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Local
dollar an endangered species as currency crashes
IRIN
News
June 25, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=72913
Zimbabweans are switching
to barter, payment in kind and the use of foreign currencies, such
as neighbouring South Africa's rand, instead of the local dollar
to survive hyperinflation and the accelerating economic meltdown.
Zimbabwe's currency is
still officially pegged at Z$250 to one US dollar; early last week
the informal market price was about Z$100,000 to US$1, but by Monday
25 June it had crashed to Z$400,000 against the US dollar. In January
this year US$1 was being traded for Z$3,000.
The country's inflation
rate - the highest in the world - is officially at more than 3,700
percent, although independent economists believe the real rate of
inflation is around 20,000 percent and could reach 1.5 million percent
by the end of 2007.
Purses and wallets have
become redundant; Zimbabweans have been using shopping bags, suitcases,
sacks and other large containers to carry cash. Bank tellers are
hidden from view by huge piles of the increasingly worthless currency
as long queues wait to withdraw as much as they can in an attempt
to beat the galloping inflation that has crippled the country, once
a regional economic power house.
Conversations in banking
halls are drowned out by the constant drone of money-counting machines
- importing the machines is one of the few remaining growth industries,
but this mini-boom could also be ending, as Zimbaweans are increasingly
forced to resort to barter, payment in kind and using foreign currencies.
Barter
"We pay for soya
beans and can swop one tonne for a drum of fuel," said a recent
advert in the state-sponsored daily newspaper, The Herald; bartering
is becoming commonplace as individuals, traders and markets seek
an alternative method of determining value.
Thomsen Siziba, a newly
resettled farmer in the prime farming area of Chegutu, Mashonaland
West Province, told IRIN that farm workers no longer wanted to be
paid in cash, but rather in kind.
"The gazetted [monthly]
wages for farm workers is about $70,000 [US$0.17 at the current
parallel market exchange rate of Z$400,000 to US$1] - which basically
is not enough to buy two litres of cooking oil, which costs $350,000
[US$0.87] - or a bar of soap, which costs $270,000 [US$0.67], or
a bottle of beer which costs $75,000 [US$0.18]," he said.
Siziba said they knew
the economy was collapsing and "a lot of the farm workers say
they no longer want long-term contracts which would tie them to
me; the farm workers say they would rather work for food and clothing
handouts instead of money, which they say is now worthless".
More than a third of
the population will require food assistance by early next year,
according to a recent joint report by the UN Food and Agriculture
Organisation and the UN World Food Programme.
Ditching
the Zimbabwean dollar
Onward Chabvepi, a vegetable
hawker in the capital, Harare, told IRIN he had lost confidence
in both President Robert Mugabe's ruling ZANU-PF government and
the local currency.
"The prices of just
about everything are increasing every day. I am not a sophisticated
economist, but one thing that I know is that our currency is now
worthless, and that it is safer to convert most of the money which
I earn to South African rands, the US dollar or the Botswana pula,
which are much more stable currencies."
A tenant in Belvedere,
an upmarket suburb of Harare, told IRIN his landlord had given him
notice that from July his rent should not be paid in Zimbabwean
dollars but in fuel, which currently sells for about Z$220,000 a
litre. His monthly rent will now cost him 80 litres of petrol, or
Z$17.6 million (US$44).
Analysts said
the growing use of the South African rand or US dollar for day-to-day
trading was a watershed in Zimbabwe's economic malaise. "It's
a clear sign that people no longer have confidence in the Zimbabwean
dollar," said Prof Tony Hawkins of the Graduate School of Management
at the University
of Zimbabwe.
He said the hyperinflation
cycle, fuelled by the government's printing of money, has led to
too much currency in circulation and people were opting to keep
their money in foreign currencies that were more secure.
"The key cause of
inflation is government and the central bank printing money - they
are no longer publishing the figures of the total money in circulation,"
he said.
Hawkins told IRIN that
although some people were engaging in barter trade, the chances
that it would become widespread were minimal. "Logically, you
could see that happening, but on a wider scale people prefer to
sell their products in foreign currency, which is more secure and
does not lose its value."
Post-Mugabe
era
Since 2000, more than
a quarter of the population - over three million people - are believed
to have migrated to neighbouring countries in search of work, or
further afield to England and the United States. Only one in five
people in Zimbabwe is employed.
Industry and International
Trade Minister Obert Mpofu told IRIN: "As government, we are
concerned about the daily price increases and we have set up a taskforce
that will work with security ministries and curb the price increases.
They will also investigate the causes of basic commodities shortages,
which are only found on the black market." Cross-border buying
has also increased.
The freefall of Zimbabwe's
economy has many commentators believing that the endgame of Mugabe's
27-year rule is at hand, and cite last week's talks in South Africa
between the main opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change,
and representatives of the ZANU-PF government as an indicator of
this.
Donor countries, including
Britain, the former colonial power until 1980, are reportedly compiling
a list of Zimbabwe's requirements in a post-Mugabe era, although
there is no indication that Mugabe is contemplating stepping down
from office and has publicly stated that he intends running in presidential
elections scheduled for next year.
A US$3billion, five-year
stabilisation programme, which includes food aid, land reform and
health assistance, would be required, according to reports.
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