Redmi by Xiaomi

Redmi by Xiaomi

Xiaomi Mobile phones in Zimbabwe

Open
HomeBusiness

Indexing Prices To Black Market Rate Unjustified, Says Guvamatanga

2 years agoSun, 29 Jan 2023 08:15:20 GMT
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedIn
Indexing Prices To Black Market Rate Unjustified, Says Guvamatanga

A senior government official said that businesses should not use the parallel market exchange rate as a reference for pricing in the economy as it constitutes only a small fraction of cumulative trade volumes.

The Zimbabwe dollar is currently trading above $1 000 per US$1 on the parallel market, while the official rate is US$1:$779.

Businesses have been accused of indexing prices to the parallel market which, in turn, has fuelled runaway inflation.

Ministry of Finance and Economic Development Permanent Secretary George Guvamatanga said that the parallel market accounted for less than 10 percent of foreign currency traded in the economy last year. He said:

I have indicated that the percentage of the black market (to total forex traded) is less than 10 percent.

Click here: Pindula WhatsApp Channel
wa.me/channel/0029Vb4GVea90x2nCSDImS1b

 

If you look at the inflows that came in the Reserve Bank (of Zimbabwe) reports, of US$12 billion traded, maybe only US$1 billion was traded on the parallel market.

All the other funds are traded through FCAs, auction, and willing-buyer, willing-seller systems.

So, why are we keen to use parallel exchange rate marginal pricing, even if someone comes to you with the argument that they are not getting forex from the auction?

You know what? We want to give so much credit to this parallel market, but when you actually look at it, this parallel market only accounts for about 10 percent of the total foreign currency traded in the economy. The bulk of it comes from the auction, interbank and FCAs.

It (parallel market) then becomes the anchor (of pricing), which is a theorem of marginal pricing because even if you take the 10 percent and do weighted price, the rate is still probably around $840:US$1.

Guvamatanga said foreign currency inflows have been rising and under normal circumstances, this should keep the forex rate stable. | The Sunday Mail

Tags

7 Comments

𝚝𝚔 · 2 years ago
𝕤𝕠 𝕦 𝕒𝕣 𝕒𝕕𝕞𝕚𝕥𝕚𝕟𝕘 𝕥𝕙𝕒𝕥 𝕦 𝕒𝕣 𝕝𝕠𝕠𝕤𝕚𝕟𝕘 𝕚𝕥 𝕥𝕠 𝕥𝕙𝕖 𝕡𝕒𝕣𝕒𝕝𝕝𝕖𝕝 𝕞𝕜𝕥
Anonymous · 2 years ago
George nya mai.
Machiavelli · 2 years ago
But mukoma George 80% of the economy is informalised! And your financial systems hano way of capturing the quantum of Informal Sector transactions. The RBZ is dispensing a measly $12 million per week. You certainly cannot say that is 90% of the business needs of the entire country. If you had your finger on the economic pulse you would have come to a very different conclusion. Let me enlighten you a bit. In the heist at Mutangadura shop in Goromonzi, thieves netted US$45,000 (a day's taking at a rural shop), and last weekend a small shop in industrial Workington lost US$36,000. A month ago an individual in Mt Pleasant was relieved of US$65,000. Those figures alone will show you that the banking sector is a by-stander as far as hard currency transactions go. And I haven't even multiplied those figures by the number of retailers throughout Zimbabwe, let alone factored in industry and tourism. George, you and your Reserve Bank have no clue as to the goings on in the economy.
· 2 years ago
👍
g · 2 years ago
spot on
TK · 2 years ago
pindula ndinokumbirawoo ma setting e Droid
Pk · 2 years ago
Votera Chamisa kutu usachemere zvemahara
Tk · 2 years ago
aaaaaaa putsek unondiudza pekuvhotera ndiweanikooo
· 2 years ago
This man is not very intelligent 😂 They can rig elections but they cannot rig the economy.
G40 · 2 years ago
Those who are on Twitter Jonathan Moyo ariku poster wo here these days??
g · 2 years ago
mazvikonewa vakuru. kutaura sandi kuita. idyai zvenyu kekupedzisira

Leave a Comment


Generate a Whatsapp Message

Buy Phones on Credit.

More Deals
Feedback