NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

CCZ slams ‘record breaking’ super-profits in sea of poverty

- BY FIDELITY MHLANGA ⬤ Follow us on Twitter @NewsDayZim­babwe

THE Consumer Council of Zimbabwe (CCZ) yesterday slammed business for abetting hardships, saying a significan­t number of firms accessing cheap foreign currency at the auction market were indexing prices at black market rates. Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) governor John Mangudya last week said the auction system paid out US$1,97 billion to companies seeking foreign currency in 2021.

He said the auction system managed to calm market jitters during the period, as this amount represente­d 30% of foreign payments processed by banks.

In the past week, the Zimbabwe dollar has been trading at US$1:$118 on the official market, compared to US$1:$240 on the punitive black market.

This means companies accessing foreign currency on the official market are buying it at half the price those purchasing from the black market are paying.

Consumers want this difference to be reflected in prices.

In remarks made during a post monetary policy statement (MPS) discussion organised by the Zimbabwe Independen­t and the Bankers Associatio­n of Zimbabwe, CCZ acting executive director, Rosemary Mpofu said the RBZ’s interventi­on had been barely felt by consumers due to market manipulati­on by manufactur­ers.

“We have noted with concern and we have complained to authoritie­s including the RBZ that most manufactur­ers have been accessing foreign currency from the auction system but as consumers we are not benefiting,” Mpofu told the webinar.

“We continue to see prices going up using the parallel market rate. We are seeing that in a lot of products particular­ly food and other commoditie­s, governor. We ask you to engage to make sure that whoever is given foreign currency on the auction system should also reflect that in their prices,” noted Mpofu.

She demanded that businesses should charge prices that reflect their costs.

“We need to see manufactur­ers who are responsibl­e because for goodness sake the world over no company is making profits as huge as those that are being made in Zimbabwe,” the CCZ chief said.

The RBZ chief announced in the February 2022 MPS that he would continue whittling down reserve money to bring inflation under control.

His hawkish monetary policy stance has helped push inflation down from 837,53% in July 2020 to 60,61%.

But Mpofu said the annual inflation rate was not decelerati­ng at a pace that brought relief to consumers.

“Of concern is fuel and bread among other basic goods prices, which have increased in the past few weeks. As consumers we still continue to suffer. We are saying if inflation could go down a little bit faster than what it is today, that will be the language that consumers understand. We thank you for the effort but we think inflation should go down a lot more faster than what it is now because prices continue to bite consumers and a lot of consumers are not getting enough on the table,” she said.

She demanded explanatio­ns from manufactur­ers as to why they were charging extortiona­te prices when they were accessing cheap forex.

She said the breadbaske­t had almost trebled from just over $25 000 in January last year to more than $73 000 currently, an indication of the devastatin­g impact of inflation.

Mpofu’s remarks come hard on the heels of teacher’s relentless pressure to have a salary hike as their earnings have been eroded by inflation.

According to the Zimbabwe National Statistics Agency, the poverty datum line for January stood at $42 475.

 ?? ?? Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe governor John Mangudya
Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe governor John Mangudya

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