Categories: Stories

Grace Mugabe eyeing presidency in 2023 and not 2018!

Zuma’s former wife and preferred successor, Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, said that Grace Mugabe must answer before the law – but if it had come to that, Grace Mugabe’s own sons would have had to testify in the case.

The embarrassment and mileage in the cross-examination would have been profound, and even in Zimbabwe, it would have made her permanently unelectable.

Grace Mugabe escaped that particular humiliation – but where she previously seemed temporarily reconciled to biding her time, she may now have no choice.

Set against a severe economic meltdown, of course, this all looks like soap opera.

As things stand, the country’s greatest accomplishment is its pretence of relative normality in a time of deep crisis.

Zimbabwe is highly dependent on imports, including for food.

There is no liquidity; a parallel market has developed between the US dollar (widely used in cash form) and the Zimbabwean central bank’s bond notes, and the Zimbabwean currency is increasingly at a disadvantage.

Despite the introduction of bond notes, more and more electronic money transfers are denominated in dollars.

If all those electronic dollars can’t be backed up on demand with physical dollars, that will create a dangerous bubble.

As soon as a large company seeks to reclaim its electronic dollar deposits but is given only bond notes, the game will be up.

And ultimately, Zimbabwe needs to service its gargantuan debts in dollars: if those dollars run out, prices will rise, raising the prospect of severe food shortages.

What will the nonagenarian president say on the campaign trail?

Will he really try and convince people he can print bonds faster than they lose value?

Can he really keep blaming the West for wrecking his own economy?

He may be counting on the fractious, chaotic opposition to fall apart – but the economy could still make retaining legitimacy harder than ever.

 

By Stephen Chan. This article was first published by The Conversation

(389 VIEWS)

Don't be shellfish... Please SHARE
Google
Twitter
Facebook
Linkedin
Email
Print

This post was last modified on September 4, 2017 5:14 pm

Page: 1 2 3

Charles Rukuni

The Insider is a political and business bulletin about Zimbabwe, edited by Charles Rukuni. Founded in 1990, it was a printed 12-page subscription only newsletter until 2003 when Zimbabwe's hyper-inflation made it impossible to continue printing.

Recent Posts

Zimbabwe worried ZiG is appreciating too fast?

Zimbabwe, whose currency declined 80% this year before being abandoned, is now worried about its…

April 19, 2024

ZiG confusion

Zimbabwe’s new currency, the Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG,) continued to firm against the United States dollar…

April 19, 2024

US congratulates Zimbabwe on its 44th anniversary, but maintains sanctions on the country

United States Secretary of State Antony Blinken has congratulated Zimbabwe on its 44th independence anniversary…

April 18, 2024

Did you know that if America’s billionaires were considered a country they would be the third richest nation in the world?

The 813 billionaires in the United States have a total wealth of US$5.7 trillion. If…

April 17, 2024

Mnangagwa spokesman says there is nothing to celebrate about latest US move on Zimbabwe sanctions

President Emmerson Mnangagwa’s spokesman George Charamba says there is nothing to celebrate about the United…

April 17, 2024

Two British aristocrats target one of Zimbabwe’s biggest lithium assets

Over drinks back in 2019, two British tycoons, Algy Cluff and Michael Spencer, agreed to…

April 16, 2024