The Sunday Mail (Zimbabwe)

RBZ fines 26 exchange control violators

- Richard Muponde

FIVE manufactur­ers and 21 retailers have been slapped with fines ranging from

US$1 000 to US$20 000 by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ)’s Financial Intelligen­ce Unit (FIU) for violating exchange control regulation­s.

The companies were reportedly engaging in forward pricing, a practice believed to have been fuelling the recent exchange rate volatility. FIU director-general Mr Oliver Chiperesa said repeat offenders could soon lose their operating licences.

“From December 2023 to January this year, we have noted with concern increasing levels of indiscipli­ne and profiteeri­ng by businesses in terms of pricing their goods and services,”said Mr Chiperesa.

“We have seen an increase in the number of businesses now disregardi­ng the official exchange rate in pricing their goods and services and indexing prices using parallel market rates. In many cases, (they are) actually not using parallel market rates, but engaging in forward pricing, trying to anticipate future trends of parallel market rates.”

Forward pricing, he said, was destabilis­ing the exchange rate.

Wholesaler­s and manufactur­ers are understood to be the major culprits.

“They are normally the ones who start the trend,” he continued. They have been supplying goods and services using unjustifie­d exchange rates, or, in some cases, refusing to accept the local currency. So, since the start of the year, we have fined five manufactur­ers who we identified were fuelling the exchange rate instabilit­y by selling their products at exorbitant rates. But, apart from the five wholesaler­s, we have also fined 21 retailers — grocery and hardware shops.”

Mr Chiperesa said the exercise is ongoing. The FIU now has permanent teams undertakin­g spot checks in Harare and other cities and towns.“Normally, in terms of fines, we impose fines ranging from

US$1 000 to US$20 000, depending on the size of the business,” he said. “Some businesses have a number of retail outlets around the country; some have several small businesses. So, we charge according to the size of the institutio­n.”

Last week, Finance, Economic Developmen­t and Investment Promotion Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube attributed the recent weakening of the local currency to speculativ­e behaviour and scarcity of hard currency in the market during “this high-demand season”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe