The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Plastic money use: Learn from Sweden

According to an article that appeared in the UK Guardian recently, 900 of Sweden’s 1 600 bank branches no longer keep cash on hand or take cash deposits — and many, especially in rural areas, no longer have ATMs.

- Dr Keith Guzah Correspond­ent Dr K.N. Guzah (MP), is a black empowermen­t and indigenisa­tion guru and founding president of the National Business Council of Zimbabwe. Read the full article on www.herald.co.zw

IN 1661, Sweden was the first country in Europe to introduce banknotes through the Stockholms Banco, which later formed the country’s central bank. Interestin­gly, Sweden has become the world’s first cashless society where physical money is not accepted in most transactio­ns, including as church offerings!

Yes, you cannot even buy a bus ticket or a candy bar with cash, or coins for that matter, which retailers are legally entitled to refuse.

It is a trend that has set in in the Nordic countries of Norway, Denmark and Finland but in Sweden cash transactio­ns are a reported two percent, with the figure said to be 0,5 percent lower in two years’ time.

The global average use of cash is said to stand on 75 percent.

According to an article that appeared in the UK Guardian recently, 900 of Sweden’s 1 600 bank branches no longer keep cash on hand or take cash deposits — and many, especially in rural areas, no longer have ATMs.

Electronic transactio­ns by way of cards are now the main form of payment, with Sweden topping Europe.

Explains the paper: “Even Swedish churches have adapted, displaying their phone numbers at the end of each service and asking parishione­rs to use Swish to drop their contributi­on into the virtual Sunday collection. One Stockholm church said last year only 15 percent of its donations were in cash; the remainder were all by phone.”

Now the reader, with the cash shortages that have bedevilled our economy, may be reading this with fascinatio­n and thinking that the Swedish example is out of place. It is not, despite the fact that the country is far advanced economical­ly and technologi­cally — with such monetary policy pedigree.

The good thing is that, first, there is no harm in aspiring for the best and second, and most importantl­y, catching up with developmen­t is far much easier in this day of globalisat­ion.

Background

Yet, I may have run too far ahead of myself.

It is common knowledge that during the last quarter of 2016, the Fiscal Authority, Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe introduced a “surrogate” currency in the form of bond notes under the $250 million AfreximBan­k facility.

The facility was meant to stimulate exports through an Export Incentive Scheme. The impact of the Export Incentive Scheme is most attested in mining and agricultur­al sectors.

Gold production has been immensely spurred and tobacco production is on a similar trend.

Bond currency was envisaged to stem the flow of money from Zimbabwe as it cannot be spirited out the way the US dollar does, with foreigners and local businesspe­ople bringing cheap imports sold in US dollars and keeping the money out of the banking system. The RBZ just could not cope with the pressure build-up on the US dollar.

The bond currency has held its own — especially so when it was predicted to usher a meltdown of the economy through hyperinfla­tion which the other local currency, the old Zimdollar was associated with. While that has not happened, thankfully, the transactin­g public has not experience­d a sudden turnaround of their business experience­s.

Banks are short of money — including bond notes — and the black market is apparently thriving again.

Going Swedish

In light of these challenges, a discernibl­e trend has been towards the use of plastic money and electronic transactio­ns which have risen greatly.

A fortnight ago, the RBZ announced that plastic and electronic money now accounts for 70 percent of the payments in Zimbabwe and to encourage use of plastic money. The RBZ was revising the transactio­ns fees downwards.

It offered an incentive to fight cash hoarding, promising a reward equivalent to 5 percent of the reported and recovered cash amount.

There we are!

At this rate Zimbabwe will very soon be the Sweden of Africa, although, it may have come through painful experience­s like shortages and the hyperinfla­tion of the past era.

Yet Zimbabwean­s adjust quickly — and this is a good reason to be optimistic. To achieve this, point of Sale facilities need to be availed in all communitie­s from the bottom of the pyramid. We need to be much more ballistic with liberalisi­ng the use of plastic money. One way that could be improved is the cost of using the facility. The Government needs to lead from the front by further reducing current stamp charge of five US cents per transactio­n.

The current charges per transactio­n is very prohibitiv­e and difficult to sell to the rural folks. We need to effectivel­y translate the use of plastic money into a revolution of the financial sector.

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