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Zimbabwe to fine businesses not using gold-backed currency ZiG

Friday May 10 2024
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Zimbabwe launched a new currency in Harare on April 5, 2024 but it is losing value against the dollar. PHOTO | VOA

By REUTERS

Zimbabwe will fine businesses using inflated exchange rates as the government battles to maintain the value of its newly introduced gold-backed currency, the Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG).

Any business using an exchange rate higher than the official rate of 13.5 ZiG per US dollar will be liable for a fine of 200,000 ZiG ($14,815), according to a government notice seen by Reuters.

Anyone offering "goods or services at an exchange rate above the prevailing interbank foreign currency selling rate" would be guilty of a civil infringement, read the notice, issued late on Thursday.

Read: Zimbabwe's new gold-backed currency starts trading

The government has been making efforts to keep the ZiG afloat since its launch in early April, with authorities launching a blitz on illegal foreign currency traders last month.

Some businesses such as supermarkets have been charging a premium above the market rate for customers paying in the new currency, while the ZiG is being rejected by informal traders.

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Zimbabwe's Treasury on Tuesday moved to enforce the use of the ZiG as the official unit of exchange for transactions.

This is Zimbabwe's fourth attempt at having a local currency within a decade, with the country dumping the Zimdollar last month after it lost 70 percent value since the start of the year.

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