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Can Blockchain Technology and Cryptocurrency Help Zimbabwe Overcome Its Economic Crisis?

GERALD MAROKO

When Zimbabwe’s long-standing president Robert Mugabe was deposed in November 2017, many hoped that the economic decline he had presided over would soon be reversed. 


Is Blockchain technology cryptocurrency In Zimbabwe legal
Pic - freemanlaw.com


But, as it currently stands, the economy is showing no signs of recovering, thanks to an ongoing currency crisis. Several solutions have been tried. And in this regard, we can ask: could a blockchain-based cryptocurrency be the cure for what ails Zimbabwe?

Just over a decade ago, Zimbabwe was beset by severe hyperinflation of world record levels – which peaked to an estimated 79.6 billion percent month-on-month, 89.7 sextillion percent year-on-year in mid-November 2008 – that it abandoned its currency altogether, adopting instead a basket of international currencies, chiefly led by the US dollar. But acute dollar shortages drove up prices, spurring the government, in 2016, to introduce its own banknotes and coins that were supposedly worth the same value as US dollars.

The Lack of Confidence With Zimbabwe’s Currency Regimes

Due to an acute lack of confidence, however, the new money traded at a significant discount on the black market. With dollars continuing to flow out of the country at a faster rate than they flowed in, the government recently merged its currency and all electronic money into yet another new unit: the Real Time Gross Settlement (RTGS) dollar.

But simply issuing another currency will not be enough to solve Zimbabwe’s problem. A “fiat” currency – whose value is not intrinsic, but established by the government – is viewed as credible only when the government prints money responsibly and most money in the country is held in the banking system. When the system’s credibility collapses, it takes decades to rebuild.

This is what has happened in Zimbabwe, where the government has a long history of poor fiscal management. In 2003, for example, the government was routinely withdrawing money from privately held foreign-currency-denominated accounts without the account holders’ consent; meanwhile, it couldn’t afford the ink needed to print more bank notes.

Their confidence shaken by years of politically motivated monetary interventions, including unrestrained money-printing to fund discretionary spending, Zimbabweans have long avoided holding currency issued by their own government. In 2008, money was changing hands over a hundred times faster in Zimbabwe than elsewhere in Africa, as people sought more trustworthy stores of value.

This lack of consumer and business confidence in a state-run monetary system continues to this day. The RTGS dollar lost one-fifth of its value within a month of its introduction.

None of this should be surprising. When people lose their life savings and are plunged into poverty through no fault of their own, the last thing they want to do is rely on the government that put them in that position and, amid shrinking tax revenues, offers them little support in getting back on their feet.

Is Blockchain Technology Sufficient to Restore Confidence?

A blockchain-based cryptocurrency can potentially circumvent this lack of confidence. Rather than being managed by the central bank, transactions would be stored on a distributed, decentralized public ledger. And, as with Bitcoin, the supply would be capped, in order to prevent the discretionary printing of money. In this sense, a cryptocurrency would resolve some of the most fundamental problems with a state-run monetary system in Zimbabwe.

The benefits would be far-reaching. Blockchain technology makes transactions virtually tamper-proof. And, with third-party intermediation unnecessary, transactions costs are low.

This could save the Zimbabwean diaspora up to $90 million annually in remittance-related fees. Lower transaction costs would also support progress on financial inclusion, as anyone with Internet access could trade even very small amounts of money in real time.

With the expansion of Internet-enabled mobile-phone use, even those living in isolated regions have gained valuable opportunities to participate in the formal banking system. It is now widely accepted that this trend has already brought millions into the formal economy in Asia.

The Use of ‘Smart Contracts’

The next step would be for Zimbabwe to start using self-executing “smart contracts” in its formal economy – a change that could save up to 0.5% of Zimbabwe’s annual GDP. This approach would boost business confidence, by making transactions safer and cheaper. Such a shift could be extended to many other applications: for example, blockchain technology could enable the instant digital transfer of asset titles.

The ultimate goal would be to create an open banking system – a more transparent model, in which banking data are shared through open application programming interfaces, enabling third-party developers to build their own applications and services. Given Zimbabweans’ lack of faith in their existing system, it would not take much to convince them to leave it behind.

Blockchain Could be the Cure, Perhaps

As a blockchain-based system strengthened business and consumer confidence, investment and household spending would rise, bolstering the economy and boosting tax revenues.

This, together with the government’s inability to engage in discretionary money-printing, would vastly improve the management of public finances, helping the government to recover its credibility in the long term. But the lynchpin of this system is the fact that it will function, even while the government remains discredited.


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