I cannot believe it’s the end of the year – where did 2016 go? One thing I know for certain and that is if nothing changes here, we are in a hole so deep it is beginning to feel as if there is no way out. By my calculations the Government in Zimbabwe has now converted all surplus cash in the formal sector of the economy into some form of State debt – treasury bills, an overdraft at the Reserve Bank and a programme to expropriate the hard currency earnings of our exporters at $200 million a month.
The delinquency of this regime has no limits, not satisfied with the theft of State revenues at over $2 billion a year through rampant and in certain cases carefully managed corruption, they have expropriated the hard earned cash savings of the entire country for the second time – last time it was between 2000 and 2008. The mechanism used then was hyper inflation caused by simply printing money in vast quantities.
This time they have run a budget deficit of over 20 per cent for three and a half years and in the process the State, through the Ministry of Finance and the Reserve Bank have borrowed all the formal sector savings from the GNU era. The most visible sign of this are the long queues at banks when people try to get their money out of the banks. I have news for them – their money has gone and all that the banks can give them is a small trickle of hard currency supplied by the Reserve Bank from hard currency expropriated from exporters.
This has got to the point where it is becoming more and more difficult to get money out of the banks and finally the regime has resorted to printing a new local currency to try and fill the gap. The commercial Banks support this measure because it means that they can sell Bond Notes at par with the US dollars and thereby reduce their US dollar obligations to their clients. The Reserve Bank is delighted because they can now sell notes in US dollars after printing them at a cost that is a few cents per dollar note. Those who owe others money are also delighted as they can see themselves being able to buy the new currency at a significant discount and then settle their US dollar credits at a fraction of their real value.
But on the down side, anyone who works in the formal sector for a salary and is paid through the Bank will now have to draw his/her money out of the Bank in a currency that will depreciate rapidly. This means that by these means the regime will achieve what they cannot do through the front door – a sharp reduction in the cost of employment. The new currency is selling on local markets at 2:1 against the US dollar and this can only depreciate as time goes by. In the short term they may be able to get full value from traders in goods, but not for long. Market prices are already rising and real inflation is again a possibility as the new currency replaces the hard currencies in circulation.
Some major traders are reporting brisk business – people are buying bond notes and using them to buy goods at the face value of the new notes. They are speculating that in a month or so, prices will have risen and goods will be in short supply. I cannot see any reason why they should be wrong. All government departments will now be paid in the new currency and local authorities will have to accept the new notes at par with the US dollar.