Zim's new currency 'won't solve its problems'

A new note introduced by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe. AP Photo: Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi

A new note introduced by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe. AP Photo: Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi

Published Apr 25, 2017

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Zimbabwe’s cash crisis is not getting any better and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) says it’s new local currency, known as Bond Notes, is not going to fix its chronic financial problems.

Zimbabwe ran out of cash – the US dollar – from April last year, so it withdrew high denomination notes from the market and introduced about R1.3 billion in small denomination locally produced cash, known as Bond Notes.

The governor of the central bank, John Mangudya, said the money for this new currency was backed by Afreximbank in Cairo.

During the present Spring IMF meeting in Washington, African director Abebe Aemro Selassie said on Sunday that a whole package of reforms was needed to get Zimbabwe out of the crisis.

“There’s a limited amount of foreign exchange inflows coming in, and no monetary policy tool. So, they are in a difficult circumstance right now.

“We think that, going down this one (bond) note route, in and of itself, will not address the challenges that the country has. So, it’s very important to have a more comprehensive policy package, which also addresses a lot of the fiscal challenges that the country faces, a lot of the structural reforms that have to be done,” he said.

Mangudya, insiders say, listens carefully to the IMF and has now said he will not, for the moment, release any more Bond Notes even though he has only released about half the amount he said he would print.

Zimbabwe also dramatically restricted imports – mainly from South Africa – as it did not have enough money to pay for them.

To secure new loans it also finally repaid the IMF, but has still failed to settle its long-standing loans to the World Bank and the African Development Bank.

Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa has not yet been able to get political clearance from the ruling Zanu-PF to fulfil his 2015 commitment to the IMF to cut the size of the civil service and other public spending, which consumes more then 90% of government revenue.

Since the Bond Notes arrived in the banking system late last year, US dollar notes have largely disappeared.

The central bank accuses some of hoarding US dollar cash, and last week placed a cap on cash-back facilities offered by some major retailers such as Pick n Pay, which owns and runs several supermarkets in Zimbabwe.

Unable to get cash from ATMs or even from their banks, many shoppers pay for their goods at the till using their bank cards and then add extra dollars to the slip, and the supermarket gives them notes back.

Now the central bank has told retailers to limit that facility to about R250 a time. Banks are only allowed to provide customers with a maximum of R2 600 per week from their accounts.

Many employers pay workers via telephone banking or via their bank cards. So while bank statements show a US dollar amount, depositors cannot withdraw it except in small amounts from time to time

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