HARARE – Zimbabwe’s Delta Corporation, the country’s largest beverage maker, reported a 57 percent drop in first-quarter lager sales on Wednesday as consumers slashed spending amid the worst economic crisis in a decade.

Zimbabwe is currently grappling with rocketing inflation, power cuts and shortages of everything from fuel and foreign currency to bread and medicine, prompting street protests earlier this year.

“Macro-economic changes… have resulted in erosion of disposable incomes and reduced consumer spending,” Delta, which is 40 percent-owned by Anheuser-Busch InBev, the world’s largest brewer, said in a trading update.

In a bid to tackle some of its economic problems, President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s government last month ended a decade of the use of the United States dollar and reintroduced a local currency, whose rapid loss of value pushed inflation up 175.66 percent in June.

In addition to the drop in lager sales, carbonated drinks revenue slid 79 percent in the quarter to June 30, Delta said but traditional sorghum beer sales were, however, 2 percent up in the quarter.

Dollar shortages have also hit the beverage maker, curbing its ability to import packaging materials and concentrates for soft drinks.

Delta reported a 92 percent increase in total group revenue, but only because the previous period’s reporting was valued in United States dollars and at the time there was still a one-to-one exchange rate between the local currency and the greenback. The company did not give a comparison in United States dollar terms.

Zimbabwe abandoned its currency in 2008 after hyperinflation hit 500 billion percent, wiping out pensions, savings and any vestiges of confidence in the currency.

After experimenting with a range of different currencies including the greenback and South African rand in the years since, Mnangagwa’s government surprised the market in June by bringing back a national currency. It made an interim unit the sole legal tender, renaming it the Zimbabwe dollar and banning the use of foreign currencies for local transactions.

The Zimbabwe dollar has slipped to an average of 8.9 against the United States dollar on the formal market since then, but black market traders said it was fetching around 10 Zimbabwe dollars on Wednesday. – Reuters