Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Industry must wean itself from auction

- Michael Tome

INDUSTRY must wean itself from relying on the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe for foreign currency, but rather device means to generate own forex and leave the Apex Bank to perform its key responsibi­lities that include ensuring exchange rate stability.

Some industry players say the RBZ auction backlog continues to bloat as manufactur­ers rely on the platform for foreign currency, an indication the “system was not working.”

The Apex Bank has been struggling to effectivel­y release foreign currency allotted to companies, leading to a backlog hovering around US$100 million as of April 2022.

According to some industrial­ists the Central Bank still owes bids from last year, a position that has stalled some companies’ operations thus reducing local industry’s potential to reach its full capacity.

A survey by the Confederat­ion of Zimbabwe Industries (CZI), say industry players in the manufactur­ing sector are getting circa 40 percent of their foreign currency requiremen­ts from the RBZ auction, while 60 percent is generated from internal mechanisms and other sources.

As a result, some industrial­ists are of the view that manufactur­ers should come up with mechanisms that enhance their ability to generate foreign currency and stop burdening government and the Central Bank.

Earlier this year Central Bank Governor Dr John Mangudya, indicated that while clearance of the backlog was critical, there was a need to create other ways of sourcing foreign currency to reduce traffic to the auction market.

Officiatin­g at the CZI manufactur­ing sector survey report launch last week, the organisati­on’s past president, Dr Joseph Kanyekanye, indicated that local firms should start a process of weaning themselves from the Apex Bank allocation­s.

“As industry, we are getting 40 plus percent of the foreign currency from the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe. Literally, we are getting that from the tobacco farmers, small scale gold miners because these are the guys with forceful surrender requiremen­ts.

“In a way I am saying its high time industry accepts and have self-introspect­ion, we cannot be perpetual infants, there must be a time we must be weaned off. I think that trajectory needs to be promoted from the policy perspectiv­e so that we move to a point were basically we do not require calls to the Reserve Bank every week to make our businesses run,” Dr Kanyekanye said.

Some of the local firms have started to post significan­t foreign currency inflows from the local market and exports.

Dairiboard Holdings in its first quarter trading update recently indicated that volumes sold in foreign currency grew by 186 percent stemming from enhanced foreign currency generation strategy by the firm.

According to Dairiboard, this led to foreign currency priced volumes to account for 40 percent of the firm’s total volumes, up from 17 percent recorded in 2021.

Of Dairiboard’s 40 percent sales volumes in foreign currency, 32 percent were realised from domestic sales up from 13 percent in 2021 while exports contribute­d eight percent.

In support of the new thinking, Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce (ZNCC) chief executive, Christophe­r Mugaga, in an interview noted that industry has for long been serving at the mercy of many government protection­ist policies and was high time for private players to formally learn how to generate own foreign currency.

He said the industry needed to be supported but did not need to be given perpetual handouts.

“We have benefited from the auction since its launch, we have benefitted from the protection­ist policies of the government for years including statutory instrument­s.

“I am convinced that we certainly do not need to continue relying on auction handouts. From our position as the chamber of commerce, we have always said the auction is not a platform for dolling out money, but for setting the exchange rate. It is the duty of our banks to give money through letters of credit not auction,” said Mugaga.

He lamented the current position where some players are accessing auction funds but not channeling them towards relevant purposes thus ending up on the parallel market.

“So this issue, where the industry continues to knock on Central Bank doors saying we want support, these are the people who are driving the funds to the black market.

“We already had an in-house meeting with some of our members, who are getting money on auction and not using it for the intended purpose,” said Mugaga.

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