Zimbabwe Bread Price Jumps 60%, But Shortages Persist

FILE: An unidentfied man buys a loaf of bread at night for 150 billion Zimbabwe dollars in Harare

HARARE (Reuters) - The price of bread, Zimbabwe’s second most-consumed staple, jumped 60% overnight due to escalating costs of production, the national bakers’ association said on Wednesday, adding more woes to consumers grappling with triple-digit inflation.

Zimbabweans are experiencing severe economic hardship that has evoked memories of the hyperinflation horrors during late President Robert Mugabe’s rule, when citizens lost pensions and savings and businesses were forced to shut down.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who took over from Mugabe after an army coup in 2017, has called for patience as his government struggles to convince Zimbabweans that its policies will revive an economy stricken by shortages of electricity, fuel and medicines and a drought that hit farm output.

National Bakers Association of Zimbabwe president Denis Wala said the price of fuel and electricity, as well as rolling power cuts that forced producers to use diesel generators, had pushed up the cost of producing bread.

“Bakers cannot continue to absorb all these costs; that is why we have had to increase the price,” Wala told Reuters.

Bread now costs 15 Zimbabwe dollars ($0.97) a loaf, up from 9.45 Zimbabwe dollars on Tuesday. But shortages still persisted on Wednesday, with many shops saying they had not received supplies.

Zimbabwe imports most of its annual requirement of 400,000 tonnes of wheat, but acute shortages of dollars have constrained imports.

Although farmers have started harvesting wheat, production is expected to fall below the 160,600 metric tonnes last year, farmers groups say.

Zimbabwe has suspended the publication of official annual inflation data since Aug. 1, following the introduction of a new currency. In its last official figures, inflation hit more than 175% in June, its highest level since hyperinflation under Mugabe wiped out the economy in 2009.

Soaring prices have angered workers whose salaries have lagged behind inflation. The latest increase in the price of bread will only embolden calls by government employees to have their salaries indexed to the dollar. (Reporting by MacDonald Dzirutwe; Editing by Alex Richardson)