Categories: Stories

In Zimbabwe it’s as if people live with a two-week outlook on anything

Officially, there are no price controls in Zimbabwe. Price controls are bad, and in a new administration that is supposedly trying to disentangle itself from yesteryear-economic blunders, talk of any sort of price fixing should be unfathomable.

Yet, it appears Zimbabwe is headed back to the heady days of price controls. In the face of what are deemed “economic saboteurs” and “unscrupulous profiteers,” ZANU-PF has in the past not hesitated to wield its power on the said “truant” businesses through such measures as threatening to revoke operating licenses and even outright arrests.

Toward the end of 2007, faced with inflation hovering around the 20 000 percent mark, government simply decreed that prices revert to June 18 levels.

Such was the unbridled manner the price controls were effected that, a reported 1 768 business people were arrested and arraigned before the courts for non-compliance with the price controls.

This exercise will no doubt be most remembered for the arrest of then OK Zimbabwe chief executive, Willard Zireva who faced 41 counts of overcharging, allegedly done by some of the retailer’s branches.

To top it off, shortages of basic commodities witnessed at the time in shops, due to the shortage of foreign currency to restock were blamed at “saboteurs.”

Then Minister of Trade, Obert Mpofu, reportedly blamed the food shortages on Non-Governmental Organizations, which he accused of “hoarding food so they can distribute it at election time in an effort to topple the government.”

Recently, talk of ‘price monitors’ and ‘revoking of licenses’ has become normal Zimbabwean parlance.

Vice President Kembo Mohadi warned that fuel retailers risked having their licenses revoked for selling fuel above the gazetted price recently.

Backed into a corner, government has often favored the stick as opposed to the carrot. Mangaliso Ndlovu the current Minister of Industry and Commerce was quoted in the state media as saying, “We will be able to track where the sources of price increases are. We want to urge those who are profiteering that we will take measures against them.”

By measures, he means withdrawal of RBZ foreign currency allocations. Nothing new!

The Zimbabwean experience shows perhaps how our national psyche and response to issues has become secular.

After all, the economy faces the same problems repeatedly.  When the market fundamentals start shifting, and prices rise, government’s natural response is to label retailers as “saboteurs” and “profiteers.”

Faced with uncertainty, – and cannot blame them – consumers rush to hoard essential supplies in anticipation of empty shelves, only to seek to de-stock days later as other pressing needs demand the cash locked up in hoarded goods.

If anything, the recent spike, plunge and spike again in both the stock market liquidity and especially the parallel market rates point to the short-termism that has gripped Zimbabwe.

It’s almost as if people live with just a 2-week outlook on anything, and no one sees anything beyond that length of time.

Not government, not businesses and most certainly not the individual consumers. This has sadly been the case for the past 2 decades and a half. History certainly rhymes in Zimbabwe!

By Perry Munzwembiri for the Source

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This post was last modified on October 18, 2018 2:11 pm

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Charles Rukuni

The Insider is a political and business bulletin about Zimbabwe, edited by Charles Rukuni. Founded in 1990, it was a printed 12-page subscription only newsletter until 2003 when Zimbabwe's hyper-inflation made it impossible to continue printing.

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