The Herald (Zimbabwe)

No more price control negotiatio­ns

- Martin Tarusenga Martin Tarusenga is General Manager of Zimbabwe Pensions & Insurance Rights, email, martin@zimpirt.com; telephone; +263 (0)4 797020; Mobile; +263 (0)772 889 716. Opinions expressed herein are those of the author and do not represent thos

THE news that the Minister of Industry, Commerce and Enterprise Developmen­t, Dr Mike Bimha, resorted to calling in bakers and other stakeholde­rs to negotiate a price reduction in bread, may point to wrong economic policy interventi­on and long run under performanc­e on the part of the Minister. The negotiatio­ns and the consequent agreement for a price reduction amount to a price control measure. Price controls of this nature are economical­ly considered ineffectiv­e, witness Zimbabwe sliding into past experience­s.

A long run economic principle to resolving commodity price hikes is to increase supply of the commodity, rather than introduce price controls. The price hike itself suggests one or more of the following; inefficien­t production, artificial short supply of the commodity itself, a lack of competitio­n in the supply of inputs in the production of the commodity such as labour, flour, yeast, kneading machines in the case of bread.

Further a price hike deriving from a collusion by the producers without justificat­ion suggests the existence of an uncompetit­ive monopolist cartel.

The decision by the meeting to reduce the price of bread suggests that there was no justificat­ion for the price hike. This in turn suggests that one or more of the drivers of price hikes may have been at work leading to the hike. The meeting and the consequent bread price reduction therefore served only to suppress price hikes — the hikes will most certainly be a menace in the near future.

This latter conclusion may especially be plausible if it is considered that only one of the bakers in Zimbabwe has more than 80% of the market share of bread — a cartel could surreptiti­ously be at work.

The long run solution to such price hikes is certainly not through negotiatio­ns such as the Minister called for. The Minister should immediatel­y set in trend policies to increase competitiv­e bread production and distributi­on in Zimbabwe. A capital/loan facility should transparen­tly be organised and availed to fit and proper, ambitious, passionate baker entreprene­urs. Such a facility should have production and capacity building turnaround times. Members of the Small Bakers Associatio­n of Zimbabwe could be considered some of the most fitting candidates.

This is a time for the Minister to call on the pension and insurance industries through the Insurance and Pension Commission (IPEC), the banking industry, among others, to extend equity pension/insurance funds investment policies to cover bakers. Such a facility should be supported by focused baker training courses and institutio­ns — yes Minister, those kneading machines should be produced locally without excuse.

It should not take the Minister two (2) months to organise the capital/ loan facility, to transparen­tly identify at least twenty (20) fit and proper candidate producers. The successful candidates should be subject to rigorous performanc­e assessment to ensure that this policy interventi­on is successful. And a year should be enough for the Minister to realise kneading machine production, enough even for export to SADC countries for starters.

No more price control negotiatio­ns.

 ??  ?? Bakers reverse bread price increase
Bakers reverse bread price increase

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