Tuesday, August 17, 2010

(NEWZIMBABWE, BLOOMBERG) Zim economy size double IMF estimates: Imara

COMMENT - This is the conclusion of the economic hit placed on the country of Zimbabwe by the UK, US and their mercenaries, the MDC. Zimbabwe is 'undervalued'.

Zim economy size double IMF estimates: Imara
by Bloomberg
16/08/2010 00:00:00

ZIMBABWE’S economy may be double the size estimated by the International Monetary Fund, making the stock market’s value of $3 billion look “cheap,” Imara Asset Management Zimbabwe Chief Executive Officer John Legat said.

[And that's what it is all about. Badmouth a piece of real estate, watch the price go down, buy it low, and then express surprise at the low valuation. Neocolonialism in action. Everyone should read The Shock Doctrine by Naomi Klein, and Confessions Of An Economic Hitman, by John Perkins. - MrK]


The southern African nation’s economy may be as big as $10 billion, compared with the IMF estimate of about $5 billion, Legat said in an e-mailed statement today from Harare, the Zimbabwean capital. In December, Zimbabwean Finance Minister Tendai Biti revised the size of the economy to $5.1 billion from $3.5 billion, he said.

“We find it hard to understand why both the IMF and government are being as cautious as they are,” Legat said. “Their views give a sobering view of the country, rather than an upbeat and exciting outlook for a country barely in its second year of reform.”

Zimbabwe is rebuilding its economy after experiencing a decade of recession that followed a drought and President Robert Mugabe’s seizure of white-owned commercial farms for redistribution to blacks deprived of land under colonial rule.

[Actually it followed the imposition of economic sanctions in 2002 - that year, and not before. The year the Zimbabwe Democracy and Economic Recovery Act of 2001 came into force and put a credit freeze on the Zimbabwean government. - MrK]


The policy led to shortages of everything from food to fuel and resulted in an inflation rate estimated at 89.7 sextillion percent by the Cato Institute.

Imara’s estimate of the Zimbabwean economy’s size is based on a comparison of spending power in neighboring Zambia, Legat said.

While Zambia’s two biggest breweries reported sales of $230 million last year, revenue at Delta Corp., Zimbabwe’s biggest beer maker, totaled $324 million, he said.

This year, Econet Wireless Holdings Ltd., a Zimbabwean mobile-phone operator, expects revenue of $500 million, while Zambians are expected to spend $280 million with Zain Zambia, that country’s biggest mobile-phone company, Legat said.

Some measures suggest that Zimbabwe’s agriculture, tourism and manufacturing industries are also bigger than in Zambia, which has a $14 billion economy, he said.

“According to the IMF and the government, Zimbabwe’s gross national product per capita is $450, which compares with Zambia at $1,200 per head,” Legat said. “Spending patterns in both countries suggest the opposite.”

Imara estimates that Zimbabwe’s market capitalisation may double as investors take advantage of the opportunities offered by the domestic stock market.

Since the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange resumed trading in February 2009, following a three-month shutdown ordered by the central bank amid soaring inflation, a plunging Zimbabwean dollar and international sanctions against Mugabe’s government, the bourse’s market value has risen 40 percent, Legat said.

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