Anger, despair in Zimbabwe as receding economy shatters Zimbabwe’s post-Mugabe prosperity hopes
January 15, 2019980 views0 comments
Hopes of an economic revival in Zimbabwe lie in tatters 14 months after President Emmerson Mnangagwa took office, as the nation reels from foreign exchange and fuel shortages, strikes and a dearth of political leadership.
Bloomberg reports that disgruntlement with falling living standards spilled onto the streets of Harare, the capital, and other towns at the beginning of the working week with thousands of people heeding a call by the country’s largest labour group to strike against massive fuel-price increases. Five people were killed and 24 hurt in clashes between the police and demonstrators, according to aNewsDay newspaper report,
citing the Zimbabwe Association of Doctors for Human Rights.

“You can’t blame people for being angry when there’s no money and the struggle is so real,” Nyarai Kumira, 32, an unemployed Harare resident, said Tuesday. “People are suffering. They’ve got only one avenue and that’s anger because so many can’t afford to eat properly.”
Under Mnangagwa’s predecessor Robert Mugabe, the seizure of white-owned farmland by ruling-party militants slashed agriculture production, triggered hyperinflation and a decade of economic stagnation, and forced the country to abolish the use of its currency and switch to the U.S. dollar.
A turnaround looked conceivable after Mnangagwa, 76, took power in November and won a disputed election in July last year, but his pledges to create jobs and draw billions of dollars in foreign investment remain unmet, with businesses and consumers crippled by the lack of foreign exchange.
Mnangagwa’s decision to proceed with a planned trip to Russia, Kazakhstan, Belarus, Azerbaijan and a World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland, in the midst of the crisis to drum up investment and loans has drawn the ire of his struggling countrymen who consider the former spy chief insensitive to their plight.
“About 90 percent of us are self-employed or unemployed,” said Jessica Moyo, who works as a seamstress in Harare. “Even if you have a job, you’re probably earning about $300 a month and transport already costs you about 20 to 30 percent of your income. Now it’s going to be three times as much, so who suffers? The poor, because the ruling elite aren’t feeling hardship.”
While the official inflation rate stands at 31 percent, economists say that figure is probably understated, and there are big price discrepancies depending on whether goods are paid for electronically or with banknotes. Shops regularly run out of goods such as bread and coffee, and motorists line up for hours or even days outside filling stations to buy fuel.
The main opposition Movement for Democratic Change says Mnangagwa’s administration has mismanaged the currency, failed to bring corruption, inflation and the budget deficit under control and unfairly raised taxes targeting the poor. Security Minister Owen Ncube in turn blamed the MDC for organizing the three-day strike against the fuel-price increases and the chaos that ensued.
Tendai Tobaiwa, 48, who sells vegetables and fruit from a wheelbarrow in the city center, said while the situation had become untenable for ordinary people, the ruling elite seemed to carry on as usual.
“Some drive Porsches, can you believe it?” he said. “The ruling party doesn’t even think of our suffering, only their bank balances, their cars, their big homes.”
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