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Of
cash and dealers
IRIN News
November 23, 2007 http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=75482
Just when life could
not become any harder for Zimbabweans, who are already having to
cope with food and fuel shortages and rocketing prices, local banks
have run out of notes.
Long queues of people
waiting to draw cash have been a common sight outside banks for
the past two weeks. "Yesterday I came here at 4 a.m. but by
3 p.m., when the branch closed, I had not managed to get anything,"
said Janet Sibanda, who lives in the capital, Harare.
The crisis has inevitably
bred a new kind of dealer, providing cash for a commission. They
include bank tellers who moonlight as currency sellers after work,
illegal foreign currency dealers, shop managers and even sports
administrators, who receive cash after matches.
"Sometimes these
people ... charge you as much as 40 percent of what you need, meaning
that if you ask for Z$200 million (about US$143), you can only receive
Z$120 million (about $86)," said John Kangai, a self-employed
carpenter.
"People are taking
advantage of others because of the prevailing economic crisis, but
that is not fair. I am struggling to make ends meet and the greedy
are seeing an opportunity in the crisis to make quick and lazy money."
A parallel market cash
dealer, who identified himself as Jeff, defended the practice, saying,
"You need to be well-connected for your life to run smoothly."
He claimed he sourced currency from tellers working at various financial
institutions, and usually used local currency to buy foreign currency,
which he also traded for a higher price on the parallel market.
Blame
seasonal demand
Gideon Gono, governor
of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ), has acknowledged the cash
crisis but said it was a sign of the demand for money as the Christmas
season approached.
"This is not to
say we cannot do anything," he told businesspeople and journalists
at a briefing on 20 November. "We have pumped a lot of money
into the market through various interventions, which is not supported
by production ... and we are waiting to see what happens."
He urged companies handling
large amounts of cash to surrender it to banks. The RBZ said Z$58
trillion (about US$41 million at the parallel market rate of US1
dollar to Z$1.4 million) was in circulation.
While individuals cannot
draw more than Z$5 million (about US$4), companies have to contend
with a maximum withdrawal of Z$20 million (about US$14), which used
to be the limit for persons making ordinary withdrawals.
History
repeating itself
Despite his insistence
on 20 November that the central bank would not interfere, the following
day Gono announced that Zimbabwe would introduce new bank notes
to replace the bearer cheques (essentially, money printed on ordinary
paper) introduced as a temporary measure in 2003. He did not say
when the new currency would be introduced, but stressed that the
"time has now come that swift measures be taken".
Zimbabwe's currency was
devalued in late July 2006 when the Reserve Bank carried out a sting
operation, introducing new notes with three zeros knocked off that
took thousands of bulk cash holders by surprise and wiped out the
savings of many ordinary people. The new notes were an attempt to
halt the economic meltdown and relieve Zimbabweans from carrying
wads of cash.
The exercise, codenamed
Operation Sunrise 1, forced people to surrender their old notes
to the Reserve Bank in an unrealistically short space of time.
The prevailing cash problems
are similar to those of 2003, when banks almost ran out of cash,
forcing the government to introduce short-lived traveller's cheques
that could only be used locally. Gono took over as RBZ governor
in December 2003 and replaced the traveller's cheques with the bearer
notes.
Hyperinflation
the cause
Inflation is
so intense that people need up to six times the amount of money
that they required a month ago to buy the same commodity. On the
other hand, the RBZ has stopped printing more money because, I understand,
their printing machine has broken down.
Eric Bloch,
an economist and consultant to the RBZ, said the cash crisis was
mainly due to hyperinflation. "Inflation is so intense that
people need up to six times the amount of money that they required
a month ago to buy the same commodity. On the other hand, the RBZ
has stopped printing more money because, I understand, their printing
machine has broken down," Bloch told IRIN.
Zimbabwe's inflation
rate is officially pegged at almost 8,000 percent - the new rate
has yet to be announced - but various independent economists have
put inflation at nearer to 15,000 percent. The prices of basic commodities
increase almost every day.
Besides having the highest
inflation figure in the world, Bloch said, "there is no doubt
that a huge amount of the cash is circulating outside the financial
system". Foreign currency rates in the parallel market have
been rising sharply, he pointed out, costing larger wads of Zim
dollars.
Critics blame Zimbabwe's
seven-year economic crisis on the government's mismanagement: the
ruling party accuses western powers of "sanctions" to
force regime change.
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