Money for nothing

 - as cash barons run the economy


Caption: A soldier joins other desperate people in a bank queue in Harare as the cash crisis continues to hit the nation.  Pic by Phillip Memo 

HARARE
Attempts to alleviate Zimbabwe’s critical cash shortages through the introduction of higher denomination notes are so far proving ineffective, as long bank queues have remained into January 2008. Late last year, Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Governor, Gideon Gono, introduced three high denomination bearer cheques, Z$250,000 (about US$0.12 at the parallel market rate of US$1 dollar to Z$2 million), Z$500,000 and Z$750,000, after initially announcing the phasing out of the Z$200,000 bearer cheques, which he said were now in the hands of “cash barons” who were selling the notes as a commodity.
“Of the Z$67 trillion which has been printed, we can only account for Z$2 trillion which is in the formal banking system. The rest of the money is with cash barons who have opened mini-central banks at their houses. Unfortunately the people doing that are influential citizens with leadership positions,” Gono said recently.
Zimbabwe, which is battling the world’s highest inflation rate officially pegged at 8,000 percent – but unofficially estimated by independent economists at 25,000 percent – has seen cash join a catalogue of other shortages, which include fuel, electricity and food. Gono said that high-ranking people within Zimbabwe’s corridors of power hoarding cash were known to him.
Some, such as an advisor to the Reserve Bank, Jonathan Kadzura, found to have taken $10 billion of the freshly minted $500,000 notes out of the banking system, have been exposed. While David Butau, chairperson of the Finance Parliamentary Portfolio Committee and a Member of Parliament in the ruling Zanu (PF) fled to United Kingdom last week amid reports of irregular financial dealings.
Individuals are only permitted to withdraw a maximum of Z$50 million daily, while companies can make daily withdrawals of $100 million. The Reserve Bank’s decision to withdraw the $200,000 bearer cheques as legal tender on 31 December 2007, was rescinded without explanation, although vendors had stopped accepting the $200,000 bearer cheques well ahead of the new year’s eve deadline.
Sipho Manyumbu, a school teacher in Harare who spent the holiday season in bank queues, said it was nonsensical for Gono to claim that the cause of the money shortage was a consequence of the rise of the cash baron.
“Simple mathematics will prove to the Reserve Bank governor that the Z$67 trillion he is mourning about if divided by 14 million Zimbabweans (the country’s estimated population) will leave each person with about Z$6 million, which is not enough to buy a kilogramme of meat. With our inflation now way above 20,000 percent, it no longer makes sense to keep money in the bank because getting it out is cumbersome. I now withdraw all my salary and keep the money at home but so far I have not been able to get any money.”
Tendai Musemburi, a former banker, said that while there were people hoarding cash to exchange for foreign currency, its effect was negligible.  “The issue is that the money is with the people. There is a lot of money chasing very few goods because of the decline in the manufacturing sector … But they can not use it because there is either nothing to buy or the goods have just become too expensive,” he said. – IRIN

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