivity.”

Moyo said people “are giving into stress. That’s why we are having so many
cases of people said to have died after a short illness.”

And the main opposition leader Nelson Chamisa warned in his independence
day message on Twitter that “the stark reality is that most are reeling from
abject poverty and frustrations. State decay, corruption & violence have
shuttered the 1980 uhuru dream & ruined livelihoods”.