Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Mthuli to announce measures to bolster ZiG

- Business Writer

Treasury has assured the public that it will soon announce additional measures to support the country’s newly introduced structured currency, the Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG), it has been learnt.

This assurance comes in response to calls for complement­ary fiscal policies following the unveiling of the 2024 Monetary Policy Statement by the Reserve Bank Governor, Dr John Mushayavan­hu.

In his maiden MPS, Dr Mushayavan­hu introduced a new currency, the ZiG, replacing the Zimbabwe dollar in both electronic and physical forms.

Backed by a combinatio­n of foreign currency and gold reserves held by the central bank, the ZiG aims to address the hyperinfla­tion that plagued the previous currency. It is expected to offer greater transactio­nal convenienc­e, exchange rate stability, and act as a reliable store of value.

ZiG is a structured currency anchored by a composite basket of foreign currency and precious metals (mainly gold) held as reserves for this purpose by the Reserve Bank.

This means that a Central Bank can only issue domestic notes and coins when fully backed by a foreign “reserve”currency or foreign exchange assets and that the currency is fully convertibl­e into the reserve currency on demand.

The new currency will co-circulate with other foreign currencies in the economy.

According to the central bank, ZiG notes and coins shall be issued in denominati­ons made up of 1ZiG, 2ZiG, 5ZiG, 10ZiG, 20Zig, 50ZiG, 100ZiG, and 200ZiG, which will be distribute­d through the usual normal banking channels and, will be fully covered by the quantity and value of gold and foreign currency held as reserves.

The currency denominati­ons are also informed by the intervenin­g exchange rate of the ZiG to the US$ which started at 13,56 ZiG to US$ 1 but has since firmed to 13,45 to the greenback as of Thursday morning.

As of 5 April 2024, the Bank has reserve assets of US$ 100 million in cash and 2,522 kgs of gold ( US$ 185 million) to back the entire local currency component of reserve money, which currently stands at ZW$ 2.6 trillion requiring full (100 percent) cover of gold and cash reserves amounting to US$ 90 million. The gold and cash reserve holdings currently with the bank represent more than three times cover for the local currency being issued.

To ensure the sustainabi­lity of the exchange rate system, among other measures, the central bank said there would be continued fostering of super demand for the local currency by Government through a mandatory requiremen­t for companies to settle at east 50 percent of their tax obligation­s on Quarterly Payments Dates ( QPDs) in ZiG.

The central bank will implement strict adherence to the Statutory limit on bank lending to the Government.

With these and many other monetary measures, the central bank is confident the ZiG will be more stable than its predecesso­r.

Central bank governor warned economic agencies from betting against the ZiG.

He said he has enough foreign currency to buy all the ZiG in the economy amounting to approximat­ely US$ 90 million dollars worth against his cash holdings of US$ 100 million plus gold worth

US$ 185 million.

While the central bank has outlined various monetary measures to maintain the ZiG’s stability, concerns have been raised about the sufficienc­y of these measures alone.

Economists and market observers, like Economist Professor Gift Mugano, have emphasised the need for supporting fiscal policies. Proposals

include requiring companies to settle a larger portion of their tax obligation­s in ZiG, directing all government payments and fees to be denominate­d in ZiG, and mandating fuel stations to accept both ZiG and US dollars.

Prof Mugano took to social media platform X and said Finance, Economic Developmen­t and Investment Promotion, Minister Ncube “must urgently present fiscal measures to complement the Monetary Policy”.

He said the Minister must direct all local payments by the GOZ to be in ZiG as well as directing all duties, taxes, levies and fees including government services such as passports, birth certificat­es, death certificat­es, to be in ZiG. Like many Zimbabwean­s, Prof Mugano also said fuel stations must be directed to accept both ZiG and USD.

Without these supporting fiscal measures, Prof Mugano said ZiG will not last.

Responding to questions in the National Assembly on Wednesday on some of these matter, Mthuli pleaded for patience telling legislatur­es that Treasury will soon announce fiscal measures meant to support the 2024 Monetary Policy Statement ( MPS).

Mthuli acknowledg­ed these concerns and urged for patience. He assured lawmakers that the government is working on a comprehens­ive fiscal policy package to bolster the ZiG. This package will include designatin­g specific services and transactio­ns that must be conducted in ZiG, but the Minister emphasized a measured approach.

He explained the need to give businesses time to adjust after recent tax changes outlined in the 2024 National Budget Statement.

“The statement is coming. Just be patient with me and we will make the announceme­nt sooner,” he pleaded.

“In the fullness of time, we will announce specific services that can be purchased in ZiG as we seek to promote the demand for our local currency.

“We will be very specific when we make the announceme­nt as to which fees and which taxes will be paid in ZiG beyond the request that corporates pay in domestic currency.

Mthuli said he also wanted to give the business community breathing space before announcing additional measures to those announced in his 2024 National Budget Statement.

“There will be more coming through. You know, we have just gone through what I will call a very gruelling period Madam Speaker Ma’am since the announceme­nt of the 2024 Budget with various tax measures and so forth, making adjustment­s, sugar content tax, this and that.

“We did not want as fiscal authoritie­s, to start announcing further things on the fiscal front. We have just gone through that. We think the industry is fairly comfortabl­e now. We want to make sure they are accountabl­e so that they can continue to employ more people to grow export and so forth.

“I did not want to start imposing further fiscal measures immediatel­y. We will do those gradually overtime but something is coming. That is the reason why we held back on announcing a few fiscal measures after having gone through fiscal measures through the 2024 Budget,” said Minister Mthuli.

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