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Africa Subsaharan
Zimbabwe inflation passes 100,000%
2008-02-22
The official rate of annual inflation in Zimbabwe has rocketed past the 100,000% barrier, by far the highest in the world, the state central statistical office said yesterday. Second-placed Iraq has inflation of 60%, according to international estimates. In a brief statement, the statistics office said inflation rose to 100,580% in January, up from 66,212% in December.

The new official figure was still well below the rate calculated by independent analysts. They estimate the real inflation is closer to 150,000%, citing supermarket receipts showing that the price of chicken rose more than 236,000% to 15m Zimbabwe dollars a kilogram between January 2007 and January 2008. Slower increases in prices of sugar, tea and other basics bring down the average to around 150,000%.

Zimbabwe, a former regional breadbasket, is facing acute shortages of food, hard currency, gasoline and most basic goods in an economic meltdown blamed on disruptions in the agriculture-based economy after the seizures of thousands of white-owned commercial farms began in 2000, accompanied by political violence and turmoil.

In early October the state central statistical office gave official inflation at just below 8,000%. It then suspended its monthly updates because there was not enough in the shortage-stricken shops to calculate a regular basket of goods. November's already dizzying rate of 24,470% was announced in January and earlier this month the official rate for December was given as 66,212%, a dramatic escalation in the space of a month.

The National Incomes and Prices Commission, the government's price control body, this month allowed sharp increases in the prices of the corn meal staple, sugar, bread and other basics in a bid to restore viable operations by producers and return the goods to empty shelves. But the new prices were still roughly half the price demanded on the black market and were unlikely to guarantee regular supplies to food stores.

Executives at a milling company producing corn meal said the price increase allowed by the government was already overtaken by soaring production costs and gasoline prices and the National Bakers Association said bread shortages were set to worsen unless the price of a loaf was nearly doubled to more than 5m Zimbabwe dollars for a regular loaf.

Gross domestic product in Zimbabwe fell from about $200 in 1996 to about $9 a head last year.
There is no way a people can live on $9 a head per year. The explosion has to come soon.
Posted by:Steve White

#4  Ten Million, and yes I figured that from the beginning. (Didn't know a 15 megabuck bill exised)

Thank you again.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2008-02-22 15:36  

#3  By the time Redneck Jim gets the 15 million buck note, it won't be in circulation any more.
Posted by: rhodesiafever   2008-02-22 13:05  

#2  Zimbabwe, a former regional breadbasket, is facing acute shortages of food, hard currency, gasoline and most basic goods in an economic meltdown blamed on disruptions in the agriculture-based economy after the seizures of thousands of white-owned commercial farms began in 2000, accompanied by political violence and turmoil.

100,000% inflation rate is a bunch.
Posted by: JohnQC   2008-02-22 13:04  

#1  See how good things can be when you run all the stinky white-people things out of town?

Its a veritable heaven on earth, pass the corn, would ya Bob.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2008-02-22 08:00  

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