http://www.guardian.co.uk/zimbabwe/article/0,,2127297,00.html

Mugabe's price cuts bring cheap TVs today, new crisis tomorrow
Police and Zanu-PF lead bargain hunt after officials order shops to act

Chris McGreal in Harare
Monday July 16, 2007
The Guardian

Zimbabweans are shopping like there's no tomorrow. With police
patrolling the aisles of Harare's electrical shops to enforce massive
government-ordered price cuts, the widescreen TVs were the first
things to go, for as little as £20. Across the country, shoes,
clothes, toiletries and different kinds of food were all swept from
the shelves as a nation with the world's fastest shrinking economy
gorged itself on one last spending spree.

Car dealers said officials were trying to force them to sell vehicles
at the official exchange rate, effectively meaning that a car costing
£15,000 could be had for £30 by changing money on the blackmarket. The
owners of several dealerships have been arrested.

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President Robert Mugabe's order that all shop prices be cut by at
least half, and sometimes several times more, has forced stores to
open to hordes of customers waving thick blocks of near worthless
money given new value by the price cuts. The police and groups of
ruling party supporters could be seen leading the charge for a
bargain.

Mr Mugabe has accused business interests of fuelling inflation,
running at about 20,000%, to bring down his government. A hotline is
in place to report "overcharging", and retailers who flinch at
slashing prices are being dragged before the courts. Several thousand
have been arrested for "profiteering" over the past week, including
the chief executives of the biggest retailers in the country, some of
them foreign-owned.

Economists say the price cuts will only deepen the national crisis,
leaving many shops bare because they will not be able to afford to
restock while official retail prices remain lower than the cost of
buying wholesale or importing. Mr Mugabe has dismissed such warnings
as "bookish economics".

Some businesses fear that Operation Reduce Prices is intended to pin
the blame on the private sector for Zimbabwe's economic problems as a
step towards seizing control of many companies in the way that
white-owned farms were expropriated at the beginning of the decade,
sparking the crisis.

Parliament is expected to pass legislation in the coming weeks that
will effectively give a controlling stake in all publicly traded
companies to ruling party loyalists and others chosen by the
government.

The impact of the price cuts was felt almost immediately as fuel
virtually disappeared from sale after garages were forced to sell
petrol for 23p a litre, less than they paid the state-owned supplier.

The police and army broke the locks on petrol pumps at some garages
and tanks ran dry amid panic buying. Now petrol is available only on
the blackmarket, at more than seven times the official price and three
times what garages had been charging. By Saturday, most minibus taxis
had gone from the roads because drivers could not find petrol. Crowds
of workers were left on kerbs for hours trying to get to or from their
jobs.

The riot police had to be called out to the South African-owned Makro
super store in Harare after thousands of people stormed the shop after
it was forced to slash prices. The scenes were replicated in stores
throughout Harare. The Bata shoe chain's shops were stripped bare in
two days by people snapping up pairs for as little as 20p.

Food is still available, although bread, sugar, cornmeal and other
staples are hard to find, and meat has all but disappeared because
livestock owners say it is now uneconomic to slaughter their animals.
Much of the meat that is available is goat slaughtered in backyards
and sold in informal markets.

The rest of the food supply - already severely undermined by drought
and lack of production on land seized from white farmers - is also
under threat after Mr Mugabe threatened to take over manufacturers if
they shut down their plants on the grounds that they were uneconomic.
"Factories must produce. If they don't, we will take you over ... We
will seize the factories," he said.

Last week, the government said it was reviving the State Trading
Corporation, shut down two decades ago because of mismanagement, to
take over businesses that collapse or are seized. But many factories
are unable to produce goods because electricity and water are
unavailable for much of the day.

The price cuts were ordered by the joint operation command, a
committee of army, intelligence and police officers closely tied to
the ruling Zanu-PF and chaired by Mr Mugabe.

The government despatched security personnel and party cadres,
including its notorious "green bomber" thugs, to enforce the price
cuts, in some cases by beating up shop managers who did not implement
them quickly enough.

"Zanu-PF is at heart a military organisation and that's exactly how
it's gone about this, as a military operation," said David Coltart, an
opposition MP. "The benefits will only last a few weeks at most and
then we're going to have to live with the consequences. They believe
they can dictate price cuts and print money with gay abandon but
ultimately it will rebound. Not ultimately, very soon."

Business leaders say one reason for the price cuts is to quell unrest
in the security forces, which saw a dramatic increase in inflation
last month wipe out a 600% pay rise in May. They also fear the
campaign is a step towards doing to private companies what was done to
white farmers. Mr Mugabe is pressing a law through parliament in the
coming weeks that will require all businesses to be at least 51%
Zimbabwean owned and managed.

Zanu-PF has dressed up the move as an affirmative action measure to
help previously disadvantaged black people. But firms will not be able
to choose their new partners. They will be selected by the government.
The measure will be paid for by taxing the same businesses forced to
hand over control.

Mr Coltart said the move was essentially a means for the ruling party
and military to take over the economy. "We can't expect a rational
policy to emerge. You will see the military in charge of
manufacturing. We've already got the military in charge of railways
and grain marketing and the electoral process. There are military men
now involved in all sorts of other businesses. The militarisation of
the state will continue," he said.

In a letter to the cabinet the governor of Zimbabwe's central bank,
Gideon Gono - until recently considered one of Mr Mugabe's closest
allies - said that price controls must be scrapped and foreign
investments and property rights protected to put the country on the
path to economic recovery.

He also said that the seizure of white-owned farms had been
counterproductive because it cost Zimbabwe foreign currency earnings
by losing tobacco exports and scaring off investors.

Many of Mr Mugabe's opponents agree with Mr Gono but they are quietly
heartened by the latest upheaval. They are fond of quoting the US
ambassador to Harare, Christopher Dell, who recently said that Zanu-PF
was committing regime change on itself with its disastrous economic
policies and that Mr Mugabe would be gone by the end of the year.

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