“Hyperinflation, IAS21 or 29, it was a headache for accountants and for people looking for financial information from outside. The IT guys were having a tough time…We just could not stay where we were. Governor, you did not reveal that it is you who makes the choice.
“The IMF (International Monetary Fund), the World Bank and economic actors like ourselves give you input, but you have the unenviable task and difficult task of choosing all this advice which you are going to hear more today and choose which one [is the best]. But, we only had three choices.”
Moyo suggested an alternative approach: following Zambia’s example from 2013 by removing zeros to rebase the currency, a tactic aimed at addressing market and economic volatility.
“But, really, we could not have that because it was going to bring back some trauma of zeros so we said okay skip that, we cannot remove zeros on the ZWL$ and stay there. The other choice was to dollarise, but Dumisani (Dumisani Sibanda, an economic analyst) has already spoken on why we could not dollarise,” Moyo said.
“Because, from a business point of view, the manufacturing sector where I come from, we know the pain of dollarisation so we could not stay with dollarisation. Then the third choice really was what you (Mushayavanhu) then chose. Another instrument in the basket of currencies or arsenal of investment instruments, cryptocurrencies, gold coins or ZiG, and ZiG was already existing, so we went that route, or you picked that choice.”
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