|
This is a textbook case of how to create hyperinflation by
thinking you can print all the money you want.
It is interesting to note that Mugabe blames Britain for
trying to undermine his regime when in fact while under
British control, Zimbabwe was Africa's second richest country
(behind South Africa).
But under Mugabe's reign Zimbabwe has become a basket case due
primarily to misguided economic policy.
Several years ago Mugabe nationalized the large farms and took
control from productive farmers and gave control to his cronies (who
knew nothing about farming) and then he wondered why farm production
fell. Duh?
Now inflation is increasing so fast his central statistical
office can't keep up. And they are instituting yet another program
to try to
" make food and other basic
commodities available to vulnerable segments of the population being
hammered by hyperinflation."
The following article by the Voice of America radio shows the
depths to which Zimbabwe has fallen. ~editor
Zimbabwean Hyperinflation Officially Estimated At 2.2 Million
Percent
By Blessing Zulu
Washington
16 July 2008
Zimbabwe's central bank governor made known on Wednesday that
inflation has reached an annual rate of some 2.2 million percent in
the first official disclosure of such data since the country's
Central Statistical Office announced a rate of 165,000% for
February.
Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Governor Gideon Gono offered the
estimate during a speech at the launch of a program the government
said would make food and other basic commodities available to
vulnerable segments of the population being hammered by
hyperinflation.
Central Statistical Office Acting Director Moffat Nyoni confirmed
the figure with the caveat that it was rough measure based on
limited price data. His office stopped issuing inflation data after
the February report, saying it could not obtain valid prices from
stores.
President Robert Mugabe, launching the initiative, blamed Britain
for the economic crisis and accused it of trying to achieve regime
change in a bid to control Zimbabwe's resources.
British-based Zimbabwean economist Prosper Chitambara told
reporter Blessing Zulu of VOA's Studio 7 for Zimbabwe that the
inflation estimate of 2.2 million percent points to continued
deterioration and a plunge "into the economic abyss."
Continually accelerating inflation spells disaster for many
Zimbabweans who are barely able to feed themselves. More than 2
million Zimbabweans will be going hungry in the months ahead,
according to the United Nations World Food Program and Food and
Agriculture Organization, which say that figure could surge to more
than 5 million by early next year.
WFP Southern Africa spokesman Richard Lee told VOA correspondent
Delia Robertson that hyperinflation will have a devastating impact
on the most vulnerable people in the country.
Zimbabwean consumer George Bhamu of the eastern city of Mutare
said inflation is making it impossible for families to afford basic
commodities they need to live day by day.
A Chivhu resident who asked to be identified only as Innocent,
said inflation is obliging many Zimbabweans to make a living by
means that are sometimes less than reputable.
|