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ZIMBABWE:
IMF position on Zimbabwe's future
IRIN News
February 01, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=51491
HARARE - One
practical problem of hyperinflation is the sheer inconvenience of
carrying bundles of cash. As a response, the Zimbabwean authorities
this week introduced a new Zim $50,000 (US 50 cents) note, but critics
warn its value has already been overtaken by inflation.
"The new Zim $50,000 note is not enough to buy a bottle of beer
or a newspaper. How can it be expected to ease the problems of carrying
huge sums of money?" complained Dunstan Moyo, who has been making
wallets and handbags in the capital, Harare, for the past five years.
He has watched his original business dry up, but has diversified
into knapsacks - a handier way of carrying around large wads of
cash. Enterprising street vendors have also spotted the gap in the
market and stand outside banks dangling plastic bags, rucksacks
and, for larger withdrawals, suitcases.
Zimbabwe's current inflation rate is 600 percent, and the reserve
bank predicts it will climb by 200 points before the end of the
year. Some analysts suggest 1,000 percent would be closer to the
mark as the local currency steadily devalues in the face of a crippling
foreign exchange shortage.
The highest denomination was previously the Zim $1,000 note, which
no longer buys a packet of sweets. Following disastrous money shortages
in 2003, temporary bearer cheques were printed with a maximum value
of Zim $20,000.
But an average Zimbabwean family now needs Zim $16.6 million (US
$166) a month to survive and even with a Zim $50,000 note, that
is a lot of paper.
Queues outside automated teller machines have become chaotic as
customers struggle to withdraw enough money to cover basic daily
groceries and transport fares.
Economic consultant John Robertson said plastic money was not an
option for most Zimbabweans, as they cannot meet "the basic requirements
demanded by banks to open accounts".
Banks have stringent conditions for new accounts, including proof
of residence and a pay slip, but more than 70 percent of Zimbabweans
are unemployed.
The government, which blames unofficial sanctions by western governments
for the economic crisis, has responded to the rampant inflation
by announcing it will soon introduce a new currency, after "wide-ranging"
consultations.
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