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Zimbabwe:
From hyperinflation to growth
Steve
H. Hanke, CATO Institute
July 25, 2008
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=9484
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The hallmark of Zimbabwe's
economic collapse is hyperinflation. The most recent official inflation
figure is for February 2008: a whopping 165,000 percent year-over-year.
At present (early June 2008), inflation is unofficially about 2.5
million percent a year. Not surprisingly, the Zimbabwe dollar has
lost more than 99.9 percent of its value against the U.S. dollar
during the past year.
Zimbabwe's hyperinflation
is destroying the economy, pushing more of its inhabitants into
poverty, and forcing millions of Zimbabweans to emigrate. Between
1997 and 2007, cumulative inflation was nearly 3.8 billion percent,
while living standards fell by 38 percent.
The source of Zimbabwe's
hyperinflation is the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe's money machine.
The government spends, and the RBZ finances the spending by printing
money. The RBZ has no ability in practice to resist the government's
demands for cash. Accordingly, the RBZ cannot hope to regain credibility
anytime soon. To stop hyperinflation, Zimbabwe needs to immediately
adopt a different monetary system.
Any one of three options
can rapidly slash the inflation rate and restore stability and growth
to the Zimbabwean economy. First is "dollarization." This
option would replace the discredited Zimbabwe dollar with a foreign
currency, such as the U.S. dollar or the South African rand. Second
is a currency board. Under that system, the Zimbabwe dollar would
be credible because it would be fully backed by a foreign reserve
currency and would be freely convertible into the reserve currency
at a fixed rate on demand. Third is free banking. This option would
allow commercial banks to issue their own private notes and other
liabilities with minimum government regulation.
Central banking is the
only monetary system that has ever created hyperinflation and instability
in Zimbabwe. Prior to central banking, Zimbabwe had a rich monetary
experience in which a free banking system and a currency board system
performed well. It is time for Zimbabwe to adopt one of these proven
monetary systems and discard its failed experiment with central
banking.
*Steve H.
Hanke is a professor of applied economics at Johns Hopkins University
in Baltimore and a senior fellow at the Cato Institute.
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