Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube had his own bank, Barbican, which was listed on the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange but was closed by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe in 2005.
At the time of its closure, Ncube said the action by the central bank was excessive.
“I think the action taken against us was disproportionate and excessive,” Ncube told The Independent. “There are some banks which were exposed to over $100 billion but were said to be in a sound financial position. I don’t have the full facts of what happened but I’m still shocked, baffled, and confused about these events.”
Barbican Bank was bailed out to the tune of $6 billion by the RBZ.
Central bank governor John Mangudya was chief executive officer of CBZ bank, Zimbabwe’s largest commercial bank by assets.
Former Finance Minister Tendai Biti last said last week Mangudya was literally running the country’s finances as CBZ was the government banker.
“Government accounts were kept at the CBZ who treated us like a commercial client. So, I couldn’t run an overdraft facility because John Mangudya would say ‘Minister you can’t do that’,” Biti told his audience.
Permanent Secretary George Guvamatanga was managing director of Barclays Bank Zimbabwe for nearly 10 years before he was booted out by the new owners who took it over from Barclays Bank Plc of the United Kingdom.
Though Mthuli Ncube and Guvamatanga have been in office for nine months now, and Mangudya is going into his sixth year, this might have escaped a lot of people’s attention.
Does this mean that the country’s finances are in good hands?
That is anybody’s guess.
The following are Zimbabwe’s finance ministers since independence:
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