Financial Gazette
23 December 2015
HARARE-ZIMBABWE’S government is looking at ways of easing the country’s cash crunch, President Robert Mugabe has said, as the central bank chief denied rumours that the Zimbabwe dollar was about to be reintroduced.
Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa and Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe chief John Mangudya were “looking at… strategies of reforming the banking sector and injecting liquidity in the marketâ€, Mugabe told mourners at a state funeral on Tuesday.
He singled out a decision to encourage the use of the Chinese yuan in Zimbabwe, announced at the weekend, as a “new possibility for usâ€.Authorities announced they would accept the yuan as legal tender in January last year. It was however almost never seen in shops or on the streets.
Messages circulating on social media platforms said Mugabe’s cabinet had approved the return of the Zimbabwe dollar in the form of “bond notes†and “bond coins.â€
Mangudya told a local daily newspaper that the claims were unfounded and that the reintroduction of the local unit would cause panic. He refuted claims that pension payments would be made in never-before-seen “bond notes†on Wednesday.
“In fact pensioners received their payments in US dollars yesterday,†he said.
The fear was that “bond notesâ€, if introduced, would resemble Zimbabwe’s much-maligned “bearer chequesâ€, printed in denominations of millions, billions, and trillions during the economic crisis.
“Bond coinsâ€, all with a value of less than US1, were introduced last year in a bid to ease shortages of small change.
Former education minister David Coltart tweeted Tuesday: “As destructive as many of Zanu-PF’s polices are, even they know how catastrophic any attempt to introduce a worthless currency would be.â€
Zimbabwean consumers and retailers used to favour rand coins over bond coins. Following the fall in the value of the rand this year, many shops reject them and individuals do not want them either.