U S dollar black market thrives in broke Zimbabwe

Source: U S dollar black market thrives in broke Zimbabwe | The Financial Gazette March 21, 2017

BLACK market in Zimbabwe is gaining popularity as cash shortages persist, with many people moving onto streets in search of the now elusive U.S. dollar.

Among the busiest spots is a trans-border bus terminus to the east of Harare and around a shopping mall in the city center, where dealers wave wads of foreign currency to potential clients.

As at Friday morning, 107 dollars worth of bond notes were buying 100 U.S. dollars while the same amount of bond notes fetched 1,200 South African rand.

Other dealers charge up to 15 percent of the needed cash and require clients to transfer funds electronically into their accounts before they give them hard cash.

The U.S. dollar and rand remain the most commonly used currencies in Zimbabwe.

The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) introduced bond coins and notes, which were supposed to trade at par with the U.S. dollar, between 2014 and 2016 in a bid to improve liquidity, but the continued flight of dollars has stirred up public concerns.

The inter-changeability of the surrogate currency with the U.S. dollar remains a thorny issue with only the banks maintaining it while some retailers and traders have found subtle ways of charging a premium for the use of bond notes.

An illegal foreign currency dealer told Xinhua that many people were coming over in search of foreign currency for various reasons ranging from financing their businesses to paying tuition and accommodation fees for their children who are studying abroad.

“They come here, get their U.S. dollars and go to the bank where they deposit the money in their children’s visa accounts,” she said.

RBZ in 2016 established a list for foreign currency disbursements that leaves college fees payments at the lowest rung of priorities, so the parents have devised other means to send money to their children, including using mobile money transfer platforms.

Also falling into that category are cash depositing clients in the retail and wholesale industry and other borrowing clients engaged in the importation of non-strategic goods.

Donations, capital remittances from disposal of local property and from cross-border investments, funding of offshore credit cards, importation of goods and services readily available in Zimbabwe have been declared non-priority areas.

As a result of the priority list, the black market has found ready clients as people go for the elusive foreign currency, some of which they are reportedly hoarding.

In a previous interview with Xinhua, economic analyst Clemence Machadu said it seemed the U.S. dollar now had sub currencies as the black market took advantage of cash shortages.

“Bond currency may have come as a saviour that will decongest demand for the greenback and ensure that some domestic transactions happen in bond notes, relieving the hard currency to meet imports,” said Machadu.

“However, the challenge is when it comes to exchanging bond notes for hard currency by those who may now want to import more supplies.

“It is obvious that hard currency won’t be conveniently available and that will create an arbitrage whereby a premium will be charged to exchange bond notes for the greenback,” he said.

The Zimbabwe dollar became moribund in February 2009 and made way to a multiple currency regime dominated by the U.S. dollar and, in the initial stages, the rand.

The others are the Australian dollar, British pound, Botswana pula, euro, Indian rupee, Chinese yuan and Japanese yen, but these have hardly been in use.

RBZ governor John Mangudya earlier this week blamed the emergence of the black market on indiscipline and general lack of confidence in the market.

He said 102 million dollars worth of bond notes and coins were now circulating in the economy, accounting for 1.8 percent of deposits in the banks.

The bond notes and coins are supported by a 200 million dollar facility supported by Afreximbank meant to inject liquidity into the market after the central bank realized that the country had run short of the U.S. dollar.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 4
  • comment-avatar
    Homo Erectus 7 years ago

    RBZ gov blames the appearance of the black market rate on indiscipline and lack of confidence in the market……….No, no, no Mangudya, you’ve got it wrong (again, as always). The sole reason for the black market reappearance has to do with ONE man – the President of Zimbabwe. Without him, things would be fine.

  • comment-avatar
    Chiwaridza 7 years ago

    The black market is at Z$107 bond notes to US$100.00 today, as soon as there is a critical shortage of cash US$ on the black market the rate will shoot out – this could happen at any time as well as in a single sizable black market trade.

  • comment-avatar
    Mazano Rewayi 7 years ago

    The one thing all Zimbos have to learn is taking responsibility. People resisted the bond notes from the beginning. but the governor insisted “measures were in place” to make the whole nonsense work. Now he blames “indiscipline and lack of confidence in the market”, not himself for forcing the same market to accept what it never wanted. Just like the government blames its ineptitude on sanctions and colonialism. People, let’s grow up. If there were no challenges there would be no need for leaders – to lead is to solve problems, not to explain them. Let’s hope the reserve bank does not introduce a “bearer bond note” soon.