Monday 4 August 2014

Currency is not the problem….Policy is the problem Mr Politician


There has been a raging debate on whether Zimbabwe should trash the United States dollar and adopt the South African rand as a measure to stabilise the ailing economy. This is a dangerous diagnosis considering the fact that there is no underlying reason or rationale for such course of action. No matter how much policy makers or economic commentators spend their energies debating on a currency to adopt the reality is that they are way offside and ignorant of the real issues which have stalled economic progress in Zimbabwe. The truth of the matter is that Zimbabwe’s economic policies are not globally competitive and robust to ensure the much needed growth and development. This is the problem with most African states they tend to major on the minor and major on the minor.

Ditching the United States dollar will not change the course of Zimbabwe’s economic direction by an inch but a new thinking in policy formulation and implementation will definitely result in the realisation of economic gains. Zimbabwe will not be granted billions of Rands by simply joining the Rand Monetary Union and neither will the economy flourish by adopting any form of currency and that means even adopting our own, whether we call it Ibwe, Pound or Dollar. South Africa will not accept the country into the Rand community due to policy inconsistencies and an uncertain economic future the country is heading to as this will also have an adverse effect on other countries in the community.



Money is always chasing production. This is the reason why China has got the largest foreign reserves in the world. China’s economy has been able to attract pounds, euros, dollars, pesos and francs amongst a host of currencies. The level of economic activity and trade which has come out of China has allowed a steady flow of capital which has further strengthened its economic growth and development. Liquidity or money is a function of production and investment, two qualities which are currently absent in the economic set up Zimbabwe finds itself in today. To quench the liquidity thirst the Zimbabwean economy is facing there is need for a radical policy shift which is able to propel the economy to greater heights and create the much needed employment, growth and development.
With all due rationale the US dollar has done no harm but much good to Zimbabwe’s economy and not any form of currency can avert the economic crisis which the country is sitting on. Only the right economic policy and strategy will deliver economic prosperity to Zimbabwe. Instead of wasting valuable time on a non-productive debate about ditching the United States dollar policy makers should be working overtime on making Zimbabwe an attractive investment destination which can pull some sustainable and profitable projects. There should be more emphasis on how to make the over hypnotised ZimAsset work and improved effort and action from the government.


Even if we chose to adopt the fanciest currency in the world the status-quo remains as long as the country is not able to churn out new production which can move the economy forward. Liquidity is a function of production and investment and unless we rectify the two factors any form of debate about currencies to adopt and ditch is mere noise and futile. After all we thought Zimbabwe adopted the multi-currency system not just the United States dollar.   

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