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Is
Zim heading to pre-2009
Cathy
Buckle
December 04, 2013
http://www.dailynews.co.zw/articles/2013/12/04/is-zim-heading-to-pre-2009
A front page newspaper
photograph with the headline: “Hundreds queue outside banks
for hours to make withdrawals,” sent chills down our spines.
Whether we liked it or
not it was impossible to stop the automatic flashback to five years
ago.
The independent media
reported that banks couldn’t meet the withdrawal requirements
of depositors.
As a result limits were
put on the amounts of withdrawals customers could make, ranging
from $200 to $1 000 dollars a day.
Suddenly, the new phrase
at every turn was “liquidity crunch” which in plain
English simply means shortage of money.
A senior staff member
at one bank, choosing anonymity for himself and his bank, told the
press that the huge queues were only the result of ATM machines
being down.
“We don’t
want you to write a negative story on this one because it will have
a boomerang effect,” he said.
A negative story creating
a boomerang effect? How insulting it is for banks to be saying this
to Zimbabweans who have all lost their money repeatedly in the past
decade after a series of financial crises which most of us have
yet to recover from.
Repeated devaluations
including the notorious “Zero to Hero” debacle turned
us all into paupers.
Pensions, insurance policies and savings were lost overnight.
We arrived at banks to
find our balances reduced to zero.
Even worse were the times
we arrived at banks, building societies and asset management houses
to find the doors locked, staff gone and our life savings non-existent.
At no time during the
worst of Zimbabwe’s economic crisis did the banks protect
us, their customers.
They took our deposits
and pay cheques with one hand and gave nothing back in return.
They limited the amount
of our own money we could withdraw so we couldn’t pay school
fees, buy life-sustaining medication, get enough food despite queuing
for hours at our banks.
They stopped paying us
interest.
They increased the minimum
balance we had to leave in our accounts. They stopped sending us
monthly bank statements.
They raised ledger fees
repeatedly and introduced new charges for depositing or withdrawing
cash and even counting our cash.
They even charged us
when we went to the counter to enquire about the balance in our
accounts.
Since the dollarisation
of the economy in 2009, Zimbabwe has not become a nation of savers
again as we were prior to 2000.
No one trusts the banks
with their money anymore and the continual 51 percent indigenisation
threats make us even more scared of leaving our money in the banks.
Despite now trading in
an international currency, the banks continue to give us minimal,
if any, interest.
Putting the customer
first is a mentality that still hasn’t seen the light of day
in Zimbabwe.
Why is it that banks,
like so many of the places where we do business, still don’t
appreciate that without us, their customers, they wouldn’t
have jobs, or banks?
It doesn’t take
a picture or story in the paper to create the ‘boomerang effect’
banks are so scared of.
There are 10 million
cell phones sending countless text messages every second, not to
mention the queues we are ourselves standing in or seeing with our
own eyes.
And as for the “expert”
on ZBC TV on Wednesday night blaming the “liquidity crunch”
on sanctions: oh please, get real!
It is time for all of
us to respond to this sanctions blame game every time it is used
by pointing out the fact that only 10 individuals and one company
(the ZDI) remain on the EU restricted measures/ targeted sanctions
list.
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