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The housing related inflation clearly rose following review of civil service remuneration in January and July
The current fiscal challenges and the wage pressures have made this economy overly reliant on fresh diamond revenues. In this regard, it is important that there is a proper legitimate legal framework dealing with diamond revenue
We don’t feel that we are getting what belongs to Caesar vis a vis gold and platinum. I therefore propose to increase the royalties on gold and platinum ... in order to maximise the contribution of our minerals
The Principals of the GPA met today, Monday 21 November 2011, at 1500 hours. Due to various commitments on their part, the presentation of the 2012 National Budget is deferred from Tuesday 22 November to Thursday 24 November 2011, in Parliament at 1415 hours. Any inconvenience caused to stakeholders is ...
There are things that people see as a sign of collapse or fragility of a state; shops that are empty, roads with potholes, hospitals and schools that don't work. Those are physical signs of fragility
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Zimbabwe's Finance Minister Tendai Biti delivers his budget speech in parliament in Harare November 24, 2011. Zimbabwe's economy is likely to continue its strong recovery next year from a decade of decline to expand by 9.4 percent, Biti said on Thursday, but a hike in mining royalties...
View Photo »Zimbabwe's Finance Minister Tendai Biti presents the country's national 2011 budget before the Parliament in Harare on November 24, 2011. Zimbabwean government expects to take in $600 million in additional revenue from diamond sales next year, after a global watchdog lifted its ban on...
View Photo »Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe (R), Vice President Joice Mujuru (2nd R), Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai (2nd L) and Finance Minister Tendai Biti attend a session to present the country's national 2011 budget in Harare on November 24, 2011. Zimbabwean government expects to take in...
View Photo »Zimbabwe's Finance Minister Tendai Biti poses with a briefcase carrying the country's national 2011 budget as he arrives to present it before the Parliament in Harare on November 24, 2011. Zimbabwean government expects to take in $600 million in additional revenue from diamond sales...
View Photo »Zimbabwe's Finance Minister Tendai Biti addresses a news conference in Harare, August 23, 2011. Zimbabwe's year-end inflation target of 4.5 percent has come under pressure from rising food prices, but the government has no current plans to revise its forecast, Biti said on Tuesday. ...
View Photo »Zimbabwe's Finance Minister Tendai Biti presents his mid-term budget speech in Harare, July 26, 2011. Zimbabwe could record a $700 million budget deficit for 2011 due to wage increases to public servants and grain imports, Biti said in a half-year budget review on Tuesday.
View Photo »Zimbabwe's Finance Minister Tendai Biti poses with his briefcase before addressing Parliament in Harare, July 26, 2011. Zimbabwe's economy is on course to grow by 9.3 percent in 2011 due to a recovery in the key mining and agriculture sectors but wage increases for state workers will be...
View Photo »Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe (R) listens as Finance Minister Tendai Biti delivers his budget speech in parliament in Harare November 24, 2011, while Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai (L) and Vice President Joice Mjuru (C) look on. Zimbabwe's economy is likely to continue its strong...
View Photo »Supporters of Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF party call for Finance Minister Tendai Biti, who is from the opposition Movement for Democratic Change party, to resign as they demonstrate outside Biti's office in Harare June 27, 2011. Mugabe's ZANU-PF is fighting with the...
View Photo »Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe arrives for the presentation of the national budget at Parliament in Harare, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Zimbabwe's Finance Minster Tendai Biti says he will plow $600 million in new revenue from diamonds into the nation's ailing health, water and power...
View Photo »Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe, right, attends the presentation of the national budget with lawmakers at Parliament in Harare, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Zimbabwe's Finance Minster Tendai Biti says he will plow $600 million in new revenue from diamonds into the nation's ailing health,...
View Photo »Zimbabwe's Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, left, attends the presentation of the national budget with lawmakers at Parliament in Harare, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Zimbabwe's Finance Minster Tendai Biti says he will plow $600 million in new revenue from diamonds into the nation's ailing...
View Photo »A Zimbabwean police officer stands by a wall outside the home of Zimbabwe's Finance Minister Tendai Biti, where a suspected petrol bomb was thrown in the early hours of Sunday morning, in Harare, Zimbabwe, Sunday, June 5, 2011. The attack comes barely a week after Zimbabwe's President...
View Photo »Zimbabwe's Finance Minister Tendai Biti delivers his budget speech in parliament in Harare November 24, 2011. Zimbabwe's economy is likely to continue its strong recovery next year from a decade of decline to expand by 9.4 percent, Biti said on Thursday, but a hike in mining royalties...
View Photo »The housing related inflation clearly rose following review of civil service remuneration in January and July
The current fiscal challenges and the wage pressures have made this economy overly reliant on fresh diamond revenues. In this regard, it is important that there is a proper legitimate legal framework dealing with diamond revenue
We don’t feel that we are getting what belongs to Caesar vis a vis gold and platinum. I therefore propose to increase the royalties on gold and platinum ... in order to maximise the contribution of our minerals
The Principals of the GPA met today, Monday 21 November 2011, at 1500 hours. Due to various commitments on their part, the presentation of the 2012 National Budget is deferred from Tuesday 22 November to Thursday 24 November 2011, in Parliament at 1415 hours. Any inconvenience caused to stakeholders is ...
There are things that people see as a sign of collapse or fragility of a state; shops that are empty, roads with potholes, hospitals and schools that don't work. Those are physical signs of fragility
