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Local currency becomes an endangered species
IRIN News
September 11, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=80306
The Zimbabwe
dollar moved one step closer to extinction after the central bank
authorised the use of foreign currency as legal tender in the country
on 10 September.
This announcement
by Reserve Bank Governor Gideon Gono does little more than catch
up with realities on the ground; the use of foreign currency has
been widespread since the elections earlier this year.
Depending on location,
there are usually about three types of foreign money in circulation,
as well as two local currencies (original and "revalued"),
which compete for the title of the world's most worthless unit.
The US dollar and South
African rand are in use across the country, while Botswana's pula
is favoured in Bulawayo and the west of the country, the Zambian
Kwacha in northern areas and the Mozambican metical in Mutare and
the country's eastern regions.
The local unit's demise
is a consequence of Zimbabwe's hyperinflation - officially estimated
at more than 11 million percent - and the tightening of sanctions
by the European Union (EU) in the aftermath of the one-man presidential
election in June that was widely condemned as undemocratic.
A German company
discontinued its contract
to supply paper for use as money after the EU reportedly exerted
pressure on it, so the Zimbabwe dollar is not only increasingly
worthless, it is becoming increasingly scarce.
Gono told IRIN that about
1,000 retail outlets and 250 wholesalers, known as Foreign Exchange
Licensed Warehouses and Shops (FOLIWARS), as well as fuel stations,
will be permitted to trade in foreign currency for an 18-month period
until March 2010, "as an experiment as we gear ourselves up
for the 2010 World Cup [soccer] games ... [to be] ready to cater
for all visitors to our country."
Neighbouring South Africa
is hosting the 2010 FIFA World Cup.
The central bank estimates
that each month about 400,000 Zimbabweans cross to neighbouring
countries to buy groceries and other goods, spending an average
total of US$950 million. The foreign currency is accrued as remittances
from friends and family in the "Zimbabwean diaspora",
a euphemism for the more than three million people who have left
the country in the past few years.
"Against this background
it has become compellingly clear that innovations be invoked to
increase internal capacity utilisation, as well as shoring up the
availability of basic goods and services," Gono said.
He dismissed the notion
that the recognition of foreign currency as legal tender amounted
to dollarisation. "It is imperative to note that the current
measures are neither a condonation of, nor a direct introduction
of, the dollarisation of the economy," he maintained.
"These reforms are
essentially a pragmatic response to the realities obtaining in the
economy, in the interest of advancing smooth functionality of the
economy's commercial wheels, in the interest of increasing the availability
of foreign exchange in the formal market, as well as in the interest
of promoting the general availability of basic commodities through
greater capacity utilisation."
Reality
check
However, companies trading
in foreign currency will only be allowed to do so after paying the
central bank an amount anywhere between US$20,000 and US$250,000;
the bank will also be entitled to 15 percent of the earnings generated
by those licensed to trade in foreign currency.
Tindo Mbare, a former
banker, said Gono's actions were a sign of his detachment from reality.
"I don't know what country Gono is living in, but Zimbabweans
have been trading in foreign currency for more than a year. There
are areas where firewood is sold in forex, while bridal prices are
now being charged in foreign money.
"In my opinion,
the main reason for this experiment is to try and lay their hands
on the remittances from Zimbabweans in the diaspora. Zimbabweans
in the diaspora have refused to channel their money through official
channels in retaliation for being deprived of the right to vote."
Willie Mhlophe, a serving
police officer, described Gono's latest financial policy as "mad".
"I think there are people in the ruling class who have unlimited
access to foreign currency, and assume that we all can get foreign
currency. They need to be told that they are creating something
they won't be able to control.
"As civil servants,
we are not paid in foreign currency, so where will we get that money?
I foresee a situation whereby the only shops with goods will be
those trading in foreign currency, and that will create civil unrest,
especially between members of the poorly paid security forces in
the civil service and the ruling and upper classes."
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