Hyperinflation threat returns to Zimbabwe
Just less than a decade after hyperinflation obliterated
Zimbabwe’s dollar along with its pensions and savings, the southern
African nation is almost facing a return to precipitous price rises.
Zimbabwe adopted the U.S. dollar in 2009, along with Britain’s pound and the South African rand, to tame inflation that topped out at 500 billion percent.
According to a Reuters report, the situation is still a far cry from 2008 when the central bank printed a Zimbabwe $100 trillion note.
But Steve Hanke, an economics professor at Johns Hopkins University in the United States, said in paper published last week that hyperinflation - defined as monthly inflation above 50 percent for at least 30 consecutive days - had returned.
Importers attribute the increases to the price of foreign exchange, which they have to buy on the black market at a premium.
Source: Reuters
Zimbabwe adopted the U.S. dollar in 2009, along with Britain’s pound and the South African rand, to tame inflation that topped out at 500 billion percent.
But the relative financial stability
of the last eight years has unravelled in the last two months as acute
foreign exchange shortages have led to sharp price increases as money in banks is fast losing value.
But Steve Hanke, an economics professor at Johns Hopkins University in the United States, said in paper published last week that hyperinflation - defined as monthly inflation above 50 percent for at least 30 consecutive days - had returned.
Zimbabwe’s
real inflation rate, measured by purchasing power parity and taking into
account its de facto exchange rate, was 313 percent a year and 112
percent on a monthly basis, said Hanke, who has written a book about the
country’s 2008 crisis.
He dismissed official
statistics that put year-on-year inflation at just 0.78 percent in
September as a “truly fantastical piece of artwork”.
Zimbabwe, welcome back to the record books! You have once again entered the inglorious world of hyperinflation. It is a world of economic chaos, wrenching poverty and death,” he said.
Its purveyors should be incarcerated and the keys should be thrown away,” he concluded, taking a swipe at the government of 93-year-old President Robert Mugabe.Other economists said Hanke’s figures might be a bit steep but also dismissed the official numbers as fantasy.
University
of Zimbabwe economist Tony Hawkins said an increase in money supply
through massive treasury bill issuance this year and depreciation of the
domestic currency pointed to inflation as high as 40 percent or more in
the next two years.
Locally-based Econometer Global Capital put the September inflation figure at 65 percent.
However,
Mutasa Dzinotizei, who heads the Zimstats statistics agency, dismissed
the alternative calculations. His organisation’s methodology, based on
domestic dollars taken at face value, was sound, he told Reuters.
Aside from locally-produced staples such as maize meal and bread, prices of imported goods on Harare supermarket shelves have shot up 30-150 percent in the last two months.
Inflation is reflected at the retail end of the market. We don’t go to the stock exchange or look at the exchange rate. I have never seen it done anywhere in this world,” he said.
Aside from locally-produced staples such as maize meal and bread, prices of imported goods on Harare supermarket shelves have shot up 30-150 percent in the last two months.
Source: Reuters
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