The best Zimbabwe news site on the world wide web 
 
NEWS
FORUMS
NEWS ANALYSIS
READERS' FORUM

CARTOON

BRITISH FOREIGN OFFICE

ECONOMY & FINANCE
Zimbabwe's currency makes new plunge


Zimbabwe launches new Z$500 million bank note

RBZ unveils Z$250m bank note

Cash shortages on first day of currency floatation

Dollar firms after RBZ currency floatation

RBZ eases foreign exchange rules

Inflation soars to 165000%

By Nelson Banya

ZIMBABWE'S currency plunged to a new record low on Thursday, trading at an average one billion to the US dollar on a recently introduced interbank market and triggering massive price increases.

Traders were quoting the Zimbabwean dollar at between 995-million and 1,45-billion against the greenback in Thursday morning trade, up from an average 700-million at the beginning of the week. The currency has depreciated by about 84% since the central bank effectively floated it in early May after years of an official peg.

Analysts said the rapid weakening of the currency was being driven by inflation expectations as well as huge demand for hard currencies.

"The exchange rate is being driven by massive demand for forex, as well as the desire to hedge against inflation," said Mudzingwa Nhiwatiwa, a research analyst at ZABG banking group.

"It shows our forex generating capacity is perilously low. Until we restore production and exports, the Zimbabwean dollar will continue to depreciate sharply."

Zimbabwe's production capacity, largely based on agriculture, has declined sharply mainly due to upheavals on commercial farms following President Robert Mugabe's drive to seize land from whites to resettle landless black Zimbabweans.

Prices of basic goods, most of which are now imported, have gone up sharply since the disputed March 29 election in which Mugabe's Zanu-PF lost its parliamentary majority for the first time in 28 years.

Opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai also beat Mugabe in the presidential election, but not by enough votes to avoid a run-off ballot, set for June 27.

Nhiwatiwa said the freeing up of the exchange rate system in the absence of improved production and amid uncertainty over the unresolved election stalemate, had seen prices rising sharply.

For instance, a loaf of bread, which cost about Z$15-million before the polls, now costs about Z$600-million.

A two-litre bottle of cooking oil costs about Z$5-billion, almost equal to an average low-income worker's monthly wage, piling the misery on a country also grappling with food, fuel, water and electricity shortages, 80% unemployment and hyperinflation.

Official figures put Zimbabwe's annual inflation -- the highest in the world -- at 165 000% in February, but analysts say the figure vaulted as high as 1,8-million percent by May.

Prices on Zimbabwe's stock market, for long a refuge for investors in the inflation-ravaged country, have rocketed since the beginning of the year.

The benchmark Zimbabwe Stock Exchange (ZSE) industrial index leapt to a new high above 900-billion points on Wednesday, from just over 1,2-billion points at the start of the year.

Critics blame Mugabe's policy for the economic crisis, but he denies the charge, and says the economy has been undermined by Western governments plotting to oust him as punishment for his land reforms. - Reuters

JOIN THE DEBATE ON THIS ARTICLE ON THE NEWZIMBABWE.COM FORUMS
newsdesk@newzimbabwe.com


All material copyright newzimbabwe.com
Material may be published or reproduced in any form with appropriate credit to this website