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ZIMBABWE:
Govt devalues currency in bid to ease forex shortages
IRIN
News
May 19, 2005
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=47203
HARARE - Reserve
Bank governor Gideon Gono announced the devaluation of the Zimbabwean
dollar by 31 percent from Zim $6,200 to Zim $9,000 per US $1 in
his quarterly review of monetary policy on Thursday.
Zimbabwe's flourishing parallel market exchanges currency at rates
of up to Zim $18,000 per US $1.
In his statement Gono portrayed an economy that had ground to a
halt, weighed down by crippling shortages and high inflation.
After its recent parliamentary elections, Zimbabwe was again hit
by shortages of fuel and other basic goods: electricity, water,
maize, sugar, milk, eggs and margarine have all been in short supply.
But while basic commodities are scarce in supermarkets, they can
be found on the parallel market at inflated prices.
On the eve of the governor's policy statement, long queues formed
at fuel stations in urban centres as private vehicles and commuter
buses waited for fuel deliveries.
Tired commuters queued for hours as they waited in vain for public
transport. Some opted to walk, while others with a bit of cash to
spare splurged on relatively expensive taxis to get themselves home.
"I made a fortune with the little fuel that I bought on the black
market, because I was charging very high fees because of the scarcity
of transport," Nduna Dube, a taxi driver, told IRIN.
In his monetary policy announcement, Gono blamed the lack of fuel
on "unscrupulous middlemen" and said government would take steps
to deal with them.
He also announced a programme to support the troubled agricultural
industry, which has had yet another poor season.
"In order to ensure maximum productivity levels, there's great scope
in the country for promoting and supporting joint ventures between
the new [resettled] farmers and progressive-minded former operators
of horticulture ... as well as other new investors, so as to hasten
the skills transfer cycle," Gono said.
The Reserve Bank would also no longer allow foreign currency account
holders to withdraw hard currency; only those who could prove they
were travelling out of the country would be issued with travellers'
cheques, and they would have to account for the money spent.
Professor Eliphas Mukonoweshuro, a political scientist, described
Gono's policy statement as a reflection "of the levels of desperation"
in government as it attempts to ease foreign currency shortages.
"The fact that the government is prepared to monitor the small amounts
in foreign currency accounts of private citizens shows just how
desperate they are, and how they have run out of ideas," he added.
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