Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Cash shortages an opportunit­y for innovation among cross border traders

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whereby after selling their wares outside the country, cross-border traders would then bring in other wares to sell and make the US dollar. But with the introducti­on of bond notes as an export incentive, we now need policy innovation from the Reserve Bank. We have been engaging the Reserve Bank to see how cross border traders can access the bond notes export incentive. So we have already presented papers to Government and the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe with various proposals on how this can be achieved.

FM: What are some of the proposals you have made and how has Government responded?

AT: We lobbied the Ministry of Finance, the RBZ and the Ministry of Small to Medium Enterprise­s for financing of the cross border trading sector and reforming the trading environmen­t. We actually advised Government that, look, you can be able to harvest from the energy of the cross border traders if you put aside funding for our operations. We said to them, as cross border traders we are prepared to burn the midnight candle to export and bring in both foreign currency and raw materials that will drive productivi­ty in our industries. We also proposed the creation of a float, in bond notes, for cross border traders and artists who buy things such as art and craftwork from the curio manufactur­es to be able to buy them in bond notes, take them for sale outside the country and be able to deposit whatever foreign currency they get there into an account and then be able to come and withdraw it here as bond notes. This way, we would be converting the bond note into foreign currency. Since 2004, we have also, as ZCBTA, advocated for what is called COMESA Simplified Trade Regime (STR), whereby we lobbied that people must be allowed to import or export goods of up to $1000. without a lot of paperwork requiremen­ts such as invoices or Bills of Entry.

In 2010, COMESA acknowledg­ed that and they introduced STR, but our Government was not innovative enough to create policies, which would enable us to capitalise. For instance, instead of using the STR as a mechanism to tap into the foreign currency generation capacity of the informal sector, Government opened it up to everybody.

However, we are now happy that they have responded to our proposals particular­ly through the $15 million loan facility that was availed specifical­ly for cross border traders.

FM: Tell us more about the loan facility. Who will benefit and how will it work?

AT: Like I said earlier on, the $15 million Fund is an outcome of the engagement­s with Government. In fact, four years ago we had approached Afreximban­k with the same proposals we made to the Zimbabwean Government and they saw the value of bringing the micro enterprise player into the formal economy. They actually put significan­t funding on the table but we could not find a banking partner with expertise to manage the finances in accordance with their expectatio­ns and the deal could not proceed. But now we are happy that our own Government has come on board.

The purpose of the funding is two-pronged. Firstly, it is export focused and secondly, it is production focused. You must have something to sell outside the country or you should be able to bring in raw materials which add value to the country’s productivi­ty for you to be able to access this funding. You cannot borrow that money to import finished products. We have establishe­d a partnershi­p with Steward Bank who will be the fund manager. We will soon be meeting the RBZ to finalise the operationa­l parameters before we roll out the facility but I can give you the background informatio­n. The loan facility will only be accessed by cross border traders who belong to organised structures. In terms of eligibilit­y requiremen­ts, we as ZCBTA are proposing a shift from the geography related rules used by micro-finance institutio­ns. For us, there is no point in asking somebody about a fixed place from which they operate because a cross border trader can be working from home but trading around the country. So what we should be looking at is the trackrecor­d.

To say that, if you have been exporting wood can we see your forestry papers or proof of the duty that you have been paying say for the past three years. Secondly, we will also encourage our members to organise themselves and apply as small groups as a way of minimising default risks. Lastly the Government has also said we do not want this facility to benefit people from Harare only and so as we speak, we have triggered registrati­on in all other provinces to get a decentrali­sed membership database. Generally, we see it as a win-win situation and a strategic alliance between Government, CZI and us the cross border traders. For us cross border traders, it’s about increasing capitalisa­tion and viability, for the Government it’s about earning foreign currency and for CZI they can follow our footprints a few years later to open bigger shops.

FM: Cross border traders require foreign currency to import. How accessible has it been especially now that the bond notes seem to be replacing the US dollar in circulatio­n?

AT: Well, I haven’t heard people cry because right now, getting foreign currency in the bank or outside the bank is not necessaril­y an issue in this country. Remember I talked about the issue of mattress and for instance if you give an order to an informal trader for a specific product today, they will simply get their foreign currency from under the mattress and go and import the product for you. What Government needs to do, which we have proposed to them, is to create incentives for people to bring out the money from under their mattresses and transact. One such measure is to allow informal traders to import strategic raw materials and also lower duty on those raw materials, which are key for revival of our industry. Those who cannot get foreign currency from the banks have their own networks of accessing it on the parallel market.

FM: But isn’t there a challenge with the exchange rates, because while the RBZ says the bond note is at par with the US dollar, there have reports that this isn’t the case on the parallel market.

AT: I really haven’t heard many of such stories because people are using bond notes and the US dollar at the same time and these currencies are being treated at par. What I have heard, but I haven’t been able to prove it, is that when the bond note was introduced, there were shops that were insisting on payments in strictly US dollars and not bond notes. But if you talk about roadside moneychang­ers, I haven’t heard any complaints and so like I said exchange rates have not really been a problem for crossborde­r traders. In fact informal traders can actually do their business without even going to the banks.

FM: What innovation­s have you taken as an informal business sector to ensure that your membership’s business is not severely affected by the decrease in cash circulatio­n levels?

AT: The innovation that we did as cross border traders has been to develop a new membership card which also functions as a bank card and it is powered by Steward Bank. This is part of a move towards a cashless society within the cross border traders sector which also helps to minimise the negative impact of cash shortages on our membership. You can tell the people in Bulawayo that as an associatio­n, we have developed a branded bank card, which enables our members to transact locally without necessaril­y having to use cash all the time. We partnered with the Confederat­ion of Zimbabwean Industries and Steward Bank, so that we have that kind of a technical transactin­g platform. But this card is ZimSwitch enabled and only works locally. I can safely tell you that within another three weeks, we will have a cross border card, which operates beyond our borders. We are just putting the nuts and bolts together.

Secondly, this transactin­g platform, which will help the small-scale cross border traders to talk to big traders in terms of business. In other words, I can walk into Dairibord or Olivine Industries, swipe using this card and get a discount. We also have Point Of Sale machines which you can use to make purchases using this card. The key feature, which I want you to capture is that we requested for specificat­ions, which allow inter-member payments using this card. In other words, if a cross border trader in Victoria Falls wants bananas which I can send from Harare, we should be able to pay each other using the plastic card.

FM: How has the membership responded to this card and what has been the uptake level?

AT: So far the card has been doing well in Harare. Right now we are putting the mechanisms in all provinces to enable people to access it and also register as members. Since the announceme­nt of the loan fund, the demand for the card has been rising significan­tly. Initially we had said we will start doing the campaigns in Harare and learn how to replicate it in the provinces.

FM: How would you compare the impact of cash shortages to that of Statutory Instrument 64 of 2016?

AT: Statutory Instrument 64 had both positive and negative impacts on our operations as cross-border traders. The negative impact mainly relates to the way it was introduced. It was introduced at a time when cross-border traders were already strangled by another instrument, called Instrument 148, which had been introduced much earlier.

It prevented traders and travellers using buses with trailers from enjoying tax rebate. So Statutory Instrument 64 was introduced when cross border traders were already under siege and tempers were boiling. They were saying- How can you have someone driving a Mercedes Benz being allowed a $200 rebate but a poor person using a bus with a trailer is not allowed?.

But suffice to say that the Ministry of Industry and Commerce was very proactive in dealing with the situation and we were called to a meeting where we then began to input in the process, which had been started without involving us. We made our submission­s, which were taken on board. We pointed to the minister that apart from being a livelihood for many people, cross border trading can also support the recovery of the economy. We said for whatever import gap there is in this country, there must be some kind of framework, which allows a small-scale trader to also play a part. We suggested to them to give us a list of goods or raw materials that can be imported so that we can incentivis­e people with money under their mattresses to bring it out, engage in business and ease the cash shortages.

The minister was very accommodat­ive and I can speak with authority that if any of our members require import permits, all we need to do is to write a support letter to the minister and they will be able to get it and import whatever is being imported by the big players.

FM: What would be your closing remarks; any advice or the way for your members and Zimbabwean­s at large?

AT: I would like to urge our members out there to register for them to enjoy the many benefits that our associatio­n has to offer, such as the impending loan facility and the cross border traders’ card that will enable them to boost their businesses in these times of cash shortages and also to get discounts from manufactur­ers.

 ??  ?? Clients stand outside a Bulawayo bank for their chance to do transactio­ns in this file picture. Zimbabwe is facing severe cash shortages that have resulted in long queues at banking halls, and this has negatively affected both the formal and informal...
Clients stand outside a Bulawayo bank for their chance to do transactio­ns in this file picture. Zimbabwe is facing severe cash shortages that have resulted in long queues at banking halls, and this has negatively affected both the formal and informal...

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