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Zim shops full - for rich
Article By:
Tue, 16 Jun 2009 09:42
Zimbabwe's once-deserted supermarkets are full again, after the
country reined in its world-record hyperinflation. But there's no
wait at the tills - most people simply can't afford to buy
anything.
"It a luxury for those who have money to buy," said Marian
Chituku, a 36-year-old mother of three, holding a loaf of bread as
she walked out of a supermarket in the working-class suburb of
Chitungwiza, outside the capital.
"The shops are full, but to us there is no difference because we
cannot afford the goods. They are as good as non-existent. We only
see them on the shelves."
Chituku said her family has tea — without milk — in the late morning, skips lunch and then eat dinner as their only meal in
order to stretch her income from a vegetable stall in the township.
But in Harare's leafy suburbs, supermarkets are a shopper's
paradise for the select few deciding between imported haddock
fillets or full-shell mussels.
"You can get
everything you want here," Josephine Marucchi, a
housewife from the posh suburb of Mount Pleasant, said pausing to
choose from the various brands of cheese before completing the
sentence: "as long as you have money.
"It's completely different from last year when people had money
and the shops were empty," she added.
The centre of the shop looked like a gym, stocked with modern
exercise gadgets, where an assistant explained to a customer how to
operate a treadmill.
Last year supermarkets across Zimbabwe resembled empty sheds as
local manufacturers either pulled down the shutters or operated at
less than half their capacity because of hyperinflation, which
rendered the local currency unusable.
The shortages were exacerbated after the government launched a
blitz ordering businesses to slash prices, with long-ruling
President Robert Mugabe accusing some businesses of colluding with
his western foes to try to topple him.
Things improved
after Mugabe and his one-time rival Morgan
Tsvangirai formed a unity government in February. The local
currency has been abandoned and import restrictions lifted, which
has erased the hyperinflation estimated in multiples of billions
last year.
Now prices, all in US dollars or South African rands, are
actually declining, but more than half the population still depends
on international food aid.
"The major challenge is affordability," Harare-based economist
Prosper Chatambara told AFP.
"The majority of workers are earning US$100 a month, and
yet the poverty datum line is put conservatively at $437, so
there is a deficit of nearly $350.
"Most families have to reprioritise their needs. In most cases
basic have become luxuries."
Zimbabwe's biggest employer is the government, which is paying
workers only $100 a month while it tries to win
international support for its plan to revive the economy and the
civil service, including schools
and hospitals.
Until the government finds a way of increasing wages, the gap
between rich and poor is unlikely to change. The painfully obvious
disparities have become a fact of life, seeping even into local
music.
"Some die from over-eating," goes a hit song by Chiwoniso
Mararire. "Others die of hunger."