(The Source) – Zimbabwe’s central bank says it will print additional
bond notes worth $300 million in an effort to ease biting cash
shortages, stoking fears that the country could return to the era of
money printing and hyperinflation.
Governor John Mangudya said the bond notes would be backed by another
facility from the African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank). The
continental bank would have backed Zimbabwe’s rollout of the surrogate
currency to the tune of $550 million, after a $50 million facility for
bond coins in 2014 and $200 million for the initial bond note release
last November.
The bond note is not fungible outside Zimbabwe, and trades at par
with the United States dollar, worsening capital flight and shortages of
foreign currency.
Despite that initial rollout, Zimbabwe remains in the throes of an
acute banknote shortage, with bank queues now a permanent feature.
Presenting the Monetary Policy Statement on Wednesday, Mangudya said
the export incentive scheme had been successful in increasing imports by
14 percent.
“Between May last year and June this year the country has generated $4,9 billion in foreign currency receipts,” he said.
“Building on the success on the export incentive scheme in securing
exports of goods and services and diaspora remittances, the bank found
it imperative to increase the scheme by a further $300 million dollars
under a standby liquidity support facility which is being finalized by
the Afreximbank.”
Plans to increase the bond notes in circulation have received stiff
resistance from citizens who fear the return of the Zimbabwe dollar but
Mangudya maintained that the country was not ready for a return of the
currency.
Zimbabwe abandoned its currency at the height of hyperinflation in
2009 and adopted a basket of multi currencies which include the US
dollar Rand, Pula and Pound.
Mangudya added that bank was also negotiating for a $600 million
nostro stabilization facility from Afreximbank to manage the cyclical
nature of Zimbabwe’s foreign currency receipts.

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