BREAKING: Govt Bans The Use Of U.S. Dollars And Other Foreign Currencies

0

The Zimbabwe government has banned the use of foreign currency as legal
tender alongside the local RTGS dollar, in an apparent bid to arrest
galloping increases of prices of basic commodities and other goods and
services.

However, payment for international airline services in foreign currency will still be allowed.

Finance and Economic Development Minister Mthuli Ncube announced the ban on Monday.

“With effect from the 24th of June, 2019, the use of the British pound,
United States dollar, South African rand, Botswana pula and any other
foreign currency whatsoever shall no longer be legal tender alongside
the Zimbabwe dollar in any transactions in Zimbabwe,” the minister said
in a Statutory Instrument (SI).

Ncube said this means that the Zimbabwe dollar, which is at par with the
RTGS dollar and the bond notes and coins, would be the sole legal
tender with immediate effect.

Zimbabwe, which abandoned its local currency, the Zimbabwe dollar, in
2009 following years of hyperinflation, has been using a basket of nine
multi-currencies dominated by the U.S. dollar.

The others are the British pound, the euro, the Chinese yuan, the
Australian dollar, the Indian rupee, the South African rand, the
Botswana pula and the Japanese yen.

The SI said the new regulations do not affect the opening or operation
of foreign currency-designated accounts, which shall continue to be
designated in the foreign currencies with which they are opened and in
which they are operated, or the making of foreign payments from such
accounts.

Also not affected is the requirement to pay customs duties and
value-added tax in any of the foreign currencies for goods specified
under the law to be luxury goods.

A serious shortage of foreign currency has spurred a black market where
the U.S. dollar was on Monday trading at 1:11 RTGS dollars at the
minimum, while the official interbank rate was at around 1:6.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa said last week that Zimbabweans should
expect to start using a new local currency by the end of 2019 or the
first quarter of 2020, as the government has made strides putting in
place macroeconomic fundamentals needed before its re-introduction.

He said the current scenario where Zimbabwe has no control over the
supply and availability of the currencies in use is unacceptable.

Leave a Reply