INCREASINGLY, empty business towers and shopping premises epitomise subdued business activity in the central business district of Zimbabwe’s capital, Harare, coinciding with price increases that the government now hope to stop by removing duty on goods imported from South Africa and other neighbouring countries.
Downstairs at the office towers and across the Harare city centre’s major roads, informal traders duck police and council authorities.
Inside the few supermarkets dotted around the city, prices change daily, and sometimes twice a day as operators adjust to the reality of quick-paced exchange rate fluctuations.
“We have a new system whereby prices are changed at head office. Sometimes, the price that’s on the shelf is not matched by the one obtaining at the till-point, because the changes are just too much,” one merchandiser with…
