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Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Zimbabwe slowly returning to normalcy

Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe welcomes his Iranian counterpart Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at Harare International Airport, on April 22. Ahmadinejad was in Zimbabwe for a two-day visit condemned by Mugabe’s opponents as a meeting of despots which could further isolate Harare. Photo/REUTERS 


The hordes of black-market currency traders in Zimbabwe’s capital Harare have gone out of business.
Just over a year ago, Zimbabwe had the world’s worst modern-day hyperinflation and the national currency was worthless.
Streets in central Harare were lined with black-market traders exchanging huge wads of Zimbabwean dollars for US dollars or South Africa rand.
One trader, who did so well illegally dealing in foreign exchange he could afford to take a second wife, has taken up his old job as a taxi driver.
“Life has become so difficult and there is no meaningful business to sustain my life. In the past, no matter how difficult it was, you could always get some money, but not now. Raising a dollar has become hard labour,” said Derick Chiwapura who traded foreign exchange at a Harare shopping mall.
Today, shops in the capital are fully stocked with goods which anyone can buy as long as they pay in US dollars. Zimbabwe’s government allowed the use of multiple currencies in early 2009, effectively making the dollar the official currency.
Harare’s streets are markedly cleaner than they were six months ago, grocery shops have sprung up all over the capital – offering goods at prices comparable to neighbouring South Africa – and there are more new vehicles on the roads.
But much-needed investment from abroad remains absent and the country’s stock exchange has seen foreign investors retreat after the introduction of regulations calling for foreign-owned companies to transfer a majority stake to Zimbabweans.
Zimbabwe moved to implement the Indigenisation and Economic Empowerment Act that requires foreign firms to sell a 51 per cent stake to local blacks at the end of January.
Faster political reform
“The foreigners are sniffing around. You can see that from the full hotels but nothing will happen until the economy picks up,” said one banker in Harare.
Zimbabwe’s power-sharing government, set up by President Robert Mugabe and his rival Morgan Tsvangirai, now the country’s prime minister, has estimated around $10 billion is needed to repair the economy.
Foreign investors are also reluctant to pledge funds without faster political reform. Mugabe’s ZANU-PF party and Tsvangirai’s MDC continue to bicker over the pace of reforms and appointments of senior state officials.
Bankers and the country’s stock exchange say the economy can only recover if there is significant foreign investment but the controversial empowerment regulations have spooked investors. (Reuters)

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