While unlike in Zimbabwe, President Jacob Zuma cannot arbitrarily name his successor, the jostling and in-fighting to occupy the best springboard possible to succession is almost identical – with similarly dire consequences for reform and the economies of both countries.
While land reform comparisons between the two countries are popular among political analysts, the economies thankfully remain vastly different, though what the consequences will be locally in waiting until this time next year for the ANC to elect Zuma’s successor, heaven alone knows. [Ask not for whom the Damoclean Sword hangs, though we love to watch it sway above Msholozi’s head.]
Washington-based journalist and seasoned Africa-watcher, Barry Wood, draws an apt historical comparison between Zimbabwe’s latest issuing of bond notes alongside the US dollar and what happened in Elizabethan England when two coins of nominally the same value were circulated.
It’s frightening and not a little sobering to read the stats emerging from Zimbabwe’s economic meltdown – in large part due to one man remaining in absolute power for so long.
Luckily our system has better built-in safeguards – but they need something approaching hyper-vigilance, given how Zuma has centralized power in his office by tainting just about every institution that should be holding him and his beneficiaries accountable. – Chris Bateman
By Barry Wood*
Bad money drives out good, according to Gresham’s Law, dating from 16th century England. Sir Thomas Gresham, money manager for Queen Elizabeth I, argued that, if two coins with the same nominal face value simultaneously circulate, the one with the most gold will be hoarded while the less valuable coin will be used.
Who would have guessed that in our time this medieval axiom would be tested — of all places — in Zimbabwe, the once rich, now impoverished land in southern Africa.
Zimbabwe is ruled by 92-year-old Robert Mugabe, who traveled last week to Cuba for the funeral of his friend Fidel Castro who died at age 90. In 2008 under Mugabe, Zimbabwe recorded the world’s highest rate of inflation. As prices rapidly escalated — rising multiple times daily — the central bank issued progressively larger denomination Zimbabwe dollars. That process culminated with the issuance of a 50 trillion note.
With the economy in chaos, a reformist finance minister, Tendai Biti, was named. He abolished the Zimbabwe dollar and adopted the U.S. dollar DXY, -0.09% as the country’s currency. Hyperinflation was halted and for a few years the economy began to recover.
But in recent years the commodity boom that had held up the prices of Zimbabwean mineral exports went bust. There was a devastating drought and the US dollar soared against the currency of South Africa, Zimbabwe’s major trading partner.
Unable to issue its own currency, Zimbabwe ran out of money and deflation took hold. Cash is in such short supply that civil servants, police and military, are seldom paid on time. For months there have been restrictions limiting what can be withdrawn from cash machines. Then cash machines were seldom open and people lined up overnight in hopes of getting some of their savings from the banks.
Aware of a deepening crisis, for several months Zimbabwe’s central bank told citizens that it would issue “bond notes,” a temporary expedient to alleviate the cash shortage. Ordinary people, remembering hyperinflation, protested. The bond note proposal was ridiculed as a back-door method of reintroducing the discredited Zimbabwe dollar.
The new Zim bond notes are worth the paper they are printed on - literally.
— Keith Levenstein (@keithlevenstein) December 1, 2016
On November 28 as Mugabe jetted off to Havana, the bond notes were finally released. They had been secretly printed. The $2 bond notes are theoretically exchangeable for $2 in US currency.
The government says the notes are backed by a hard-currency loan from a multilateral bank based in Cairo. The small denomination bond notes are sprinkled among US dollars in the cash machines that are working.
The words “bond note” is on the red banner near the top.
Last week money changers reappeared on the streets of Harare, Zimbabwe’s capital. Despite harassment from police the bond notes in some places trade at a hefty discount.
Gresham’s Law appears to be kicking in. In places where the official rate is honored people are using bond notes while holding back their US dollars.
The government says it will issue $12m of bond notes in coming weeks.
So far there have been few surprises. Some shopkeepers applaud the notes, saying they are helping overcome the cash shortage. Others call bond notes a desperate move by a failing state.
Zimbabwe is in desperate straits. Hard times and economic mismanagement prompted a third of its population to flee. Between 1997 and 2008 the economy shrank by 50%. Payroll accounts for 85% of government spending. Unemployment is as high as 80%. International agencies say 33,000 children need immediate attention for malnutrition and that 4 million Zimbabweans are food insecure.
International agencies are prepared to help. Efforts are being made to pay off Zimbabwe’s large foreign debt and the country’s arrears to the International Monetary Fund have been cleared.
A major problem is that President Mugabe has not named a successor and the ruling party is divided as to who will take over upon his demise.
- Barry D. Wood is a journalist based in Washington who writes frequently about southern Africa’s economy.
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