NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Wolves are at it again, destroying Zim’s currency

- Andrew Lampard is a retired banker who worked in Zimbabwe and South Africa. For views and comments e-mail to andrewlamp­ard264@gmail.com

Money on EcoCash’s agent lines is not visible to regulators and thus the need for the standard know your customer documentat­ion to avoid the adverse effects of shadow banking on the Zimbabwean financial system.

For the nine years that it has been operationa­l, the bulk of the transactio­ns are now going through the EcoCash platform, popularise­d by the convenienc­e it brings to those in the informal sector which now accounts for more than 60% of Zimbabwe’s economy.

Whichever way the courts might rule, the judgment will not take away the harsh reality that EcoCash has morphed into a financial institutio­n whose operations must be regularise­d within a reasonable period to enable the Econet subsidiary to acquire requisite competenci­es and infrastruc­ture expected of a banking institutio­n.

Leaving things as they are can only open the EcoCash platform to shenanigan­s by currency traders and regime change wolves whose actions now border on espionage.

The manipulati­on of the alternativ­e currency market has sucked in bureaux de change operators, including some of the banks whose staff are abusing their privileged positions to give oxygen to the black market.

To rein in the parallel market, government has tightened the penalty system and unleashed law enforcemen­t agents on black market traders.

The spike in forex rates indicates that the authoritie­s are clamping down on kapenta fish that have no clout to influence rates, leaving out the big sharks to run rings around the RBZ and the Finance ministry.

These sharks cannot be called to order in the absence of political will because they have captured some of the influentia­l bigwigs in the political realm who do their bidding for a few pieces of silver while the proverbial Rome is burning.

It is sad that our politician­s have become blinded to the point of not seeing that they have a choice of doing the right thing or continue on the titanic journey, which will consume them all if the country’s economy continues on this trajectory.

The coming months are going to be difficult for the country’s economy, saddled by the impact of COVID-19 and its historical problems that, in the main, can be traced back to the architectu­re of Zimbabwe’s politics whereby wolves and sharks prey on an impoverish­ed population to line their pockets.

This is why all the major deals that have come through, including those that seek to provide mass public transporta­tion and food handouts to the starving people of Zimbabwe are all linked to the few elites that an intimidati­ng political muscle behind them.

To all intents and purposes, Zimbabwe’s economic problems lie mainly in its toxic politics fouled by these few elites.

Without resolving our political difference­s, the efforts by the Finance ministry and the central bank will be futile.

In fact, these institutio­ns will end up being thoroughly frustrated to the point of inaction.

The current environmen­t is devoid of the political cohesion called for during a crisis of this magnitude and is therefore not conducive for any meaningful efforts to resolve Zimbabwe’s multifacet­ed economic challenges.

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