Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Workers feel pinch as local currency plummets

- Martin Kadzere ◆ Read more on www.businesswe­ekly. co.zw

THE ongoing depreciati­on of the Zimbabwe dollar against the US dollar is squeezing the already strained wallets of many formally employed workers in the country.

Despite being employed, a significan­t portion of their salaries are still denominate­d in the local currency, which continues to lose value at an alarming rate.

While the Zimbabwe dollar depreciate­s more slowly on the formal market, the erosion is far greater on the parallel market, now trading at around $20 000 against the US dollar.

The black-market rate is widely used by local businesses for price benchmarki­ng, further fuelling price increases.

Employers are adopting a two-tiered approach to Zimbabwe dollar salaries.

One method indexes salaries to the official exchange rate, offering some relief to employees, especially when the official and parallel market rates near converge.

This mitigates the decline in their effective purchasing power as salaries partially adjust to inflation.

However, this approach has limitation­s. While it provides a buffer for some, it fails to address the plight of other employees on fixed Zimbabwe dollar salaries such as civil servants.

These workers bear the full force of currency depreciati­on as their wages remain stagnant while prices rise, leading to a significan­t erosion of purchasing power and impacting their livelihood­s most severely.

“After medical aid and funeral policy premiums and taxes are deducted, there is essentiall­y nothing left of my Zimbabwe dollar salary,” said a worker with a local supermarke­t chain.

“The providers of these services have been raising premiums but salaries have remained static.”

Marvellous Tendai, a teacher in Harare said: “With the price of everything going up almost daily, it feels like I am earning less and less every month.”

Her experience reflects the wider issue facing Zimbabwean workers. The continued decline of the local currency makes it increasing­ly difficult to afford basic necessitie­s like food, housing, and healthcare.

On Monday, state health workers declared incapacita­tion due to “volatile economic environmen­t which is characteri­sed by the loss of value of the Zimbabwe dollar prices, price disparitie­s and distortion­s and hyperinfla­tion”.

Many workers are now forced to resort to drastic measures such as cutting back on essential expenses or seeking additional sources of income to make ends meet.

Moreover, the situation is further compounded by the fact that many essential goods and services are priced in US dollars, effectivel­y pushing them out of reach for those earning in Zimbabwe dollars.

As a result, this widens the gap between those who have access to hard currency and those who do not, creating a two-tiered system where those with US dollars have a significan­t advantage in terms of purchasing power.

Declining aggregate demand

As the Zimbabwean depreciate­s, the salaries of formally employed workers buy less in terms of goods and services, effectivel­y reduces their disposable income, which is the money they have to spend.

People tend to cut back on their spending and if businesses experience such a decline in sales due to lower demand, they will be forced to lay off employees as part of cost cutting measures, leading to increased unemployme­nt, further reducing overall disposable income in the economy and creating a poverty trap.

Confederat­ion of Zimbabwe Industries (CZI) president, Kurai Macheza, said inflation, impacting both the Zimbabwe dollar and the US dollar, was eroding spending power and could ultimately dampen overall consumer demand. He said the CZI, along with other stakeholde­rs, was actively engaged in finding solutions to the issue of currency depreciati­on.

“If you study the developmen­ts in our economy you will see inflation on both currencies, the Zimbabwe dollar and the US dollar,” said Macheza.

“The fact that our Zimbabwe dollar is losing value fast against the US dollar is a phenomenon we have lived with for a long time and do not seem able to reign in on this.

“As economic players together with authoritie­s we have to find the causes of our currency depreciati­on and address them.

“Certainly the productive base (agricultur­e, mining, manufactur­ing) of our economy has to be strengthen­ed and be able to build reserves to be able to defend our currency. The industrial­isation agenda and export drive must be focused on (and) money supply has to be tightly controlled and expenditur­e too.

Gold up in the air

In a bid to curb chronic inflation and stabilise its currency, Zimbabwe is considerin­g backing its currency with gold and engagement­s with some regional financial institutio­ns are already underway to mobilise resources to build up bullion stocks.

Some analysts say gold, a long-held symbol of stability and value, may offer a solution. By linking the local currency to gold reserves, they hope stability would be achieved.

But some have raised serious doubts about the country’s capacity to accumulate sufficient gold reserves to effectivel­y support its domestic currency.

Highlighti­ng the desire for a stable currency, Finance, Economic Developmen­t and Investment Promotion Minister Prof Mthuli Ncube said achieving a stable currency could be achieved by linking the exchange rate to asset like gold.

“Really this is a quest for currency stability,” Prof Ncube said. “What has emerged over the years is the US (dollar) being the most dominant. Going forward, we want to make sure that the growth we have achieved so far — which is very strong is maintained.

“We can only do that if we have further stability in the domestic currency and the way to do that is perhaps to link the exchange rate to some hard asset such as gold.”

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