by MrBill » Tue 10 Jul 2007, 04:46:46
Drew wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')ey Mr Bill you cheeky boy!! Oops I meant 'peacocky', lol. I think curmudgeony perhaps describes the characteristics of the OP don't you think?? Anyways, on with my own stupidity....
Cheeky or peacocky, at least I can lay claim to the pole position as the most irritating poster, if not the most prolific. Anything worth doing is worth doing to excess, eh.
Many here have talked about Zimbabwe in the context of post peak oil depletion as an example of the developing world going without, so the rest of the developed world can keep driving. I say, poppy-cock!
The developing world that produces commodities, base metals and energy have seen their coffers swell and economies grow as those basic commodities gain in value relative to finished products, which thanks to China are falling in price. You do not have to believe me, just look at the price charts of those commodities and compare them to both increases in central bank balances as well as a decrease in borrowing from the IMF.
Zimbabwe's domestic economic problems are 99.9% of Robert Mugabe's making. Plain & simple!!! (Yes, the infamous triple exclamation point is needed for emphasis).
What to do about Zimbabwe's destabilizing influence on its neighbors, nevermind alleviate human suffering and jump start economic re-development, is another story. On this front, Standard Bank is more optimistic than I am, but then again they are much closer to the issues than I am, so here is what they say could be done (or needs to be done).
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Are we closer to the endgame in Zimbabwe?
Many predictions have been made that Zimbabwe would be unable to continue much longer without a change in policy. However, to date, the ZANU-PF government has defied critics and managed to keep the country afloat.
Various factors have contributed to renewed speculation that we might be in the endgame for the ZANU-PF government. In particular, the government’s response to inflation, which has sky-rocketed to close to 5,000%, has been to force shopkeepers and producers to lower their prices or risk having their businesses expropriated. Not surprisingly, the result has been to force more activity into the informal sector.
All of this has occurred against a backdrop of recognition by the Southern African Development Community (SADC), of which Zimbabwe has remained a member, that things cannot continue as they have and that a total meltdown must be avoided.
To accomplish this, South African President Thabo Mbeki was chosen for the role of peacemaker.
New plan would place Zimbabwean monetary policy under South African control
The latest SADC initiative to orchestrate a Zimbabwean recovery (as reported by The Sunday Independent) appears to include a possible stabilisation programme whereby Zimbabwe would join the Multilateral Monetary Area (MMA) which currently consists of South Africa, Swaziland, Namibia and Lesotho. The currencies of the member countries are linked to the South African rand; all member currencies are linked on par.
While the agreement allows freedom for each member in its conduct of monetary policy, in practice, all member countries’ monetary policy is aligned to that of South Africa. The fact that the majority of imports originate from South Africa implies that inflation is largely imported from South Africa, further justifying the alignment of monetary policy throughout the MMA.
What would be the benefits for Zimbabwe?
By joining the MMA, the beleaguered Zimbabwe dollar (officially trading at ZWD250 against the USD but nearer ZWD250,000 on the black market) would be linked to the rand. Whether the link would be on a one-on-one basis, as is currently the case with other members, is unknown.
However, any link to the South African rand (and by implication policy environment) could hold substantial benefits for Zimbabwe. It would provide greater stability for the effectively worthless Zimbabwe dollar.
Any stabilisation deal would also have to provide funds upfront to fund basic food and energy requirements.
Will President Mugabe accept the consequences?
This ambitious plan would require prerequisites. Monetary and fiscal policy would have to be handed over to South African institutions. However, it appears extremely unlikely that President Mugabe would accept such a situation. He has thus far been defiant and has blamed Zimbabwe’s woes on economic sabotage by the western world as punishment for taking white farms. By accepting this new plan, he would effectively acknowledge defeat and lose control over the economy.
What would be the implications for South Africa?
Under the plan for Zimbabwe to join the MMA, according to the report by The Sunday Independent, the central banks of South Africa and Botswana would bolster Zimbabwean foreign exchange reserves – a necessity for the peg to the rand to be maintained and also to allow the import of basic goods and services. While both South Africa and Botswana could probably sponsor some reserves (South Africa has been building reserves in recent years and Botswana’s reserves are more than adequate), it is doubtful whether they would be able to do so sufficiently. The scale of financial support Zimbabwe requires would need input from outside southern Africa or even Africa. Whether the usual suspects would be willing to fund a stabilisation programme with Mr Mugabe as President is doubtful.
Certainly, if South Africa were to try financially stabilise Zimbabwe without international assistance, the result would be to undermine investor confidence and most certainly to put downward pressure on the rand.
That said, doing nothing also would have negative consequences for investor sentiment. There are currently an estimated 3 million illegal Zimbabweans in South Africa, with large numbers in other neighbouring countries. A total economic collapse accompanied by civil war, which would be unavoidable should things be left unattended, would also rattle regional investor confidence.
What the South African government must not do is be seen as jeopardising its own political integrity or financial security in order to bail out Zimbabwe unless it is accompanied by a watertight guarantee of longer-term political and economic reform.
We expect that delivering this will not be achieved by a regional solution, but rather require the backing of the global financial institutions designed for such a stabilisation role.
It may sound unkind, but I am not sure President Thabo Mbeki is really the man for the job. He has so far been a little too supportive of Robert Mugabe and his thugs, and has even hinted that the pace of land redistribution in S. Africa is progressing too slowly, so...
No, I am a little worried about Mbeki once the moderating influence of Nelson Mandela is gone? The ANZ is not a very democratic political organ either. But I do hope that S. Africa can use its influence to help its unstable neighbor. Good luck!