Government has continued to deny responsibility for what is happening to the economy, and has instead chosen to blame, as usual, unnamed ‘economic and currency saboteurs. The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, which is responsible for pegging the forex rate, has gone on a spree, arresting businesses using the parallel market rate. This is not a new phenomenon. Faced with a runaway inflation in 2008, the then Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Governor Gideon Gono, blamed sanctions, banks, the stock exchange, parallel currency dealers and insurance companies. As well as firing bankers, he blacklisted more than 20 investment companies and froze their accounts. different outcome. On October 6, the central bank blacklisted 47 more individuals for allegedly advertising and facilitating illegal foreign exchange transactions and money laundering through social media. This came after 30 individuals were "blacklisted and barred from accessing financial and mobile telecommunication services for the The script is still the same as the same reasons" on Sept. 28, said John current Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe governor John Mangudya is still using Mangudya, governor of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe the same tactics but expecting a A bit of background… The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) introduced a Foreign Exchange Auction System in June 2020 in a move that was initially seen as progressive as it allowed for what appeared to be a liberalised approach to buying and selling foreign currency by business. Through this auction system, the RBZ allocates foreign currency that it expropriates from exporters. The auction however, started on a false note as the RBZ still continued to have control of the exchange rate. This then created two exchange rates, the RBZ one which remained generally fixed, and the street rate, which was quite liquid as it was driven by market forces. As a result, the gap between the formal exchange rate and the parallel market continues to widen fast. The parallel market reflects more closely the real value of the local currency against the US dollar. When the auction system was introduced in 2020, the parallel market rate stood at ZWL 80 for One US dollar, and today it’s anything from ZWL 150 to ZWL 200 against the US dollar. The formal exchange rate stands at One US dollar to ZWL 106. Businesses are opting to price goods based on the parallel market rate because the ZWL is overpriced. To deal with this, the RBZ implements a litany of measures, including the arrest and freezing of bank accounts of those using exchange rates outside the auction system, or abusing the auction system.

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