Daily Nation Newspaper

Zim to link exchange rate to hard assets, create currency board

- REUTERS.

HARARE - Zimbabwe is working on new measures to stabilise its local currency including linking the exchange rate to hard assets such as gold and creating a currency board, Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube said yesterday.

The Zimbabwean dollar has fallen about 40 percent since the start of the year, hurt by increased foreign-currency demand from civil servants being paid December bonuses and weaker commodity prices denting inflows.

Last week, President Emmerson Mnangagwa said authoritie­s were looking to introduce a "structured currency," without explaining how that would work, and the central bank governor said that work was ongoing.

"The idea going forward is to make sure that we manage the growth of liquidity which has a high correlatio­n to money supply growth and inflation. The way to do that is to link the exchange rate to some hard asset such as gold," said Ncube.

"To do that you have to have some sort of currency board type system in place where the growth of the domestic liquidity is constraine­d by the value of the asset that is backing the currency," he said in a press briefing.

More announceme­nts will come in due course, he said, adding that he believed the new measures would offer "a lasting solution to the currency volatility."

Zimbabwe is still scarred by memories of hyperinfla­tion under longtime leader Robert Mugabe.

The government relaunched a local currency in 2019 after a decade of dollarisat­ion, but it rapidly lost value and authoritie­s reauthoris­ed the use of foreign currencies in domestic transactio­ns soon after. –

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