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View Full Version : Zimbabwe introduces $100 billion banknotes


Buster
07-31-2008, 08:41 AM
HARARE, Zimbabwe (CNN) -- Zimbabwe's troubled central bank introduced $100 billion banknotes Saturday in a desperate bid to ease the recurrent cash shortages plaguing the inflation-ravaged economy.

The bills officially come into circulation Monday, although they were on the foreign currency dealers market Saturday.

As high as they are, though, the bills still aren't enough to buy a loaf of bread. They can buy only four oranges.

The new note is equal to just one U.S. dollar.

Once-prosperous Zimbabwe has seen an unprecedented economic meltdown since it gained independence in 1980, with the official inflation rate now at 2.2 million percent.

Gideon Gono, governor of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, said the new notes are for "the convenience of the banking public and corporate sector" in light of price hikes.

"The RBZ has noted with concern the unjustifiable and incessant general increases in prices of goods and services. It is therefore appealing to the business community to follow ethical business practices as well as take an interest in the plight of the general public," Gono said in a statement dated Friday.

Zimbabwe started issuing large bank notes in December, starting with denominations of $250,000.

In January, the government issued bills in denominations of $1 million, $5 million, and $10 million -- and in May, it issued bills from $25 million and $50 million up to $25 billion and $50 billion.

The new bills are actually bearer checks and have an expiration date of December 31. Zimbabwe has not had formal currency since the introduction of bearer checks as a temporary measure in 2003.

"The RBZ is fighting a losing battle," economist John Robertson said in Harare. "As long as the inflation remains high, cash shortages will persist.

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Source (no, I didn't go to CNN.com, someone shared this with me!):
http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/africa/07/19/zimbabwe.banknotes/index.html

http://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2008/WORLD/africa/07/19/zimbabwe.banknotes/art.zimbabwe.dollars.gi.jpg




Now lets here you complain about the US Dollar. :wacko:

JonsZX2SR
07-31-2008, 10:16 AM
This sounds similar to what happened in the Weimar Republic (Germany) in the 1920's during hyperinflation or at various times in Italy with the Lira.

This should serve as an extreme lesson about what happens when a gov't mismanges an economy. Those who have any kind of assets inm Zimbabwe are simply better off holding more stable foreign currency.

Buster
07-31-2008, 12:17 PM
It's kinda humorous that these notes are selling for more on eBay as souvenirs than they're worth to the nation as currency.

JonsZX2SR
07-31-2008, 01:16 PM
Perhaps Zimbabwe could earn valuable currency by selling the notes as well as postage stamps on eBay. Lichtenstein and Monaco earn money by selling postage stamps primarily to collectors.

One would think that with some of the good that has developed in South Africa over the past 20 years, they would lead a few adjoining nations to intervene in the situation instead of expecting the rest of the world to act.

Sadly, southern Africa has a poor record of taking responsibility policing their own human rights violations in Zimbabwe, Rwanda, easter Zaire and other nations.