Zimbabwe said Thursday it will introduce next month "bond notes" equivalent to the US dollar, sparking fears of a return to the hyperinflation that wrecked the economy several years ago. The southern African nation, led by authoritarian President Robert Mugabe, adopted the US dollar and South African rand in 2009 after inflation - which peaked at 500 billion percent - rendered the local dollar worthless.
But Zimbabwe has run out of US dollar notes in recent months, and hopes to ease the cash crunch by printing its own "bond notes", starting with small denominations of $2 and $5. The plan immediately attracted criticism, with analysts saying the token currency would not hold its US dollar value and would be seen as a new version of the valueless local dollar.
A wave of protests has shaken Mugabe's regime this year, with "No to bond notes" among the regular slogans expressing grievances against the government amid a worsening economic crisis. "The bond notes will start to circulate by the end of October and will be at par with the US dollar," Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe governor John Mangudya said in Harare.
"We anticipate by the end of the year $75 million will be in the market." The cash shortage has forced the government led by Mugabe's ZANU-PF party to delay paying salaries each month to civil servants and the military. With the government again printing its own money, many Zimbabweans fear a repeat of the excessive printing that led to hyperinflation. "It will immediately destroy trust. The trust is not there and the value of the bond note will not be sustained," Harare-based economic analyst John Robertson told AFP.
"There is no money because there is no new investment. There is no investment because there is no trust - and you can't fix that by printing more notes." Zimbabwe once removed 12 zeros from its battered currency at the height of hyperinflation in 2009 when the largest note was the $100 trillion denomination.
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