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Central
Bank chief rides monetary storm
Institute
for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR)
Joseph
Sithole (AR No. 150, 16-Jan-08)
January 16, 2008
http://iwpr.net/?p=acr&s=f&o=341985&apc_state=henh
Zimbabwe's powerful Central
Bank governor Gideon Gono has had a bumpy start to the new year.
Just as he tried to assert control over the circulation of money,
which he claims is being subverted by speculators in high places,
allegations emerged that his own institution had been complicit
in shady foreign currency trading.
As a two-month-long
crisis peaked around Christmas, Gono, who is chairman of the Reserve
Bank of Zimbabwe, announced that the current highest denomination
of paper money, 200,000 Zimbabwean dollars, ZWD - worth only about
10 US cents on the parallel market - was to cease
being legal tender on December 31.
Gono's plan was designed
to cut the feet from under what he called "cash barons"
who he said were accumulating vast amounts of the money.
He has announced the
issue of notes in higher denominations of 250,000, 500,000 and 750,000
ZWD.
The existing and proposed
money looks like conventional banknotes but in fact takes the form
of bearer cheques, which the Central Bank has introduced as an emergency
measure in recent years as the face value of the Zimbabwean dollar
continues to plummet at alarming rates in the hyperinflationary
environment.
On the New Year's Eve,
the 200,000 ZWD cheques were to go out of use, Gono executed a complete
policy reverse, saying the notes would after all remain legal tender
until an unspecified date in the future. His explanation was that
not enough of the higher-denomination cheques had been printed to
meet the need for money nationwide.
In any case, he said,
there was no point in reducing trillions of dollars' worth of existing
bearer cheques to "manure" at a time when the nation was
still facing a serious cash crunch.
When he launched the
new-issue cheques, Gono said he had been given the authority to
print money as and when he deemed it necessary.
His critics have in the
past accused him of fuelling inflation by printing money at will
and failing to keep track of it properly. One of the reasons that
Gono gave for withdrawing the 200,000 ZWD notes was that, out of
67 trillion ZWD released onto the market, only two trillion could
be accounted for in the banking system.
As well as the "cash
barons" he blames for stockpiling the missing bearer cheques,
Gono has accused government officials and senior members of the
ruling ZANU-PF party of hoarding foreign currency, of which Zimbabwe
is in chronically short supply.
Now the targets of his
attacks are fighting back, accusing the Central Bank of complicity
in illicit foreign currency purchases.
Last week, a Harare woman
called Dorothy Mutekede was arrested for black-market currency trading
when she was found in possession of ten billion ZWD in the newly-printed
bearer cheques just as they were being released to the banks. She
alleged that a senior figure in the Reserve Bank (not Gono) was
the source of the cash, and was fined and released.
Her claims came as a
huge embarrassment for the Central Bank governor, who has pitched
himself as a champion against corruption in the financial sector.
The incident happened
as a court in Harare heard that the Central Bank funneled money
to a company that did not hold the foreign-currency equivalent it
claimed to have.
In court, a man called
Joseph Manjoro pleaded guilty to raising foreign currency on the
black market on behalf of Flatwater Investments, to enable it to
pay for farm machinery bought in South Africa. In mitigation, the
defendant said the Zimbabwean currency he used in the illegal transaction
formed part of seven trillion ZWD the company had received from
the Reserve Bank.
During the court proceedings,
prosecutor Tawanda Zvekare said the Reserve Bank supplied the money
in ZWD to Flatwater without ensuring that the firm had adequate
liquidity held in US dollars.
According to Zvekare,
the central bank "literally splashed cash to Flatwater without
verifying if they were very good business partners".
The prosecutor called
for links between the Reserve Bank and Flatwater to be investigated
further.
Gono has challenged those
making such accusations to substantiate the claims.
Meanwhile, he is continuing
with his own offensive, promising to name the corrupt officials
he accuses of currency speculation when he appears before parliament's
budget and finance committee next week.
Joseph Sithole is the
pseudonym of a Harare-based journalist.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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