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NewsDay

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Bond notes and their possible long-term legacy

Opinion & Analysis
Zimbabwe’s export incentive scheme, bond notes, were introduced to encourage exports and address the liquidity crunch in the country. If, for example, tobacco exporters accept bond notes, they receive a 5% incentive in addition to their export earnings.

Zimbabwe’s export incentive scheme, bond notes, were introduced to encourage exports and address the liquidity crunch in the country. If, for example, tobacco exporters accept bond notes, they receive a 5% incentive in addition to their export earnings.

But in a country with a serious shortage and rationing of foreign exchange, accepting bond notes, whose value against the United States dollar is uncertain in the immediate to long-term, is not really a choice.

On November 28, 2016, the RBZ introduced $10 million, followed by a further $7 million and $12 million barely a month later, bringing the full amount in circulation to $29 million.

Fully aware of predictions that the introduction of bond notes would result in hyperinflation, the RBZ has resorted to disbursing the pseudo currency on a “drip feed” basis.

Contrary to the earlier popular belief that bond notes would immediately trigger hyperinflation, their slow introduction has not even resolved the cash shortages.

But does this translate to a proper management of currency emanating from fears of hyperinflation?

What follows is my opinion on what bond notes have meant for the Zimbabwean economy in the first month of their introduction and their possible long term legacy.

The liquidity crunch and general forecasts on bond notes

The introduction of bond notes of the equivalent of $29 million has done little to resolve the liquidity crunch facing the country.

Given the withdrawal of foreign exchange by the RBZ, people have little option, but to accept the limited bond notes dispersed, with a need for more of the proposed $75 million to be injected into the market.

However, this is not a tacit approval of their introduction.

Many believe that bond notes are the RBZ’s way of mopping up US$ from the market for use by the government since it cannot use them to pay for imports.

This simply means that the “drip feed” basis of the RBZ is the reverse injection of bond notes to replace the US$ taken out.

But this process still represents money creation; therefore, some have begun calling the RBZ the “Reverse” Bank of Zimbabwe.

Media reports reveal how Zanu PF recently purchased over 365 double-cab vehicles and buses from South Africa for its 2018 election campaign.

In an economy starved of foreign currency, it is anyone’s guess where the money came from.

The State is using the RBZ to mop up foreign currency for its use while using the “drip-feed” bond note supply to delay the adverse effects of using the pseudo-currency.

So, while the US$ is mopped from people’s bank accounts and disappears from ordinary transactions, how sustainable will the drip-feed system be?

The real problem in the Zimbabwean economy

The discussion on the unfolding cash crisis is only a glimpse into the deepening challenges that Zimbabwe faces.

The cash crisis is not a result of poor monetary policies, but of limited production for export in the crisis-burdened Zimbabwean economy.

So these financial measures from the RBZ will not provide solutions either.

Even the incentive under Statutory Instrument 62 meant for import substitution industrialisation (ISI) only brought limited benefits, compared with the damage caused by the indigenisation laws and policy inconsistencies, leading to many company closures.

Coupled with the legislation that made it easier for companies to retrench without many financial restrictions, there was a net job and investment loss in the Zimbabwean economy.

In short, the problem was political as policy inconsistencies undermined and discouraged investment, leading to serious job losses in a country were ISI is difficult to stimulate because of severely constrained capacity and poor business environment.

To stimulate the Zimbabwean economy the answer lies, not in any fiscal or monetary interventions, but in a real shift in government mentality.

This is impossible to achieve under Zanu PF, whose main aim is to maintain power.

It is easy to see why the real legacy of the bond note is likely to be that of funding Zanu PF activities and elections by mopping up hard currencies to fund import requirements as the economy plunges further.

Whether or not they can sustain this and even crawl along 2019, the potential effects of the injection of more bond notes under pressure to offset the liquidity shortages may eventually exceed the targeted $70 million and influence the political scene in unpredictable ways.

In short, it appears that bond notes are much less of an “export incentive” for the economy, but have immediately benefited Zanu PF by providing it with a monopoly over the foreign currency in circulation and that saved in people’s bank accounts.

The foistering of bond notes on the economy has not offset cash shortages, but has simply worsened people’s circumstances as they are being forced to accept a currency they do not trust and whose value is uncertain.

Bond notes increasingly appear as an import facility for Zanu PF and the elites.