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Banks
run out of money
IRIN News
August 04,
2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=79617
Attempts to
tame Zimbabwe's multimillion percent annual inflation rate had an
inauspicious beginning on 1 August when banks turned customers away
after running out of cash.
Reserve Bank governor
Gideon Gono sees the introduction of a new currency that will lop
off ten zeroes from the old currency, effectively revaluing Z$10
billion to one Zimbabwe dollar, as the solution to the country's
hyperinflation.
On 4 August, US$1 was
equivalent to Z$75 on the parallel currency exchange market. The
largest denomination of the new currency is Z$500 (US$6.60).
The new attempt
to curb inflation - estimated at 2.2 million percent by the government
and at more than 15 million percent by independent economists -
was announced in Gono's half-yearly monetary
policy statement on 30 July and implemented two days later.
He said the new notes, along with the bearer and agro cheques being
used as currency, would remain in circulation until 31 December.
He recommended that wage and salary increments be frozen for six
months.
"The six-month moratorium
is suggested here as the most credible foundation and seed for the
retransformation of market trends and micro-level pricing behaviour
into stable and predictable modes," he said.
President Robert Mugabe,
84, who attended the monetary policy presentation, threatened to
impose a state of emergency if the business sector continued to
adjust its prices in line with the hyperinflationary environment.
"We have the power
to invoke further measures, but we do not want to use the emergency
rules. Emergency measures can be taken but we do not want that yet.
We can do that to deter unjustified price increases," said
the president, who has ruled for 28 years.
A bank manager, who declined
to be identified, told IRIN that they had not received the new notes.
"Our only problem is that the maximum withdrawals have been
increased to Z$2 trillion (US$200) per customer per day, and as
a result we have run out of cash. The Reserve Bank has not given
us any additional supplies of money." Delivery vans were parked
outside the central bank, waiting to transfer the new currency to
rural areas.
The
printing money habit
The
notes were manufactured in 2007 by a German company, but additional
trade restrictions imposed after Zimbabwe's elections in March were
dismissed as a sham by the European Union, led paper suppliers Giesecke
& Devrient cancel their contract.
The decision put pressure
on an Austria-based company, Jura JSP, which provides the specialised
software used to print forgery-proof bank notes, to review its business
relationship with Mugabe's government.
The EU has frozen bank
accounts and slapped travel restrictions on Zimbabwe's ruling elite
in protest against the government's human rights violations.
In August 2006, Gono
chopped three zeroes from the currency in a bid to contain inflation,
which was then running at 1,183 percent, describing his policy as
a "sunrise - a new beginning for Zimbabwe".
Independent economist
Tony Hawkins dismissed Gono's latest strategy as little more than
posturing. "What monetary policy? That was a political statement
that was made. The nonsense about Zimbabwe being under sanctions
was not monetary. There were a few currency changes, but that is
where it ends. Freezing wages is not going to end hyperinflation,"
he told IRIN.
"The main causer
of hyperinflation is Gideon Gono, who is printing money, which is
being used for handouts and is being given to political thugs to
beat up people."
Hawkins said unless there
was a political settlement, the zeroes would be back on the currency
in a few months. "We are looking at a situation whereby the
(US) dollarisation of the economy is going to increase, because
our own money would have become worthless."
The ruling ZANU-PF party
and the opposition Movement for Democratic Change are engaged in
negotiations, but no settlement has been reached.
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