Zimbabwe president U-turns on scrapping grain subsidies – state media 

Source: Zimbabwe president U-turns on scrapping grain subsidies – state media – Reuters

Zimbabwean President Emmerson Mnangagwa addresses mourners gathered at former President Robert Mugabe’s ‘Blue Roof’ residence in Harare, Zimbabwe, September 12, 2019. REUTERS/Philimon Bulawayo/File Photo

HARARE (Reuters) – Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government will scrap its plan to remove grain subsidies next year, a move it says will protect impoverished citizens from rising food prices, state media reported on Thursday.

The country is experiencing its worst economic crisis in a decade, marked by soaring inflation and shortages of food, fuel, medicines and electricity.

Half of Zimbabwe’s population needs food aid after a devastating drought across the southern Africa region, worsened by an economy expected to shrink by 6.5% this year and month-on-month inflation at a four-month high of 38.75%.

Zimbabwe’s grain agency buys grain from farmers and releases it onto the market at subsidised prices, costing the treasury tens of millions of U.S. dollars. The government had planned to remove the subsidy in its 2020 budget.

Mnangagwa was quoted in the state-owned Herald newspaper as saying that would no longer happen.

“We cannot remove the subsidy,” he was quoted as saying. “So I am restoring it so that the price of mealie-meal is also reduced (next year).”

The removal of the government’s grain subsidy would have seen a 10 kg bag of maize meal, the country’s staple, costing 102 Zimbabwean dollars (about US$6.30), against 60 Zimbabwe dollars now, in a country with 90% unemployment.

Last week, the government removed import controls on maize and wheat flour to try to prevent food shortages.

Zimbabwe’s reintroduction of a local currency after 10 years of dollarisation, coupled with the removal of subsidies on fuel and electricity, unleashed inflation, triggering frequent and sometimes deadly protests against Mnangagwa’s government.

Rights groups say at least 17 people were killed and hundreds were arrested in January, after security forces cracked down on protests against fuel price increases. Police have banned further protests.

Early hopes that Mnangagwa, who took over from the long-ruling former president Robert Mugabe after a November 2017 coup, would revive the economy are fast fading amid a worsening economic crisis and slow-paced political reforms.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 3
  • comment-avatar
    ace mukadota 4 years ago

    Inflation figures in above article totally INCORRECT Comrades. !

    Professor Steve Hanke said yesterday :-

    Patients at Zimbabwe’s hospitals are being asked to bring their own medical supplies. Budget cuts, a dollar shortage, and spiraling inflation have all led to Zimbabwe’s hospitals being chronically undersupplied. Annual inflation today is 587%/yr.

  • comment-avatar
    Saddened 4 years ago

    When the country pays for the ministers to fly to China/Singapore and India for medical treatment there are no funds left for the people of the country. No electricity, no water, no money, so food, soon a tax on air and sunshine.

  • comment-avatar
    Flick 4 years ago

    When will Zimbabwe get someone with just an iota of ability at the helm. Mnangagwa&co don’t have a clue, that’s for sure.