Zimbabwe’s Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa has told a senator to be patient because it is not easy to come up with a time frame on when Zimbabwe will get out of the current mess.
“Matanga zvinhu zvenyu zvekuti zvese zvinofanira kuita mangwana,” he said in response to a question from Senator David Chimhini on how soon Zimbabwe is going to get out of the current mess where people are being forced to queue to get their money.
“At this point, all I can say is it is not easy to say clearly within what timeframe but I want to encourage Hon. Members. You see, it is a process and I am confident that when we follow the measures that we have taken; this problem will be behind us, but clearly we have until September/October for the issuance of bond notes which will go quite a long way to assist this problem,” he said.
Chinamasa said they were paying huge amounts to tobacco farmers and gold panners but they were not depositing the money into the banking system.
“Circulation of money is the life-blood of an economy and what has caused us the problems is that the US$, which should be a medium of exchange is not circulating,” he said.
“People are getting paid – whether it was through tobacco and can you imagine, last year tobacco sales by tobacco farmers fetched $600 million. Let us say of that, $400 million was produced by small scale farmers, all insisting to be paid in cash and in fact they were paid in cash. Having been paid in cash, we do not know where they put the money. So sometimes our success in the tobacco sector becomes the cause of our challenges, which is why we are now coming with the encouragement that they open bank accounts.
“The same thing is happening with respect to gold production. We picked gold production from 13 metric tonnes in 2013 because of the fiscal measures that we adopted to 21.1 metric tonnes last year and artisanal miners whose activities we decriminalise are now contributing 40% of that and all of them demanding to be paid in cash. All we have been doing is withdrawing from the financial institutions but not depositing. So as long as you have a system where people are withdrawing and not depositing, it spells disaster to the economy and the measures we have adopted are to correct just that.”
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