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Strategies & Market Trends : Africa and its Issues- Why Have We Ignored Africa?

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From: TimF6/25/2007 4:43:02 PM
   of 1267
 
Problems in the 19th

How does a Zimbabwean golfer avoid hyperinflation? By paying for their
halfway and 19th hole beers before teeing off. This is the advice from the
CEO of the Harare-based Imara Asset Management, John Legat, after the beer a
four-ball ordered before teeing off at one of Harare's championship golf
courses had risen in price by the time they reached the turn. The bad news
was that by post-match drinks, the prices had risen again...

fmft.net

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Zimbabwe inflation 'to hit 1.5m%'

Andrew Meldrum in Johannesburg
Thursday June 21, 2007
Guardian Unlimited

Zimbabwe's inflation will rocket to 1.5m% before the end of the year, the US
ambassador to Harare predicted today, forecasting massive disruption and
instability that will drive President Robert Mugabe from office.
In a telephone interview with the Guardian, Christopher Dell said prices
were going up twice a day, sapping popular confidence in a government that
is now "committing regime change on itself".

"I believe inflation will hit 1.5m% by the end of 2007, if not before," Mr
Dell said. "I know that sounds stratospheric but, looking at the way things
are going, I believe it is a modest forecast."

Zimbabwe's official inflation is 4,500% but independent economists and
retailers say it is actually above 11,000% and picking up speed. The black
market rate for the pound soared from Z$160,000 last week to Z$400,000 this
week. The US dollar rate has topped Z$250,000, while the official rate is
fixed at just Z$250. Mr Mugabe stubbornly insists that the Zimbabwe currency
must not be devalued.
"Prices are going up twice a day, in some cases doubling several times a
week," said Mr Dell, who is approaching the end of his posting to Zimbabwe.
"It destabilises everything. People have completely lost faith in the
currency and that means they have lost faith in the government that issues
it.

"By carrying out disastrous economic policies, the Mugabe government is
committing regime change upon itself," he said. "Things have reached a
critical point. I believe the excitement will come in a matter of months, if
not weeks. The Mugabe government is reaching end game, it is running out of
options."

For Zimbabweans living in the turmoil of economic meltdown, hyperinflation
is spreading poverty, as even basic goods become unaffordable. Supermarkets'
trollies lie idle as few can afford to buy more than a handful of goods.
Government regulations will only permit withdrawals from banks of Z$1.5m per
day, which is not enough to buy a week's worth of groceries.

At golf courses, golfers pay for their drinks before they set off on their
round, because the price will have gone up by the time they have finished
the 18th hole. One individual was recently told by a pension company that it
would no longer send him statements as his fund was worth less than the
price of a stamp.

"I can barely cope with inflation in the thousands, but millions? We will
die," said Iddah Mandaza, a Harare factory worker. Mr Mandaza said some
workers are now saving on transport costs by "going to their jobs on Monday
and sleeping at the workplace until Friday. They all share their meals.
That's what they do to get by."

Many Zimbabweans are resorting to barter. "I traded some soap for two
buckets of maize meal [Zimbabwe's staple food]. It was far much better than
trying to buy it in the shops," said worker Richard Mukondo. "People in the
rural areas are even worse off. You can see they are hungry and their
clothes are in tatters. They trade in whatever they can produce: tomatoes,
onions, chickens and eggs."

Tony Hawkins, professor of economics at the University of Zimbabwe, said
that no one holds cash in the country any more. "People spend it as soon as
they get it. Goods hold their value, not money. The government has run out
of solutions. At this rate perhaps inflation could hit 1m%, but one gets a
sense that things will crack before then."

At the other end of the technological scale, enterprising Zimbabweans abroad
have set up internet trading schemes, such as Mukuru.com, in which
Zimbabweans overseas pay for goods with foreign currency and then vouchers
for fuel, food and medicines are sent to recipients in Zimbabwe via email or
on their cell phones.

This business has thrived because more than three million Zimbabweans - a
quarter of the country's 12 million people - now live abroad. Half of
Zimbabwe's families depend on remittances from overseas to pay basic monthly
bills, according to a recent survey by the University of Zimbabwe.

Mr Dell, 51, who has had a tumultuous three years as ambassador to Zimbabwe,
said that Mr Mugabe faces further trouble from his army, which used to be
considered solidly loyal to the president. Last week six men, including an
army private and a retired senior officer, were charged in court for
plotting against the president. He said the allegations of the coup plot
show divisions within Mr Mugabe's ruling party, the Zimbabwe African
National Union-Patriotic Front (Zanu-PF).

"I don't believe it was a real coup plot. I think it shows one side of
Zanu-PF plotting against the other. The bitter factional infighting is now
dragging in the military. That cannot be good news for Mugabe," said Mr
Dell. South African president Thabo Mbeki's efforts to mediate between
Zanu-PF and the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) are "the
last great hope for a peaceful resolution to Zimbabwe's crisis", Mr Dell
said.

zimbabwesituation.com
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