Sunday Tribune

NO CURRENCY, BUT A CURRENCY CRISIS

- | Bloomberg

NOT having a currency of its own hasn’t stopped Zimbabwe from sliding into a currency crisis.

A scarcity of foreign exchange has led to long queues for fuel, bread and medicine and sent prices surging across the country.

Police clashed with protesters in the capital, Harare, on Monday as the main trade-union group started a strike after the government more than doubled petrol prices to $3.31 (R45.60) a litre, the highest in the world, according to Globalpetr­olprices.com.

The roots of the pain lie in Zimbabwe’s decision to scrap its own currency, the Zimbabwe dollar, a decade ago, and to adopt a basket of foreign units of which the greenback is the most widely used.

The central bank then started printing quasi-greenbacks to fund rampant government spending.

The result is a convoluted system of exchange rates, with consumers charged different prices depending on whether they pay in real dollars, electronic money or so-called bond notes – even though the government insists all three have the same value. It undermined that argument by saying that foreigners could still pay the old price for fuel of $1.32 a litre if they used cash dollars.

“There is a system of smoke and mirrors going on,” said Stephen Bailey-smith, senior economist at Danish money manager Global Evolution Funds AG, which invests across Africa.

“It makes it extremely difficult to understand the real situation with the economy.” The crisis is a major headache for President Emmerson Mnangagwa, 76, a former spy chief who promised better times for Zimbabwean­s when he won elections in July, taking over from long-standing ruler Robert Mugabe, under whom the economy began its descent.

Both were members of the same party when Mugabe was ousted by the military in late 2017.

Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube said on January 12 he’d introduce a new currency within a year. But he gave few details, beyond that the central bank was building reserves, which currently cover barely two weeks of imports.

He’s also trying to restructur­e billions of dollars of defaulted multilater­al debts so that Zimbabwe can obtain new internatio­nal loans.

As violent protests left 24 people injured and five possibly dead, Mnangagwa travelled to Russia and some of its neighbours before attending the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d later this month.

Meanwhile, many Zimbabwean manufactur­ers are closing down. The chief executive officer of Surface Wilmar, the biggest producer of cooking oil, said on Friday he had no choice but to shut the company because it couldn’t find the $6 million it needed each month to pay suppliers.

“Manufactur­ers are suffocatin­g and unless something happens urgently, we could see the country grind to a halt,” said Sifelani Jabangwe, head of the Confederat­ion of Zimbabwe Industries.

The nation’s biggest brewer, Delta Corp, which is 40% owned by Anheuser-busch Inbev SA/NV, struck a deal with the government this month to get more foreign-exchange from the central bank for imports. In return, it pulled plans to reject payments in bond notes and electronic dollars, known as Real Time Gross Settlement, or RTGS.

Still, plenty of firms are offering discounts, sometimes as much as 70% , if customers use real greenbacks.

“Everyone’s running their business like a corner shop these days,” said Eliphas Wabata, who sells car parts in Harare.

“Even big retail chains. Offer to pay in cash and the price drops through the floor.”

Bond notes now trade on the black market at 3.2 per dollar, according to the Harare-based Zimbollar Research Institute. RTGS$ units are worth even less.

The stress has also spread to financial markets, with locals piling into equities to hedge against price increases.

While official statistics say inflation is running at 31% , Steve Hanke, a professor of applied economics and an expert on hyperinfla­tion at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, reckons it’s much higher: 186%.

Zimbabwe’s main stock index has climbed 65% since last March, easily the most globally. Foreign investors – who struggle to get their money out the country due to capital controls – have written down their holdings to more realistic levels.

They measure how out of whack prices are by taking the difference between the London and Harare shares of Old Mutual, Africa’s largest insurer. The Harare stock is now 4.9 times the price of that in London, when converted to dollars, double the gap of six months ago.

Hanke says Zimbabwe should stick with the dollar because it won’t be able to protect a new currency, but scrap bonds notes and RTGS.

The government could do that by accepting payments, including taxes, in those two at the same rate as the dollar. That would quickly bring down the discount for cash dollars to around 5 or 10% , he said.

But Global Evolution’s Bailey-smith disagrees.

He argues that the government should rein in spending and work quickly toward creating a new currency. It could create confidence in the unit by using additional reserves and raising interest rates – something it can’t do while it uses the dollar, he said.

“The dollarisat­ion for Zimbabwe is a sub-optimal policy decision,” he said. “They should have a currency that allows the flexible use of monetary policy.”

 ??  ?? A game of economic smoke and mirrors is being played in Zimbabwe, say experts, as the country threatens to grind to a halt
A game of economic smoke and mirrors is being played in Zimbabwe, say experts, as the country threatens to grind to a halt
 ??  ?? SOLDIERS remove rocks that had been used as barricades during a fuel price protest in Harare on Tuesday. Last weekend, the Zimbabwean government more than doubled petrol prices to $3.31 (R45.60) a litre. People face long queues for fuel, food and medicine and prices have soared. | EPA
SOLDIERS remove rocks that had been used as barricades during a fuel price protest in Harare on Tuesday. Last weekend, the Zimbabwean government more than doubled petrol prices to $3.31 (R45.60) a litre. People face long queues for fuel, food and medicine and prices have soared. | EPA

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