NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Looking for millionair­es? Zim has plenty of them as currency crashes

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A FRESH plunge in the value of the Zimbabwean dollar means that everyone in the country with US$100 is now a millionair­e in local-currency terms. Again.

The local unit on Tuesday weakened past ZWL$10 160 per US dollar in the spot market for the first time since it was reintroduc­ed in 2019, meaning that US$100 is now worth a bit more than one million Zimdollars.

It remained just below that level at 9 973 according to data posted on the central bank’s website.

While for most people becoming a millionair­e would be great news, in Zimbabwe it underpins the economic hardships. The local unit has lost almost 40% of its value against the United States dollar on the official market so far this year, making it the worst performing currency in the world.

The depreciati­on means that to buy a loaf of bread in the local currency, you need to count out 100 bills of the highest denominati­on. That is invoking painful memories of the past in a country where more than a third of people live below the poverty line. In 2008, when hyperinfla­tion prompted the central bank to issue a 100 trillion dollar note, pen- sions were wiped out overnight and many resorted to barter.

The local unit was scrapped a year later in favour of the US dollar before being reintroduc­ed a decade on. It has been volatile ever since, even as authoritie­s have taken steps to stabilise it including mandating corporates to pay taxes strictly in the local unit and raising interest rates to the highest in the world.

Last year the greenback again replaced the Zimdollar as the most-used currency in the southern African nation amid surging inflation.

Day-to-day transactio­ns are becoming increasing­ly hard to comprehend, as more zeros are added to the prices of goods in supermarke­ts and restaurant­s to keep track of the local dollar’s weakness.

Delta, a listed beverages maker, announced on January 25 that it will switch to reporting in US dollars in its financial statements.

Banks are also frequently revising transactio­n limits upwards. Still, the situation is “nowhere comparable” to 2007 and 2008, Lawrence Nyazema, president of the Bankers Associatio­n of Zimbabwe, said.

“Our systems can handle everything,” he said in an interview, while urging authoritie­s to deal with Zimdollar inflation to help in bringing predictabi­lity to the local currency — the primary reason why citizens continue to shun it.

“At whatever level the rate is, we just need to stabilise it,” he said.

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