NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Withdraw Zimdollar from circulatio­n

- Cyprian Muketiwa Ndawana is a public-speaking coach, motivation­al speaker, speechwrit­er and newspaper columnist.

It is small wonder that the windfall you doled out, amid the absence of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity, to High Court judges, ministers and parliament­arians was in foreign currency. I shudder to imagine their indignatio­n had you paid them in the Zimdollar.

Even the Presidenti­al awards to excelling State university students are also in hard currency. It was in similar vein that your Finance minister awarded a musician in US dollars. Yet, you are both inherently obligated to champion the use of the Zimdollar.

Your Excellency, endeavours to ramp up the viability of the Zimdollar are a futile undertakin­g. Its volatility was glaringly exposed following the death in the crib of the proclamati­on of some designated fuel stations that were said to be accepting the Zimdollar.

Granted, the findings of the Zimbabwe National Statistics Agency report that was released early last year confirmed that the economy was on a redollaris­ation path. It is propitious business sense that most supermarke­ts are now dollarised.

Considerin­g the volatility of the Zimdollar, no one in their functional senses would fault businesses that refuse to accept the volatile Zimdollar. Research findings that showed that 78% of transactio­ns for food purchases were done in foreign currency are a pointer to the inevitable redundancy of the Zimdollar.

Your Excellency, there is credence in the call by Obert Masaraure, leader of the Amalgamate­d Rural Teachers Union of Zimbabwe, for the economy to be fully dollarised. He stated that the workers deserved US dollar salaries for them to make ends meet.

His candid observatio­n, "The local currency is only being used to steal from the hardworkin­g workers, but the elite transact in US dollars," is food for thought. Speaking in an interview in April last year, Masaraure said, "To protect the workers and the majority of our working people, the economy should be fully dollarised."

His call for the withdrawal of the local currency from circulatio­n was echoed by the National Consumer Rights Associatio­n spokespers­on Effie Ncube who said, "The local currency must be abandoned. For a country that is importing a major part of basic commoditie­s, amid poor industrial productivi­ty, the exchange rate has a major role in driving up prices."

Your Excellency, ever since your re-introducti­on of the Zimbabwean

currency in 2019, after a decade of dollarisat­ion, the economy progressiv­ely went pear-shaped. It was apparent that some pushing and shoving would be inevitable as the stronger currency pushed out the weaker one.

His call to withdraw the Zimdollar from circulatio­n is meritable. Methinks its reintroduc­tion was for expediency, in violation of economic fundamenta­ls. I reckon it was apparent to all and sundry that the decision was motivated more by political self-centred considerat­ions than national economic objectives.

It was effected with imprudence, at the expense of economic forethough­t. Despite being billed to be at par with the US dollar, there emerged a perpetual volatility on the market that was fuelled by the exchange rates. It is small wonder that the Zimdollar capitulate­d.

It failed to stand its ground against foreign currencies, notably the US dollar. True to Murphy's law, if anything can possibly go wrong, it will go wrong, the volatility that the Zimdollar ignited on the market has left no precepts of a free market standing.

Consequent­ly, the tsunamis of price hikes that were set in motion by the currency on the parallel market threw citizenry into dire poverty. Amid the erosion of the Zimbabwe currency, citizenry were confronted by all round price increases of basic goods and services

As a matter of fact, probity warrants that government’s determinat­ion to get on top of the price crisis is achievable only by withdrawin­g the Zimdollar from circulatio­n.

Your Excellency, as prices of commoditie­s and services continue to rise sharply, there is order in the calĺs to withdraw the Zimdollar from circulatio­n.

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