Disclaimer: This site has been first put up 15 years ago. Since then I would probably do a couple things differently, but because I've noticed this site had been linked from news outlets, PhD theses and peer rewieved papers and because I really hate the concept of "digital dark age" I've decided to put it back up. There's no chance it can produce any harm now.
| Identifier: | 03HARARE2255 |
|---|---|
| Wikileaks: | View 03HARARE2255 at Wikileaks.org |
| Origin: | Embassy Harare |
| Created: | 2003-11-18 13:45:00 |
| Classification: | UNCLASSIFIED |
| Tags: | ECON EFIN EINV PGOV ZI |
| Redacted: | This cable was not redacted by Wikileaks. |
This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available. 181345Z Nov 03
UNCLAS HARARE 002255 SIPDIS STATE FOR AF/S NSC FOR SENIOR AFRICA DIRECTOR JFRAZER USDOC FOR 2037 DIEMOND TREASURY FOR OREN WYCHE-SHAW PASS USTR FLORIZELLE LISER STATE PASS USAID FOR MARJORIE COPSON E. O. 12958: N/A TAGS: ECON, EFIN, EINV, PGOV, ZI SUBJECT: Inflation Hits 526 Percent 1. Summary: Year-on-year inflation has reached 526 percent. Jarred by spiraling prices, Zimbabweans anxiously await Thursday's budget speech. End Summary. 2. The Central Statistical Office's most recent inflation figures encompass October 2002-October 2003. Basic foods and transportation are now beyond the reach of most Zimbabweans, whose salaries continue to lag inflation. (Local joke: "Your take-home-pay no longer takes you home.") Even more worrisome, an alternative PricewaterhouseCoopers consumer price index demonstrates that the poor bear the brunt of high inflation. The accounting firm pegs October inflation for high, medium and low income Zimbabweans at 13, 17 and 39 percent, respectively. 3. Comment: Still, neither official nor unofficial figures tell the whole story. For example, rail transport, far cheaper than intercity buses, is often unavailable due to the GOZ's inability to afford imported diesel. (Thanks to nearly-free electricity from South Africa, Zimbabwe's few electric trains run more reliably.) Given its limited fiscal and monetary options, the GOZ can probably not rein in inflation without raising interest rates, currently about 400 percent negative. But few contacts believe the GOZ will take that route when it unveils the 2004 budget on Thursday. More likely, the GOZ will blame the economy's ills on the parallel currency market and place new restrictions on business activity. Sullivan
Latest source of this page is cablebrowser-2, released 2011-10-04