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Africa Subsaharan
Shops emptied as panic grips Zimbabwe
2007-07-05
Panic buying swept through the streets of Zimbabwe yesterday, as stores ran out of basic goods and shopkeepers complained that they were selling goods at a loss after the government ordered prices to be halved in a last-ditch effort to tackle hyper-inflation. Shoppers desperate to restock in a country ravaged by shortages cleared out supermarkets in the capital, Harare, and Bulawayo, where shelves were bare of essential items such as maize meal, cooking oil, sugar, milk, soap, bread, chicken, beef and other items.

"I am selling goods at less than what I paid for them. I am selling bread at less than what it costs to bake it," a distraught Harare shopowner said, pleading for anonymity so as to avoid government retribution. "I am following the government's orders. Army soldiers came here this morning to check prices. Mugabe has threatened to seize any business that does not do what he says. I don't know how long this can continue."

Inflation is currently estimated at 10,000% and rising. Armed soldiers and the youth militia are patrolling shops and open-air markets to enforce President Robert Mugabe's price controls. More than 200 retailers have been charged with crimes of charging more than the official prices, police confirmed yesterday.
Posted by:Steve White

#15  In Zimbabwe, we are seeing an approximation of a Jimmy Carter presidency etended to 20 years.
Posted by: Super Hose   2007-07-05 14:22  

#14  So simple economics.

Shops are there to make profits.

If you force a shop to make a loss they will cut down on the thing making a loss.

The government is effectively telling these shops not to stock goods.

Almost as stupid as expecting socialism to work.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2007-07-05 14:09  

#13  If I'm forced to sell goods at a loss the govenment can have my store. Please!
Posted by: jds   2007-07-05 13:49  

#12  Unfortunately the real value of US currency for some denominations is in its substance. I'm surprised US coins aren't disappearing from circulation & being melted down for sale as metals.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2007-07-05 12:40  

#11  ...still think he's a cross between George Washington and Nelson Mandela.

Pappy,
I think they are a month away from being very much disabused of that notion.
Posted by: DarthVader   2007-07-05 11:23  

#10  And don't forget 'by the People'. They elected him, and the non-ZANU-PF elite, even though they mourn his 'fallen status', still think he's a cross between George Washington and Nelson Mandela.
Posted by: Pappy   2007-07-05 10:29  

#9  Msika told state radio. "We will take their businesses, we will take their licences. They have raised prices to a level the people cannot afford so they must die in agony with hunger."

Government for the people!
Posted by: Snereck de Medici6366   2007-07-05 09:55  

#8  #5

One thing Gaza and the West Bank DON'T have, is their own currency. They use NIS - New Israeli Shekels. So stability of prices is maintained thanks to the Central Bank of Israel, which has leaned fairly heavily monetarist for over a decade.
Posted by: Liberalhawk   2007-07-05 09:50  

#7  So when is Bono gonna be doing an aid concert for Zimbabwe?
Posted by: DarthVader   2007-07-05 09:41  

#6  Should be no shortage of toilet paper for a while. And it wouldn't surprise me if their currency was actually better for the purpose than the European TP (softer, stronger and more absorbent.) There is a ceiling to inflation - when the real value of the currency is reached, with 'real value' defined by the worth of the gold, silver, aluminum, or now paper it is made of.
Posted by: Glenmore   2007-07-05 08:26  

#5  Exactly, Nimble, and I keep wondering just how in the hell Gaza fell behind Zimbobwe in the race to the bottom.
Posted by: Steve White   2007-07-05 08:12  

#4  Plenty of positions available for economic policymakers in Gaza.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2007-07-05 06:50  

#3  No worries mon. After the stores are cleaned out there won't be any more. Then inflation goes to minus bazillion percent.
Posted by: ed   2007-07-05 06:48  

#2  Bob may be way ahead of me - he's in Ghana right now.
(Note to self - read the whole thing before commenting.)
Posted by: PBMcL   2007-07-05 02:18  

#1  So almost everyone's going to be out of food in about a week. Then the fun will really begin. I'd bet Bob's already got his getaway plane on the tarmac, fueled up, full of hard cash, and ready to go...
Posted by: PBMcL   2007-07-05 02:14  

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