Hyperinflation fears balloon in Zimbabwe — again
harare — Zimbabweans know the risks of worthless money all too well after hyperinflation between 2007 and 2009 gave them the 100-trillion-dollar banknote that barely bought a loaf of bread.
Now they fear that the government is about to create another devastating crisis by printing its own “bond notes” that will officially be worth the same as the US dollar.
Many Zimbabweans who lost all their savings in the hyperinflation years dread President Robert Mugabe’s government issuing socalled “surrogate money”, set for next month.
“My fear is that we will have a repeat of 2009,” Petros Chirenje, 43, an electrician based in the capital, Harare, told AFP.
“I had 17 trillion Zimbabwean dollars in my bank account and I lost everything when the government switched to foreign currency.”
“I worry that the US dollars in my account will be converted to bond notes.”
The country has used the US dollar since 2009 after issuing so many Zimbabwe dollars that hyperinflation peaked at 500 billion per cent and the national currency was abandoned.
But a shortage of US banknotes has added to Zimbabwe’s accumulating economic woes.
Banks are scarcely able to dispense cash, the few remaining businesses are grinding to a halt, and the government repeatedly fails to pay soldiers and civil servants on time.
Chirenje buys imported electrical supplies because few goods are made in Zimbabwe — but bond notes are unlikely to have much value to international producers.
“The government says the bond notes will be equivalent to the US dollar, but my question is ‘how?’,” he said.
The new notes, starting with small denominations of $2 and $5, were meant to be introduced this month, and are now due out in November but no confirmed date has yet been announced.
In response, Zimbabweans have been lining up outside banks to try to get hold of the few remaining US dollars. Withdrawals are sometimes limited to just $50 per person a day.
Mavis Chapo, a housewife, said she was withdrawing all her money “before it is eaten up”.
At least 4,600 companies have closed down in the past three years, according to central bank data cited by Bloomberg News.— AFP per cent hyperinflation forced govt to abandon its national currency cash withdrawal limit per person per day to allow banks to keep US dollars companies have shut down in the past three years because of country’s situation