Daily Nation Newspaper

ZIM TO FINE THOSE NOT USING OFFICIAL ZIG RATE

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HARARE Zimbabwe will penalise individual­s and companies which don't use the prevailing official foreign-exchange rate of its new ZiG currency for transactio­ns.

The government will levy a fine of 200, 000 ZiG on offending firms and individual­s, Mthuli Ncube, the Finance Minister said in a statement published on Thursday.

The Treasury Chief had warned on Tuesday of looming regulation­s to enforce sole use of the official exchange rate in the economy, which is set daily by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe.

The government, in a bid to avoid curb the parallel market, has made the official ZiG exchange rate the only reference for trade in the currency.

The new rule now also scraps a previous requiremen­t for retailers to price their goods within 10 percent of the official exchange rate for profits.

The regulation made them uncompetit­ive against informal traders in the fight for dollars as their goods became expensive.

The ZiG, short for

Zimbabwe Gold, was unveiled on April 5 and succeeded the Zimbabwean dollar, which had lost 80 percent of its value this year.

The new unit is the sixth attempt by the southern African nation to have a functionin­g local currency. It is backed by 2.5 tons of gold and about $100 million in foreign currency reserves held by the central bank.

Banknotes and coins of the ZiG were released at the end of last month to the public.

The ZiG was trading at 13.53 to the dollar on Thursday, according to data posed on the central bank’s website. It fell Monday to a record low of 13.67 to the dollar since its debut a month ago. –

 ?? ?? A supermarke­t till operator displays a 10 ZiG banknote and 5 Zig coin in Harare.
A supermarke­t till operator displays a 10 ZiG banknote and 5 Zig coin in Harare.

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