Opinion / Columnist
10 Implications of de-dollarization and introduction of the Zim dollar
24 Jun 2019 at 16:01hrs | Views
Wheels have finally come off as government has been cornered and forced to involuntarily de-dollarize without a plan.When government introduced bond notes we warned that the surrogate currency was bad money that was going to chase good money.
The bond notes failed. When government introduced the RTGS dollar we warned that the RTGS would fail and it happened. In both cases we gave solid advice based on evidence based research. In fact we chided and mocked the government challenging it to call the 2 currencies, the Zim dollar and accept that they had failed. On 24th June government abolished the multi-currency regime which was introduced in 2009 exactly 10 years ago in order to thwart hyperinflation. In the multiple currency basket the USD had become the de facto currency of choice as legal tender.
Subsequently government introduced surrogate currencies into the basket, namely the bond notes and RTGS. This sparked an unprecedented parallel market regime which fuelled general price increases in the economy as retailers indexed prices to us$ inorder to hedge themselves against inflation.
By the 24th June 2019, the 2 surrogate currencies had been debauched and reduced to worthless legal tender as the economy had completely redollarised. Prices were quoted in us dollars or its RTGS equivalent. Everybody rushed to collect usd as a way to safeguard or hedge against hyperinflation which has climbed to 300%. The Transitional Stabilization Program failed to tame the financial crisis. Instead the TSP was like setting a match stick on dry grass. It is clear that market confidence had dropped and all monetary/fiscal statements were blunted and of no force or effect.
So where are we now? Clearly Zimbabwe is at a crossroads. The country is jumping from a frying pan into a ball of fire. The Zim dollar is coming involuntarily and prematurely as a knee jerk reaction. The key fundamentals required for the sustainability of a Sovereign Currency include:
a) a budget deficit lower than 5%
b) A trade surplus
c) At least 6 months import cover
d) A healthy Capital Account
e) Productivity and evidence of high levels of capacity utilization
f) low levels of inflation (single digit)
g) Confidence
h) Realistic exchange rate.
These fundamentals are not yet in place. In the absence of these fundamentals, the impact of the introduction of the Zim-dollar will result in the following ten (10) policy implications:
1. The market will have no confidence in the Zim dollar
2. Retailers will withdraw goods from the shelves and cause artificial shortages
3. This will drive prices upwards
4. The parallel market will come back with a vengeance since government has introduced domestic currency without a floating or managed exchange rate for it.
5. The market will reject the Zim dollar and go back to the usd on its own.
6. Government has no capacity to enforce the use of the Zim dollar on the ground
7. Government will resort to the printing press and increase money supply growth as it seeks to increase civil servants' wages and meet its day to day obligations.
8. This will feed into hyperinflation
9. Since government is the sole printer of the sovereign currency it means that through underhand dealings the Reserve Bank may continue to drive the black market by buying forex to meet import requirements. We will see new notes on the streets.
10. Zimbabwe will again have a useless and debauched currency which only serves sentimental reasons.
Alternative Solutions:
1. At present Zimbabwe cannot afford a paper currency which has no economic value. The only feasible option is to adopt the Rand and price all goods and services in Rand as an interim measure pending an application to join the RMA
2. National Political Dialogue between Zanu PF, MDC, Civil Society, Labour, Business and Churches inorder to arrest the economic melt-down.
Conclusion:
Zimbabwe is clearly facing a political crisis. We don't need a rocket scientist to tell us. The economy is gridlocked in the jaws of politics. There is a complete shutdown of government as all social services have collapsed while civil servants are earning poverty wages under hyperinflationary conditions. Clearly government is cornered and has gone into a panic mode. Government should wake up and smell the coffee. Chickens are coming home to roost. Stabilization does not lead to prosperity. It leads to poverty. As we have always said, when it comes to economic affairs, Zanu PF is certainly clueless.
The bond notes failed. When government introduced the RTGS dollar we warned that the RTGS would fail and it happened. In both cases we gave solid advice based on evidence based research. In fact we chided and mocked the government challenging it to call the 2 currencies, the Zim dollar and accept that they had failed. On 24th June government abolished the multi-currency regime which was introduced in 2009 exactly 10 years ago in order to thwart hyperinflation. In the multiple currency basket the USD had become the de facto currency of choice as legal tender.
Subsequently government introduced surrogate currencies into the basket, namely the bond notes and RTGS. This sparked an unprecedented parallel market regime which fuelled general price increases in the economy as retailers indexed prices to us$ inorder to hedge themselves against inflation.
By the 24th June 2019, the 2 surrogate currencies had been debauched and reduced to worthless legal tender as the economy had completely redollarised. Prices were quoted in us dollars or its RTGS equivalent. Everybody rushed to collect usd as a way to safeguard or hedge against hyperinflation which has climbed to 300%. The Transitional Stabilization Program failed to tame the financial crisis. Instead the TSP was like setting a match stick on dry grass. It is clear that market confidence had dropped and all monetary/fiscal statements were blunted and of no force or effect.
So where are we now? Clearly Zimbabwe is at a crossroads. The country is jumping from a frying pan into a ball of fire. The Zim dollar is coming involuntarily and prematurely as a knee jerk reaction. The key fundamentals required for the sustainability of a Sovereign Currency include:
a) a budget deficit lower than 5%
b) A trade surplus
c) At least 6 months import cover
d) A healthy Capital Account
e) Productivity and evidence of high levels of capacity utilization
f) low levels of inflation (single digit)
g) Confidence
h) Realistic exchange rate.
These fundamentals are not yet in place. In the absence of these fundamentals, the impact of the introduction of the Zim-dollar will result in the following ten (10) policy implications:
1. The market will have no confidence in the Zim dollar
2. Retailers will withdraw goods from the shelves and cause artificial shortages
3. This will drive prices upwards
4. The parallel market will come back with a vengeance since government has introduced domestic currency without a floating or managed exchange rate for it.
5. The market will reject the Zim dollar and go back to the usd on its own.
6. Government has no capacity to enforce the use of the Zim dollar on the ground
7. Government will resort to the printing press and increase money supply growth as it seeks to increase civil servants' wages and meet its day to day obligations.
8. This will feed into hyperinflation
9. Since government is the sole printer of the sovereign currency it means that through underhand dealings the Reserve Bank may continue to drive the black market by buying forex to meet import requirements. We will see new notes on the streets.
10. Zimbabwe will again have a useless and debauched currency which only serves sentimental reasons.
Alternative Solutions:
1. At present Zimbabwe cannot afford a paper currency which has no economic value. The only feasible option is to adopt the Rand and price all goods and services in Rand as an interim measure pending an application to join the RMA
2. National Political Dialogue between Zanu PF, MDC, Civil Society, Labour, Business and Churches inorder to arrest the economic melt-down.
Conclusion:
Zimbabwe is clearly facing a political crisis. We don't need a rocket scientist to tell us. The economy is gridlocked in the jaws of politics. There is a complete shutdown of government as all social services have collapsed while civil servants are earning poverty wages under hyperinflationary conditions. Clearly government is cornered and has gone into a panic mode. Government should wake up and smell the coffee. Chickens are coming home to roost. Stabilization does not lead to prosperity. It leads to poverty. As we have always said, when it comes to economic affairs, Zanu PF is certainly clueless.
Source - Byo24News
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