News / Local
Govt mulls bond for diasporans
26 Sep 2022 at 00:57hrs | Views
GOVERNMENT is set to introduce a diaspora bond for Zimbabweans overseas as it seeks to raise investment levels in the country.
This was revealed by the Finance and Economic Development minister Mthuli Ncube speaking at a side meeting with investors at the United Nations General Assembly 77th session in New York.
According to the Migration Policy Institute, a diaspora bond is a government debt security with investors drawn from the country's nationals living abroad, their descendants, or those with other connection to the nation.
"We want investment back home. How shall we do it? The first thing is that you can invest through a diaspora bond which we are going to issue in the next few months. We took a while putting it together and it's now ready. You can invest through that bond. It's very good very attractive," Ncube said.
"We are also going to set up a structure where rather than sending money every month to your relatives, we can take the interest and pass it on to your parents. You invest once, after that you can look after your parents through interest. Investment is very safe in Zimbabwe."
In reaction, economic analyst Victor Bhoroma said the initiative looked attractive on paper, but government policies needed to be consistent.
"This looks attractive on paper, but remember the diasporas have reservations with the formal banking system which lacks market confidence. So, there are a number of things that need to be ironed out for such to work," he said.
"Government policy needs to be consistent. The repayment of that bond obviously needs to be in foreign currency and there is a need for a ring-fenced account to ensure that those who buy that bond can be compensated."
This was revealed by the Finance and Economic Development minister Mthuli Ncube speaking at a side meeting with investors at the United Nations General Assembly 77th session in New York.
According to the Migration Policy Institute, a diaspora bond is a government debt security with investors drawn from the country's nationals living abroad, their descendants, or those with other connection to the nation.
"We want investment back home. How shall we do it? The first thing is that you can invest through a diaspora bond which we are going to issue in the next few months. We took a while putting it together and it's now ready. You can invest through that bond. It's very good very attractive," Ncube said.
"We are also going to set up a structure where rather than sending money every month to your relatives, we can take the interest and pass it on to your parents. You invest once, after that you can look after your parents through interest. Investment is very safe in Zimbabwe."
In reaction, economic analyst Victor Bhoroma said the initiative looked attractive on paper, but government policies needed to be consistent.
"This looks attractive on paper, but remember the diasporas have reservations with the formal banking system which lacks market confidence. So, there are a number of things that need to be ironed out for such to work," he said.
"Government policy needs to be consistent. The repayment of that bond obviously needs to be in foreign currency and there is a need for a ring-fenced account to ensure that those who buy that bond can be compensated."
Source - Newsday Zimbabwe