The Washington Post articles describes the latest twist in the surreal saga of Zimbabwe’s currency. -Editor
Want evidence that China is still making inroads in sub-Saharan Africa? Look no further than Zimbabwe, where the finance minister just
announced a plan to begin using the Chinese yuan as an official currency within the southern African nation — part of a deal in which Beijing will
also cancel about $40 million in debt.
"There cannot be a better time to do this," Zimbabwean Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa explained in a statement.
The news is just the latest wild twist for the Zimbabwean currency. Six months ago, Zimbabwe's central bank announced that it was
finally phasing out the local currency, the Zimbabwean dollar, after years of hyperinflation had left the currency virtually worthless.
Zimbabweans were told that they would be able to exchange bank account balances of up to 175,000,000,000,000,000 Zimbabwean dollars for
just 5 U.S. dollars – a heartbreaking sum, given that it was many people's life savings.
In practice, the Zimbabwean dollar (and the $100 trillion notes that it eventually required) had already become little more than a
kitsch souvenir. By 2008, foreign currencies such as the U.S. dollar and the South African rand had become de facto currencies thanks to a
booming black market. The following year, the government announced that it would officially allow businesses to use these currencies,
effectively abandoning the Zimbabwean dollar.
The new agreement would add the yuan to the list of currencies used for public transactions, and the Zimbabwean government said it would
encourage its use. In the first stages of the plan, Reuters reports, Chinese tourists would be allowed to use the yuan to pay for services,
and Zimbabwe would begin paying back its loans to China in the currency. The new switch may have other side effects, too: In recent months,
some Zimbabwean economists had argued that the country should increase its use of the Chinese currency in a bid to get around U.S.
sanctions.
If anything, the deal is further evidence of the lengths that strongman Robert Mugabe, long isolated by much of the Western world, is
willing to go to secure the future of his relationship with China.
Notably, a Chinese group with murky ties to the government awarded Mugabe the Confucius Peace Prize – considered the Chinese version of
the Nobel Peace Prize – in October, despite the Zimbabwean leader's long-standing reputation for human rights abuses.
To read the complete article, see:
Zimbabwe’s curious
plan to adopt China’s currency
(www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2015/12/23/zimbabwes-curious-plan-to-adopt-chinas-currency/)
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