The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

An explanatio­n for US$ leakages

The context of externalis­ation by the RBZ was appealing to a nation disillusio­ned by corruption and misappropr­iation of resources.

- Chris Chenga Open Economy

IT IS neither economic nature nor is it a right for every country to have a currency of its own. Underlying currency existence is the extent of productivi­ty competitiv­eness of independen­t nation states, or nations that come together to form a currency union. As experience­d through our own history in Zimbabwe, the sustained existence of a currency is never guaranteed.

Rather, amongst other less significan­t factors, the sustained existence of a currency is particular­ly sensitive to the productivi­ty capacity of an independen­t nation, or a group coming together under a currency union.

Throughout history, numerous currencies have been conceived and in widely varying forms. For instance, commodity-backed currencies have varied in keeping parity to different commoditie­s such as state land or minerals; as well as monetary guarantees such as reserves or debt obligation­s. More recently, towards the end of the last century, fiat currencies generally functionin­g on the forces of demand and supply, though largely stabilised by the sentiments of confidence and faith have become more prominent.

What has remained consistent­ly true, however, throughout the century’ s long history in which currencies have been in existence is that all forms of currency have either been sustained or met their eventual demise by productivi­ty competitiv­eness.

It is important for us to retain consciousn­ess of the productivi­ty imperative that either sustains or demises the utility of a currency, in whichever form it may be.

Since the era of hyperinfla­tion, as individual­s, we have groomed an emphasis and perception of currencies merely in the context of exchange rates, downplayin­g the productivi­ty imperative that actually influences those exchange rates and, more significan­tly, the continuedv­iability of respective currencies in how we manage our personal economics.

Indeed, hyperinfla­tion also awoke our impulses for arbitrage and hedging currency rates; understand­ably so, as at some point, these were impulses directly linked to our continued livelihood.

As an industrial base in Zimbabwe, entities have developed perception­s of currency within a rigid context of trading.

As industry has trim med value chains from productivi­ty activities towards trading activities, currency has been much more defined on its trade context rather than its productivi­ty context.

It has been a long time since currency has kept parity to productivi­ty activities in the value chain.

Instead, currency has only become as relevant as the tradable downstream services and activities to satisfy whatever stage our industry finds itself along the value chain.

Thus, what is mutual within our perception­s as individual­s and the industrial base of Zimbabwe is that we have diverted away from understand­ing the productivi­ty imperative of currency; all currency alternativ­es that find space in our public discourse. Consider our public comprehens­ion of the liquidity constraint­s taking effect on the United States dollar.

Only at the periphery of public discourse do we heart he more precise prognosis that we are simply out-competed off the US dollar by more productive regional peers.

It is regret table that the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe engaged discourse with the context of externalis­ation and the subsequent exchange control regime, for it was not the most significan­t factor to explain US dollar shrinkage in the economy.

Low confidence, particular­ly in the productivi­tycompetit­iveness of the economy, was the most significan­t factor in US dollars pouring out of the economy.

Also harmful is the over-emphasis on currentacc­ount figures without similar regard for capital account investment­s.

The frequent current account references are evident to the aforementi­oned trade perception of currency that also still resides at the highest levels of monetary discourse.

More reference, and a more precise productivi­ty perception, should be made to the fact that capital investment­s into Zimbabwe over the last five years have been cumulative­ly less than five percent of GDP.

Indeed, one should not be alarmist, but this must be perceived as a matter of national concern.

Simplified, out of a value of 100 of economic activity, in the last five years, less than five of that economic activity has been investment into productivi­ty capacitati­on.

No currency in history has ever sustained such a structural imbalance, and before engaging the US dollar shrinkage on an external is at ion footing, this capital investment imbalance should have been the focus of emphasis from the central bank.

What the US dollar is moving away from in Zimbabwe is the low productivi­ty capacity that for five years has stood at less than five percent investment to GDP ratio.

So let currency flow whichever direction it wishes and currency always flows to where there is greater productivi­ty capacity.

The context of external is at ion by the RB Z was appealing to a nation disillusio­ned by corruption and misappropr­iation of resources.

As individual citizens and our industrial base — both economic segments retaining trade perception­s of currency instead of productivi­ty perception­s—many of us failed to identify the precise cause of US dollar shrinkage.

The liquidity crisis is simple to explain: until we enhance our productive capacity in Zimbabwe, the US dollar will continued is appearing.

Before we entertain any pivot to alternativ­e currencies, which Government has rightfully disqualifi­ed, we should focus on the question: Does our productivi­ty warrant the sustenance of any currency?

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