The government has already regularised trading in the US dollar through an amendment that was gazetted on Sunday.
A source told The Insider last week that central bank governor John Mangudya had jumped the gun by announcing the measures he did on 26 March.
“There is no going back to the United States dollar,” the source said. “The revised position will be announced on Monday with the legal instruments.”
There was no such announcement yesterday, but instead the exchange regulations were amended through a government gazette on Sunday.
The source, however, said a meeting was held yesterday and a delegation was sent to meet the President.
The source declined to say what was discussed or what the delegation would be asking Mnangagwa to do.
Some members of the Monetary Policy Committee like Eddie Cross have argued that the US dollar should be allowed for some trades so that it gets into formal circulation.
“We have formalised the use of the RTGS dollar and our paper currency and today over 90 per cent of all transactions are made in these currencies in domestic markets,” he said a month ago.
“The talk of re-dollarisation is simply a lack of understanding, we are de-dollarising our economy but recognising this will take years, not months.
“We have to re-establish confidence in our own currency and our ability to protect and maintain its real value. So long as people think it is not a safe vehicle for savings, people will retreat to the US dollar as a store of value – just like gold in previous centuries.
“The reality is that there is much more US dollar cash in our economy than our own currency. We are trying to remedy that but it takes nearly a year to get a new currency designed and printed and put into circulation. In the meantime, the existing currency actually trades at a 30 per cent premium in local markets over the RTGS dollar.
“It is even widely traded in neighbouring States. So the State has decided to slow down the process of de-dollarisation and to allow people to use their own foreign funds on the domestic market. This will tap into the very considerable volume of hard currency that is being traded in the informal economy and assist us in meeting demand for essential imports.”
Continued next page
(330 VIEWS)
Page: 1 2
Zimbabwe has been ranked third among the least free countries in Southern Africa but it…
I had always considered it a curse for a wife to die before her husband.…
This is a true story about the challenges and loneliness I faced when my wife…
My first long-form article in booklet form: Why I had a girlfriend two months after…
The editor and publisher of The Insider, Charles Rukuni, has started a whatsapp channel through…
A friend who knows about my legal battle with Zimbabwe’s richest man, Strive Masiyiwa, way…