Zimbabwean dollar

Zimbabwean dollar

$500 note of the fourth Zimbabwean dollar.
ISO 4217
Code ZWL[1]
Denominations
Subunit
1/100 cent
Symbol $
Banknotes $1, $5, $10, $20, $50, $100, $500, (plus many more denominations)
Highest denomination – $1014
Coins none
Demographics
User(s) None
(previously  Zimbabwe)[n 1]
Issuance
Central bank Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe
Valuation
Inflation 98% per day (mid-Nov 2008)
or 1023 % per year
Source [2]
This infobox shows the latest status before this currency was rendered obsolete.

The Zimbabwean dollar (sign: $, or Z$ to distinguish it from other dollar-denominated currencies) was the official currency of Zimbabwe from 1980 to 12 April 2009. During this time it was subject to periods of above average inflation, followed by a period of hyperinflation.

The Zimbabwe dollar was introduced in 1980 to directly replace the Rhodesian dollar at par (1:1) and at a similar value to the US dollar. Hyperinflation in Zimbabwe reduced it to one of the lowest valued currency units in the world. It was redenominated three times (in 2006, 2008 and 2009), with denominations up to a $100 trillion banknote.[3] The final redenomination produced the "fourth dollar" (ZWL), which was worth 1025 ZWD (first dollars).

Use of the Zimbabwean dollar as an official currency was effectively abandoned on 12 April 2009. The Zimbabwean dollar was demonetised in 2015, with outstanding accounts able to be reimbursed until April 30, 2016.[4][5]

Currencies such as the South African rand, Botswana pula, pound sterling, Indian rupee, euro, Japanese yen, Australian dollar[6] and the United States dollar are now used for all transactions in Zimbabwe. In December 2015, Zimbabwe added the Chinese yuan to its basket of currencies.[7]

Origin

The Zimbabwean dollar's predecessor, the Rhodesian dollar, was essentially equal to half of a pound sterling when it was adopted during the decimalisation of 1970, the same practice which was used in other Commonwealth countries such as South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand. The selection of the name was motivated by the fact that the reduced value of the new unit correlated more closely to the value of the US dollar than it did to the pound sterling.

Design

The main illustration on the obverse of all of the banknotes issued from 1980 to 2009 was the Chiremba Balancing Rocks in Epworth, Harare. The rocks were used as a metaphorical theme to explain the importance of development coupled with preserving the fragile environment.[8] The rocks were also part of the Reserve Bank's emblem, which was used for all Bearer and Agro cheques, which circulated between 15 September 2003 and 31 December 2008. The reverse of dollar notes often illustrated the culture or landmarks of Zimbabwe.

Introduction of the first dollar (ZWD)

The first Zimbabwean dollar was introduced in 1980 and replaced the Rhodesian dollar at par. The initial ISO 4217 code was ZWD. At the time of its introduction, the Zimbabwean dollar was worth more than the U.S. dollar in the official exchange market, with 1 ZWD = 1.47 USD. However, this value did not reflect reality. As a result, the currency's value, both in the official and parallel markets eroded rapidly over the years. On 26 July 2006, the parallel market value of the Zimbabwean dollar fell to Z$100=GB£1.[9]

Date of
redenomination
Currency
code
Value
1 August 2006 ZWN 1 000 ZWD
1 August 2008 ZWR 1010 ZWN
= 1013 ZWD
2 February 2009 ZWL 1012 ZWR
= 1022 ZWN
= 1025 ZWD

First redenomination: introduction of the second dollar (ZWN)

In October 2005, the head of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, Dr. Gideon Gono, announced: "Zimbabwe will have a new currency next year." New banknotes and coins were to replace the then current Zimbabwean dollar. Gono did not provide a name for this new currency. In June 2006, Deputy Finance Minister David Chapfika stated that Zimbabwe had to achieve macroeconomic stability (i.e., double digit inflation) before any new currency was introduced.

On 1 August 2006, the first dollar was redenominated to the second dollar at the rate of 1 revalued second dollar = 1000 old first dollars. The new dollar was subdivided into 100 cents, although cents were not used in practice. Together with the redenomination, the government devalued the dollar by 60% against the US dollar (see exchange rate history table below), from 101,000 old dollars (101 revalued) to 250 revalued dollars. ISO originally assigned a new currency code of ZWN to this redenominated currency, but the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe could not deal with a currency change, so the currency code remained 'ZWD'.[10] The revaluation campaign, which Gideon Gono named "Operation Sunrise", was completed on 21 August 2006. It was estimated that some ten trillion old Zimbabwe dollars (22% of the money supply) were not redeemed during this period.[11]

On 12 December 2006, Gono hinted in a memorandum to banks and other financial institutions that he would lay out the next phase of his monetary reforms, dubbed "Project Sunrise Two", when he announced the monetary policy review statement in January 2007. It was not possible to get immediate confirmation from Gono's office whether the memorandum was advice to banks that he would be launching the new currency in January. Even so, the chief executive officer of one of the country's largest banks said industry players had understood the governor's memo to mean new money would be introduced the next month.[12] A possible name appeared to be "ivhu", which means "soil" in Shona.[13]

The following year, on 2 February 2007, the RBZ revealed that a new (third) dollar would be released soon and gave some details of the new banknotes (see below). However, with inflation at the time still in the four digits, the banknotes remained in storage. During the same month, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe declared inflation illegal, outlawing any raise in prices on certain commodities between 1 March and 30 June 2007. Officials arrested executives of some Zimbabwean companies for increasing prices on their products. Economists consider such measures ineffective at eliminating the problem of high inflation, since high sustained inflation is a symptom of high, sustained growth in the money supply.[14][15]

On 15 June 2007, economist Eddie Cross reported: "There is talk that the Reserve Bank will cut another three zeros off our currency next week and this would mean that one Zimbabwe dollar would now equal one million of the old dollars. Chaos reigns in commerce and industry and those in the public sector are frantic."[16]

On 6 September 2007, the Zimbabwe dollar was devalued again, this time by 92%,[17] to give an official exchange rate of ZW$30,000 to US$1, although the black market exchange rate was estimated to be ZW$600,000 to US$1.[18]

Meanwhile, the WM/Reuters company introduced a notional exchange rate (ISO ZWN) which more accurately reflected black market exchange rates. Due to a shortage of foreign exchange in the country, the official rate was nearly impossible to obtain. The method of calculation was based on Purchasing Power Parity utilising the dual listing of companies on the Harare (ZH) and London Stock exchanges (LN). In particular, the Old Mutual Implied Rate (OMIR) was calculated by dividing the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange price of shares of the insurance company named "Old Mutual" by the London Stock Exchange Price for the same share.[19]

Second redenomination: introduction of the third dollar (ZWR)

The 100 trillion Zimbabwean dollar banknote (1014 dollars), equal to 1027 pre-2006 dollars.

Reserve bank governor Gideon Gono announced on 30 July 2008 that the Zimbabwean dollar would be redenominated.[20] Effective 1 August 2008, ZW$10 billion would be worth ZW$1; the new currency code was ZWR.[20] The planned denominations to be issued are coins valued Z$5, Z$10 and Z$25 and banknotes worth Z$5, Z$10, Z$20, Z$100 and Z$500.[21] While the German firm of Giesecke & Devrient was no longer printing Zimbabwean currency, The Daily Telegraph reported that the new currency was printed before the relationship was severed and had been kept in storage since then.[22]

Due to frequent cash shortages and the worthless Zimbabwean dollar, foreign currency was effectively legalised as a de facto currency on 13 September 2008 via a special program to officially license a number of retailers to accept foreign money.[23] This reflected the reality of the dollarisation of the economy, with many shop keepers refusing to accept Zimbabwe dollars and requesting U.S. dollars or South African rand instead.[24][25] Despite redenomination, the RBZ was forced to print banknotes of ever higher values to keep up with surging inflation, with ten zeros reappearing by the end of 2008 (see below).

Third redenomination: introduction of the fourth dollar (ZWL)

On 2 February 2009, the RBZ announced that a further 12 zeros were to be taken off the currency, with 1,000,000,000,000 (third) Zimbabwe dollars being exchanged for 1 new (fourth) dollar.[26] New banknotes were introduced with a face value of Z$1, Z$5, Z$10, Z$20, Z$50, Z$100 and Z$500.[27] The banknotes of the fourth dollar circulated alongside the third dollar, which had to remain legal tender until 30 June 2009.[28] The new currency code was ZWL.[29]

By the end of 2009, the Zimbabwean dollar was reported to have become largely irrelevant, with the economy by then being almost completely dollarized.[30] Even the national postal service, Zimpost, was said to be charging customers postage in US Dollars, even though some of the stamps were in Zimbabwean Dollar denomination.

Zimbabwe finance minister, Tendai Biti, said in his first budget report, "The death of the Zimbabwe dollar is a reality we have to live with. Since October 2008 our national currency has become moribund."[31]

In late January 2009, acting Finance Minister Patrick Chinamasa announced that all Zimbabweans would be allowed to conduct business in any currency as a response to the hyperinflation crisis.[32]

On 12 April 2009, media outlets reported that economic planning minister Elton Mangoma had announced the suspension of the local currency "for at least a year", effectively terminating the fourth dollar.[33][34]

Inflation

Zimbabwean inflation rates since independence (official up to Jul. 2008, estimates thereafter)
Date Rate Date Rate Date Rate Date Rate Date Rate Date Rate
1980 7% 1986 15% 1992 40% 1998 48% 2004 132.75%
1981 14% 1987 10% 1993 20% 1999 56.9% 2005 585.84% 2008 Mid-Nov. 79,600,000,000%
1982 15% 1988 7.3% 1994 25% 2000 55.22% 2006 1,281.11%
1983 19% 1989 14% 1995 28% 2001 112.1% 2007 66,212.3%
1984 10% 1990 17% 1996 16% 2002 198.93% 2008 Jul.231,150,888.87%
1985 10% 1991 48% 1997 20% 2003 598.75%

Rampant inflation and the collapse of the economy severely devalued the currency, with many organisations using the United States dollar, the euro, the pound sterling, the South African rand, or the Botswana pula instead. In the early 2000s, Zimbabwe started to experience hyperinflation. Inflation reached 623% in January 2004, then fell back to low triple digits in 2004 before surging to 1,281.1% in 2006.[35][36]

Inflation reached another record high of 3,714% (year-on-year) in April 2007.[37] The monthly rate for April 2007 exceeded 100%, implying that inflation may soon exceed all forecasts, as 100% monthly inflation over sustained 12 months would produce annual inflation of over 400,000%. Mid-year inflation for 2007 has been breaching records as inflation for May 2007 was estimated at 4,530% (year-on-year).[38] Within two months, unofficial inflation had reached 11,000%, and the black-market exchange rate with the British pound was Z$400,000 per £1.[39]

On 13 July 2007, the Zimbabwean government said it had temporarily stopped publishing (official) inflation figures, a move that observers said was meant to draw attention away from "runaway inflation which has come to symbolise the country's unprecedented economic meltdown."[40]

On 27 July 2007, the Consumer Council of Zimbabwe (CCZ) said its recent calculations for the monthly expenditure for an urban family of six showed that inflation for the month of June was more than 13,000%. The Central Statistical Office (CSO), the official source of Consumer Price Index numbers, had not released its figures since February (2007) when it reported annual inflation at 1,729%.[41]

In September 2007, the Central Statistical Office announced an official inflation rate of 6,592.8% for August 2007.[42] Private estimates were as high as 20,000%.[43] In October 2007, they announced an official inflation rate of 7,892.1% for September 2007.[44] In November 2007, they announced an official inflation rate of 14,840.5% for October 2007.[45]

Hyperinflation

Official, black market, and OMIR exchange rates 1 January 2001 to 2 February 2009. Note the logarithmic scale.

Moffat Nyoni, the chief statistician of the Central Statistical Office, announced that the inflation rate would no longer be calculated after November 2007, due to the lack of availability of basic goods and the consequent lack of information from which to calculate the inflation rate. The International Monetary Fund stated that inflation was predicted to rise to 100,000% per annum.[46] His office continued calculating past inflation rates, announcing in February 2008 that December had seen 66,212.3% inflation and an exchange rate of Z$7.1 million per US$1,[47] while the January inflation rate had risen to 100,580.2%.[48] Official rates rose to 164,900.3% in February,[49] and 355,000% in March,[50] and unofficial rates surpassed one million percent in May (the Central Statistical Office again having given up because of the lack of goods).[51] The office resumed estimates in early winter, announcing June rates of nine million percent,[52] and nearly a quarter billion percent in July.[53]

As predicted by the quantity theory of money, this hyperinflation has been caused primarily by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe's choice to mushroom the money supply.

Since February 2009, following a period of hyperinflation and widespread rejection of the devalued currency, companies and individuals are permitted to transact domestic business in other currencies, such as the US$ or the South African rand. In consequence, the Zimbabwean economy has undergone dollarisation[54] and the Zimbabwean dollar has fallen out of everyday use.[55]

Money supply (2006–2008)

100 million Zimbabwean dollars

On 16 February 2006, the governor of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, Gideon Gono, announced that the government had printed ZW$20.5 trillion in order to buy foreign currency to pay off IMF arrears.[56] In early May 2006, Zimbabwe's government announced that they would produce another ZW$60 trillion.[57] The additional currency was required to finance the recent 300% salary increase for soldiers and policemen and 200% increase for other civil servants. The money was not budgeted for the current fiscal year, and the government did not say where it would come from. On 29 May, Reserve Bank officials told IRIN that plans to print about ZW$60 trillion (about US$592.9 million at official rates) were briefly delayed after the government failed to secure foreign currency to buy ink and special paper for printing money.

In late August 2006, it was reported that about ZW$10 trillion old dollars (22% of the money supply) had not been exchanged for revalued dollars. These bearer cheques were demonetised.

On 27 June 2007, it was announced that central bank governor Gideon Gono had been ordered by President Robert Mugabe to print an additional Z$1 trillion to cater for civil servants' and soldiers' salaries that were hiked by 600% and 900% respectively.[58]

On 28 July 2007, it was reported that Mugabe said that Zimbabwe would go on printing money if there was not enough for underfunded municipal projects.[59]

On 30 August 2007, it was reported that an additional ZW$3 trillion had been printed to pay for 500,000 scotch carts and 800,000 ox-drawn ploughs plus an unspecified number of cattle.[60]

On 3 September 2007, it was reported that the black market in Zimbabwe is once again booming despite price controls. People who previously were employed for US$11 (Z$2 Million) a month are now able to turn as much as US$166 (ZW$30 Million) just through black market trading.[61]

On 24 November 2007, it was reported that money supply was now $58 trillion revalued Zimbabwean dollars (ZWD)[62] ($41 million US at parallel rates). However, Zimbabwe banks could only account for Z$1–2 trillion of those dollars, meaning that members of the public were holding Z$56–57 trillion in cash.

On 4 January 2008, it was reported that money supply had been increased by Z$33 trillion to Z$100 trillion[63] revalued Zimbabwean dollars (ZWD).[64] Further, the demonetisation of the Z$200,000 bearer cheques was put on hold, thus increasing the money supply.

A selection of Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe bearer cheques printed between July 2007 to July 2008 (now expired) that illustrate the hyperinflation rate in Zimbabwe.

The planned issue of additional banknotes (denominations of Z$1, Z$5, and Z$10 Million) on 18 January 2008 will increase the money supply by an unknown amount.

On 21 January 2008, it was reported, by Gideon Gono, that the money supply had been increased to Z$170 trillion since the middle of December. Further, Gono expected it to reach $800 trillion by 28 January 2008.[65]

On 1 March 2008, it was reported that documents obtained by The Sunday Times show the Munich company Giesecke & Devrient (G&D) was receiving more than €500,000 (£382,000) a week for delivering bank notes equivalent to Z$170 trillion a week.

The regime is surviving by printing money: at this stage there is no other way.

Martin Rupiya, professor (war and security studies), University of Zimbabwe.

According to a source at the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, G&D was delivering 432,000 sheets of banknotes every week to Fidelity printers in Harare, where they were stamped with the denomination. Each sheet contains 40 notes and the current production is entirely in Z$10 million notes.[66] On 1 July 2008, Giesecke & Devrient responded to pressure from the German government by suspending production of bank notes for Zimbabwe.[67]

In The Guardian, on 18 July 2008, a report on Zimbabwe's inflation, said that an egg costs Z$50 billion (GBP 0.17, USD 0.32), and it showed adverts for prizes of Z$100 trillion in a Zimbabwean derby and Z$1.2 quadrillion ($1,200,000,000,000,000.00: approx. £2,100; $4,200) in a lottery. It also showed a monthly war pension currently is Z$109 billion (37 pence, 74¢), shops can only cash cheques if the customer writes double the amount, because the cost will go up by the time the cheque has cleared, and people can only withdraw a maximum of Z$100 billion from cashpoints.[68]

On 23 July 2008, an Austro-Hungarian company based in Vienna confirmed that it is providing the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe with the licences and software required to design and print Zimbabwe currency.[69][70] The company, named Jura JSP, said it would consider ending its supply of licences and software if the European Union required it to do so.[69] Without the licences and software, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe may be unable to print notes in larger denominations than are already in circulation.[70]

On 24 July 2008, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe announced that "appropriate measures are being put in place to address the current setbacks being faced on the currency front, as well as on financial and accounting systems."[71] It promised that in "the next few days" it would institute changes to the minimum cash withdrawal limits and IT systems' constraints, and limited cash withdrawals to ZW$100 billion per day, which is less than the cost of a loaf of bread.[71] IT systems cannot handle such large numbers; the automated teller machines for one major bank give a "data overflow error" and freeze customers' attempt to withdraw money with so many zeros.[72] That same day, the Institute of Commercial Management reported that ZW$1.2 trillion is worth the same as one British pound.[73]

From January to December 2008, the money supply growth rose from 81,143% to 658 billion percent.[74]

Date 2006 2007 2008
July August September November December 21 January 28 January March June
Money supply 4.5×1013 ZWD 4.5×1010 ZWN 3.5×1010 ZWN 5.8×1013 or
6.7×1013 ZWN
1×1014 ZWN 1.7×1014 ZWN 8×1014 ZWN 2.5×1016 ZWN ≥ 9×1017 ZWN

Abandonment and demonetization

The use of foreign currencies was legalised in January 2009, causing general consumer prices to stabilise again after years of hyperinflation and price speculation.[54] The move led to a sharp drop in the usage of the Zimbabwean dollar, as hyperinflation rendered even the highest denominations worthless.

On 2 February 2009 the Zimbabwean dollar was redenominated once more, at the ratio of 1 000 000 000 000 (1012) ZWR to 1 ZWL. The third dollar was expected to be demonetised on 1 July 2009,[75] but the complete abandonment of local currency was hastened by the decline in overall consumer usage of local currency in favour of other currencies, helped by the legalisation of the use of hard currencies in January 2009.

The Zimbabwean dollar was effectively abandoned as an official currency on 12 April 2009 when the Economic Planning Minister Elton Mangoma confirmed the suspension of the national currency for at least a year, but exchange rates with the Zimbabwean dollar were maintained for up to a year afterwards. The current government of Zimbabwe said that the Zimbabwean currency should only be reintroduced if the industrial output was 60% or more of its capacity, compared to the April 2009 average of 20%.[76]

On 29 January 2014 the Zimbabwe central bank announced that the US dollar, South African rand, Botswana pula, Pound sterling, Euro, Australian dollar, Chinese yuan (renminbi), Indian rupee and Japanese yen would all be accepted as legal currency within the country.[77]

On 12 June 2015, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe said it would begin a process to demonetise the Zimbabwean dollar, to officially value the fiat currency at zero. The plan was to have completed the switch to the US dollar by the end of September 2015[4][78] and to adopt the use of multiple currencies. The Zimbabwean government stated that it would credit 5 US dollars to domestic bank accounts with balances of up to 175 quadrillion Zimbabwean dollars and exchange Zimbabwean dollars for US dollars at a rate of 1 USD to 35 quadrillion Zimbabwean dollars to accounts with balances above 175 quadrillion Zimbabwean dollars.[79][80] This move was meant to stabilize the economy and establish a credible nominal anchor under low inflation conditions.

By the end of November 2015, total verified balances were $15.8 million; about $10 million was disbursed to the banks while 483,140 accounts were paid out. The number of paid out accounts represent 47 percent of verified balances. Clients of closed banks were paid about $826,000 while walk-in clients received $740,000.

On 11 December 2015, The Herald reported that the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe had paid out about $7.2 million U.S. dollars in compensation for redemption of demonetized Zimbabwe dollars, which matched figures from the Ministry of Finance and Economic Development.

The exercise brought closure to the outstanding issue on the Zimbabwe dollar, further confirming the government's position that the local unit will not return anytime soon. The Government has maintained that the return of the Zimbabwe dollar would only be considered when key economic fundamentals such productivity in key sectors have been achieved.[81]

In November 2016 Zimbabwe issued US$10 million worth of "bond notes" in two and five US dollar denominations. These bond notes were exchangeable with US dollars and were issued when people withdrew money from their bank account but they could not be used outside Zimbabwe. The bond notes were one of nine official legal tender currencies in Zimbabwe.[82]

Coins

In 1980, coins were introduced in denominations of 1, 5, 10, 20, 50 cents and 1 dollar. The 1 cent coin was struck in bronze, with the others struck in cupro-nickel. In 1989, bronze-plated steel replaced bronze. A 2 dollar coin was introduced in 1997. In 2001, nickel-plated steel replaced cupro-nickel in the 10, 20 and 50 cents and 1 dollar, and a bimetallic 5 dollar coin was introduced.

The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe announced plans for new Z$5,000 and Z$10,000 coins in June 2005.[83] However, the coins never appeared.

In August 2008, all old coins dating from the first dollar were reintroduced at face value to the third dollar, effectively increasing their value 10 trillion-fold, and new $10 and $25 coins were introduced. These coins were minted in 2003 but only issued with the redenomination.[84]

In its 2014 mid-term monetary policy statement, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) said it would import special coins known as Zimbabwean bond coins to ease a shortage of change in the economy. Like the original 1980 coins, these special coins would be denominated in 1, 5, 10, 20, and 50 cents, but would have values at par with U.S. cents. There would also be South African rand coins of 10 cents, 20 cents, 50 cents, 1 rand, 2 rands, and 5 rands. The RBZ's statement did not specify when or where these coins would be imported from, but a later report on November 26 2014 clarified that over $40 million worth of these coins were expected to be delivered within the next week from Pretoria. On 18 December 2014, the 1, 5, 10, and 25 U.S. cent denominations were released into circulation. The 50 U.S. cent denomination followed in March 2015.

Banknotes, traveller's cheques, and bearer cheques

Main article: Banknotes of Zimbabwe
£8 worth of Zimbabwean dollars in 2003.

The banknotes of the Zimbabwean dollar were issued by the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe from 1980 to 2009. Up to 2003, regular banknotes were issued but as hyperinflation developed from 2003, the Reserve Bank issued short-lived emergency traveler's cheques, which were then quickly superseded by time-limited Bearer Cheques, in denominations ranging from $5,000 to $20,000 in 2003, then up to $100,000 dollars by early-2006.

On 1 August 2006, new Bearer cheques with thirteen denominations ranging from 1¢ to $100,000 were issued following the first redenomination of the dollar, superseding the regular banknotes by 21 August 2006 and until August 2008. Bearer cheques of 5,000 dollars (dated 1 February 2007) and 50,000 (dated 1 March 2007) were issued in March 2007, followed by cheques of 200,000 (dated 1 August 2007) in August 2007. Subsequently, Gideon Gono of the RBZ announced on 19 December 2007 that new bearer cheques (Z$250,000; Z$500,000; and Z$750,000) had been produced and would be released on 20 December. Additionally, the current high value bearer cheques (Z$200,000) would be demonetised as of 1 January 2008.[85] However, due to ongoing problems, plans to demonetise this note were put on hold at the end of December.

Since the Zimbabwean dollar was revalued in August 2006, there were repeated discussions and proposals regarding a further revaluation. As early as the beginning of 2007 it appeared that a revaluation was planned with new banknote designs being commissioned.[86] New plans were announced in October 2007[87] They were initially postponed until 2008 before, in November 2007, the revaluation was described as "imminent"[88] and would remove as many as four zeros from the currency and would be called Sunrise 2.[89][90] However, on 18 December 2007, it was reported that a further printing of the current Z$200,000 bearer cheques had been produced, seemingly instead of revaluing.[91] Further new issues of bearer cheques have since taken place.

At a press conference on 16 January 2008, reserve bank Governor Gono stated that "With effect from Friday (January 18), the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe is releasing the following bearer cheques into circulation: one million dollars (officially worth about US$33/22 euros but worth about 50c at the parallel rate), five million dollars and 10 million dollars." He continued, "...daily cash withdrawals have been increased from the current Z$50 million to Z$500 million per individual." Less than a month after announcing a similar move, Gono said the new notes would provide much needed relief to consumers who often have to go shopping with sacks of cash.[92]

The Zim Independent and Zim Online reported on 4 April 2008 that 25 and 50 million dollar bearer cheques were issued on 4 April. The RBZ also increased the maximum withdrawal limit for individuals to $5 billion a day.[93][94][95] On 6 May 100 million dollar and 250 million dollar bearer cheques were issued and the official exchange rate was floated to counter black market speculation.[96] 10 days later, the RBZ announced that 500 million dollar bearer cheques and special agro cheques in the amounts of 5, 25, and 50 billion dollars would be issued were to be issued on 20 May.

On 14 July 2008 Giesecke & Devrient ceased supplying bank note paper to Fidelity Printers & Refiners, the Zimbabwean government-owned company that printed Zimbabwean currency.[97] Virtually incessant use of the currency-printing presses had caused many of the machines to break down, and repair parts were no longer being shipped to Zimbabwe to repair the machines.[97] The Reserve Bank issued the $100 billion Agro Cheque on 21 July, which were printed prior to the suspension.[98][99]

On 30 July 2008 the RBZ announced a new currency, effective 1 August 2008, removing 10 zeros from the monetary value, by "a factor of 1 to 10".[100] Banknotes in the denominations of $1, $5, $10, $20, $100 and $500 were introduced and replaced bearer cheques and agro cheques by 31 December 2008.[101] However, the familiar cycle of printing ever higher denomination notes to keep up with inflation continued despite redenomination. A $1,000 banknote was introduced by the RBZ on 19 September 2008, and ten days later, as the unofficial exchange rate surpassed 270,000 ZWD to the US dollar, it issued new notes in the denominations of $10,000 and $20,000.[102] A $50,000 banknote was released on 13 October 2008, followed by $100,000, $500,000, and $1,000,000 denominations announced on 3 November.[103] The daily cash withdrawal limit was raised for individuals to Z$500,000 from Z$50,000 and for select companies it went up to $1 million.[104] Banknotes valued at $10 million, $50 million and $100 million were issued as the withdrawal limit was increased to $100 million per week on 4 December 2008.[105][106] Scarcely four days later, on 8 December, the RBZ issued a $200 million banknote,[107] and introduced a $500 million note on 12 December, worth approximately US$8 at the time.[108] In little over half a year, the billion denomination returned, with the RBZ issuing banknotes of $1 billion, $5 billion, and $10 billion on 19 December.[109]

Amid the continuing hyperinflation that rendered the currency virtually worthless, spurring the increasing dollarisation of the economy, the RBZ issued another set of new notes in denominations of $20 billion and $50 billion to be released 12 January.[110] Stepping up another order of magnitude, the Reserve Bank introduced trillion-denominated notes for the first time, unveiling banknotes valued at $10 trillion, $20 trillion, $50 trillion, and $100 trillion on 16 January, which were supposed to help citizens still in formal employment to withdraw a full month's worth of salary by showing a corresponding payslip.[111] As even these notes became increasingly worthless, a media campaign was launched in South Africa using the notes as printing paper.[112]

On 2 February 2009 the dollar was revalued once more, this time in the ratio of 1:1012,[113] and new banknotes of the fourth dollar, with seven denominations from $1 to $500, were issued.[27] These banknotes circulated alongside the third dollar until the abandonment of the dollar on 12 April 2009.

Exchange rate history

This table shows a condensed history of the foreign exchange rate of the Zimbabwean Dollars to one US Dollar:

First dollar Second dollar Third dollar
Month/Year Exchange rate
1983 1
1997 10
2000 100
Jun 2002 1 000
Mar 2005 10 000
Jan 2006 100 000
Jul 2006 500 000+
Month Exchange rate
Aug 2006 650
Sep 2006 1 000
Dec 2006 3 000
Jan 2007 4 800
Feb 2007 7 500
Mar 2007 26 000
Apr 2007 35 000
May 2007 50 000
Jun 2007 400 000
Jul 2007 300 000
Aug 2007 200 000
Month Exchange rate
Sep 2007 600 000
Oct 2007 1 000 000
Nov 2007 1 500 000
Dec 2007 † 4 000 000
Jan 2008 6 000 000
Feb 2008 ‡ 16 000 000
Mar 2008 70 000 000
Apr 2008 100 000 000
May 2008 777 500 000
Jun 2008 40 928 000 000
Jul 2008 758 530 000 000
Day Exchange rate
15 August 2008 244.83
15 September 2008 29283
7 October 2008 29277
14 October 2008 29317.7
21 October 2008 29298
28 October 2008 29306
8 November 2008 29325

† Due to the December 2007 banknote shortage, funds transferred via Electronic Funds Transfer Systems (EFTS) bore a premium rate of about $4 million, while the cash transaction rate varied around $2 million.
‡ Exchange rate was 20,000,000 for large amounts.

The third dollar rates above are OMIR. The cash rate differs significantly to the above rates. The table below is the cash rate of the third dollar history:

Month ZWR per USD
Sept 2008 1 000
Oct 2008 90 000
Nov 2008 1 200 000
Mid Dec 2008 60 000 000
End Dec 2008 2 000 000 000
Mid Jan 2009 1 000 000 000 000
2 February 2009 300 000 000 000 000

Devaluation of the first dollar

The first dollar devalued from 0.6788 R$ to 1 US$ in 1978 to roughly half a million per US$ in 2006, when the currency was revalued.

This table shows in more detail the historical value of one U.S. dollar in Zimbabwean dollars:

Exchange rates of the first dollar (ZWD)
Date Official Rate Parallel Rate Notes
1978 US$0.6788 (Apr) n/a Z$ pegged to US$
1980 US$0.68 (Mar) n/a Z$ tied to basket of FRF, DEM, ZAR, CHF, GBP, USD
18 April 1980 – Independence (1 Z$ = 1 R$)
1982 0.8925 to 0.9140 (Dec) ZWD devalued by 16.5%
1983 0.96135 (Jan) up to 3.18 (July) ZWD devalued by 5%
Parallel rate highly variable — premium up to 231%
1983 (Aug) to 1993 (Dec) 0.96135 – 6.82 Flexible basket; dual rates; 20% tax on outgoing payments
1994 6.82 (Jan) 8.36 (Oct) Floating official rate (1 July) ; dual rates; ZWD devalued by 17%
1995 8.26 (Jan) 8.85 (Oct) floating official rate; dual rates; rates unified 1998 (Dec)
1996 9.13 (Jan) 10.52 (Oct)
1997 10.50 (Jan) 12.00 (Jan); 25.00 (Nov)
1998 18.00 (Jan) 16.65 (Jun); 19.00 (Jul); 23.50
1999 36.23 (Jan) 38.30 (Sep) On 31 March 1999, the Official Exchange Rate was pegged at ZWD 38 per USD; the parallel market had re-emerged by December 1999.
2000 38 to 55 56 to 62 (Jul); 65 to 70 (Aug.) In August 2000, the Official Exchange Rate was pegged at ZWD 50, then ZWD 51 and finally at ZWD 55 per USD; parallel black market rates were at a large premium; in November, foreign exchange bureaus were closed.
2001 55 70 (Jan); 80 (Feb); 100 (Mar); 120 (Apr); 140 (May); 160 (Jun); 250 (Jul); 300 (Aug); 400 (Sep); 300 (Oct); 320 (Nov); 340 (Dec) In June, the official rate became a crawling peg rate.
2002 55 380 (Jan) to 710 (Jun), 1400 (Jul) to 1740 (Oct) to 1400 (Dec) In 2002 the parallel black market for foreign exchange mushroomed.
2003 55 (Jan); 824 (Feb) 1400 (Jan); 1450 (Feb); 2300 (May); 3000 (Jul); 6000 (Aug); 6400 (Oct); 6000 (Nov) In February 2003, the Official Exchange Rate was re-pegged at ZWD 824 per US $
2004 824 (1 January); 4196 (12 January) to 5730 (Dec) 5500 (1 January) to 6000 (Dec) In January 2004, semiweekly (RBZ-controlled) currency auctions were set up to determine the official rate.
2005 5,730 (January); 6,200 (March); 9,000 (May); 10,800 (18 July); 17,600 (25 July); 24,500 (25 August); 26,003 (September); 26,003 (October); 60,000 (Nov); 84,588 (30 December)6,400 (January); 14,000 (March); 20,000 (May); 25,000 (18 July); 45,000 (25 July); 45,000 (25 August); 75,000 (September); 80,000 to 100,000 (October); 90,000 (Nov); 96,000 (30 December) 24 August: Zimbabwean dollar becomes least valued currency unit
In November 2005, the regular currency auctions were discontinued and the RBZ announced that "market factors" would control the exchange rate.
2006 (to 31 July) 85,158 (3 January); 99,201.58 (24 January); 101,195.54 (28 April)[114] 100,000 (6 January); 106,050 (19 January); 115,000 (20 January); 125,000 to 150,000 (25 January); 175,000 to 190,000 (24 February); 205,000 to 220,000 (3 March); 220,000 to 230,000 (13 April); 300,000 to 310,000 (25 May); 315,000 (9 June); 340,000 to 350,000 (16 June); 400,000 (21 June); 450,000 (1 July); 520,000 (9 July);[115] 550,000 (27 July)[116] Economists predict an unofficial rate of nearly ZWD 250,000 to the US dollar by mid-2006.
24 January – RBZ caps daily variance of official exchange rate based on volume traded. The ZWD is able to fluctuate (from its average rate) in a daily band of: 0% (under USD 5 million); 1% (USD 5 to 10 million); 1.5% (USD 10 to 15 million); or 2% (exceeds USD 15 million). This effectively froze the official exchange rate.

Devaluation of the second dollar

The second dollar started off on 1 August 2006 with an official rate of 250 and a parallel rate of 550 to the US$. In July 2008 the dollar was revalued again, this time 10,000,000,000 2nd dollars became 1 3rd dollar, after the parallel rate reached 500 billion to 1 US$.

More detailed data can be found in the table below :

Exchange rates of the second dollar (ZWN)
Date Official Rate
(Revalued dollar)
Parallel Rate
(Revalued dollar)
Notes
2006 August 250 (250,000 old) 550 (1 August); 650 (3 August); 650 to 700 (24 August) 1 August: RBZ revalues the Zim dollar. 1,000 Old Zim dollars become 1 revalued Zim dollar. The official exchange rate is set to 250 revalued Zim dollars per 1 US dollar. (Parallel rate soars to over 600 revalued dollars per 1 US dollar)
September

700 to 800 (8 September – high volume transactions);[117] 850 (14 September);[118] 1,200 to 1,300 (28 Sep) or 1,500 (29 September – high volume transactions)[119]

October

1,500 (12 October);[120]

November

1,700 (6 November);[121] 2,000 (19 November);[122] 2,400 (29 November);[123]

December

3,000 (25 December)[124]

2007 January 250

3,200 (11th[125]); 3,500 (18th[126]); 4,000 (20th[127]); 4,200 (23rd[128]); 6,000 (26th[129])

February

4,800 (2nd[130]); 5,000 (12th[131]); 6,600 (23rd[132]); 7,000 (27th[133])

March

7,500 (1st[134]) 8,000 (2nd[135]); 10,000 (8th[136]); 11,000 (11th[137]); 12,000 – 17,500 (16th[138]); 16,000 (19th[139]); 20,000 (21st[140]); 24,000 (22nd[141]); 25,000 (27th[142]); 26,000 (29th[143])

Zimbabwean dollar becomes least valued currency unit around 21 March; In March, the parallel rate becomes extremely erratic, with reported rates varying significantly.
April 250
(15,000 special rate)

30,000 (1st[144]); 15,000 (7th[145]); 20,000 (8th[146]); 25,000 (11th[147]); 35,000 (15th[148])

A "special rate" of 15,000 ZWD per USD was brought in on 26 April 2007. The improved exchange rate will be applied to miners, farmers, tour operators, non-governmental organisations, embassies, Zimbabweans living abroad that repatriate earnings, and others who generate foreign exchange. Exporters will be required to exchange money at the central bank to receive the better rate.[149]
May

28,000 (10th[150]); 32,000 (18th[151]); 38,000 (20th[152]); 40,000 (22nd[153]); 45,000 (24th[154]); 50,000 (29th[155])

June

55,000 (3rd[156]); 60,000 (12th[157]); 75–100,000 (13th[158]); 120,000 (16th[16]); 205,000 (20th[159]); 300,000 (22nd[160]); 400,000 (23rd[161])

July

270,000 (5th[162]); 300,000 (14th[163])

August

200,000 (21st[164])

September 30,000

250,000 (7th[165]); 280,000 (14th[166]); 340,000 (18th[167]); 500,000 (26th[168]); 600,000 (29th[169])

Official exchange rate was changed to 30,000 on 7 September 2007[165]
October

750,000 (17th[170]); 1,000,000 (19th[171])

November

1,200,000 (1st[172]); 4,500,000 (14th[173]) (not confirmed); 1,400,000 (24th[174]); 1,500,000 (30th[175])

December

1,800,000 (1st[176]); 4,000,000 (3rd[177])

Due to the Dec 2007, banknote shortage, funds transferred via Electronic Funds Transfer Systems (EFTS) bore a premium rate of about $4 million, while the cash transaction rate varied around $2 million.
2008 January

1,900,000 (3rd[178]); 2,000,000 (4th[179]); 3,000,000 (8th[180]); 4,500,000 (19th[181]); 5,000,000 (21st[181]); 6,000,000 (24th[182])

The Old Mutual Implied Rate (OMIR) is calculated by dividing the Zimbabwe Stock Exchange price of the Old Mutual share by the London Stock Exchange Price for the same share. The answer is the Old Mutual Implied Rate for the Pound. Then a cross rate calculation is done for the USD rate.
6,240,837.51 (OMIR for 21st) 5,787,585.19 (OMIR for 25th) [183]

February

7,500,000 (13th[184]); 8,500,000 (18th[185]); 16,000,000 and 20,000,000 for large amounts (21st[185])

March

24,000,000 (2nd[186]); 25,000,000 (5th[187]); 46,000,000 (10th[188]); 70,000,000 (19th[189])

69,226,148.58 (OMIR for 17th)[190]

April

80,000,000 (17th[191]); 85,000,000 (24th[192]); 100,000,000 (26th[193])

May

30,000 (to 4 May);
168,815,333.33 (5 May); 187,073,022.88 (6 May); 190,429,449.18 (7 May); 204,565,727.39 (8 May); 210,389,632.00 (9 May); 216,528,794.21 (12 May); 224,832,332.83 (13 May); 236,706,849.48 (14 May); 246,433,371.43 (15 May); 255,771,415.67 (16 May); 275,335,294.12 (19 May); 303,753,731.48 (20 May); 337,341,911.76 (21 May); 369,632,426.29 (22 May); 405,870,411.18 (23 May); 434,449,294.12 (27 May); 486,485,294.12 (28 May); 529,336,764.71 (29 May); 580,678,132.35 (30 May) [194]

190,000,000 (1st[195]); 200,000,000 (6th[196]); 250,000,000 (13th[197]); 315,000,000 (16th[198]); 498,000,000 (22nd); 494,000,000 (23rd); 580,000,000 (28th); 703,000,000 (29th); 777,500,000 (30th) [199]

The official exchange rate was allowed to float 6 May
June

647,863,191.18 (2nd); 718,489,852.94 (3rd); 843,884,558.82 (4th); 969,647,058.82 (5th); 1,105,887,222.22 (6th); 1,365,130,333.33 (9th); 1,679,946,944.44 (10th); 2,150,078,888.89 (11th); 2,904,111,111.11 (12th); 3,524,549,987.29 (13th); 4,276,736,111.11 (16th); 4,952,500,000.00 (17th); 5,817,192,485.76 (18th); 6,718,055,555.56 (19th); 7,437,184,423.78 (20th); 8,260,031,632.83 (23rd); 9,005,149,886.88 (24th); 9,801,839,921.51 (25th); 10,594,701,303.45 (26th); 11,378,472,550.24 (30th) [194]

971,500,000 (1st); 1,123,000,000 (3rd); 1,221,500,000 (4th); 1,964,500,000 (5th); 2,159,000,000 (6th); 2,691,588,425 (7th); 3,139,382,641 (9th); 4,605,736,200 (10th); 5,090,337,736 (11th); 5,137,128,498 (12th); 6,412,613,315 (13th); 7,512,863,828 (16th); 9,288,500,000 (17th); 13,999,000,000 (18th); 17,743,015,150 (19th); 20,269,600,000 (21st); 22,952,543,340 (23rd); 22,835,153,651 (24th); 32,603,770,511 (26th); 40,928,000,000 (30th)[199]

967,480,942 (OMIR for 2nd); 1,746,899,809 (OMIR for 3rd); 3,047,030,834 (OMIR for 4th); [200]

16,044,776,323 (OMIR for 19th); 17,039,490,724 (OMIR for 20th); 34,910,587,875 (OMIR for 23rd); 78,479,941,887 (OMIR for 24th); 62,024,868,786 (OMIR for 25th); 64,575,990,281 (OMIR for 26th); 164,312,344,622 (OMIR for 30th)[201]

July

12,226,034,516.65 (1st);
13,350,764,705.88 (2nd);
14,345,060,331.82 (3rd);
15,183,703,996.98 (4th);
16,204,996,229.26 (7th);
17,066,529,677.98 (8th);
17,883,023,378.58 (9th);
18,681,527,512.36 (10th);
19,489,294,117.65 (11th);
20,170,317,159.13 (14th);
21,460,313,914.03 (15th);
23,356,231,572.65 (16th);
25,389,017,580.37 (17th);
27,164,677,690.87 (18th);
30,201,803,133.32 (21st);
34,749,797,812.59 (22nd);
39,129,724,504.88 (23rd);
43,319,583,395.92 (24th);
48,679,445,871.90 (25th);
54,036,639,077.74 (28th);
58,886,562,526.04 (29th);
63,761,761,010.94 (30th);
69,484,070,056.18 (31st);
(Source[194])

53,049,500,000 (1st);[199]
65,797,000,000 (7th);[199]
102,351,000,000 (8th);[199]
145,624,500,000 (11th);[199]
151,425,393,163 (11th);[202]
193,014,500,000 (14th);[199]
200,414,514,369 (14th);[202]
274,200,889,709 (15th);[199]
288,072,000,000 (16th);[199]
325,110,110,211 (16th);[202]
324,446,338,775 (17th); [199]
360,000,000,000 (17th); [202]
380,000,000,000 (18th); [199]
430,000,000,000 (18th); [202]
600,000,000,000 (21st); ,[199][202]
650,000,000,000 (22nd)[202]
750,000,000,000 (23rd); [199]
555,000,000,000 (25th): [203] 758,530,000,000 (30th); [199] 510,000,000,000 (31st): [203]

142,024,433,315 (OMIR for 1st);
129,140,850,245 (OMIR for 2nd);
109,689,985,935 (OMIR for 3rd);
113,028,111,843 (OMIR for 4th);
202,409,619,045 (OMIR for 7th);
173,176,356,278 (OMIR for 8th);
126,117,317,180 (OMIR for 9th);
139,534,966,792 (OMIR for 10th);
189,961,549,747 (OMIR for 11th);
194,840,848,150 (OMIR for 14th);
236,850,692,832 (OMIR for 15th);
241,421,049,361 (OMIR for 16th);
270,477,236,528 (OMIR for 17th);
404,332,849,598 (OMIR for 18th);
502,683,475,196 (OMIR for 21st);
687,860,375,011 (OMIR for 22nd);
495,932,559,520 (OMIR for 23rd);
488,452,876,313 (OMIR for 24th);
619,334,351,928 (OMIR for 25th);
525,086,664,547 (OMIR for 28th);
456,921,446,064 (OMIR for 30th);
669,809,343,407 (OMIR for 31st);
(Source[204])

Restoration of market data feeds

In the final months before Zimbabwe's central bank reforms of 30 April 2008, virtually all popular currency conversion resources relied upon the official rate of 30,000 ZWD to 1 USD for published figures, in spite of the vast differences between that and free market rates. By 23 May 2008, Bloomberg[205] and Oanda[206] began publishing floating rates based on Zimbabwe's formally regulated domestic bank market, while Yahoo Finance started using the updated official rate in July, albeit with a decimal point shift of 6 places. Those reported rates generally reflected the Official Rate as shown in the above table. They soon began to differ, in overvaluation of the Zimbabwean dollar, increasingly substantially in comparison to less regulated markets such as offshore markets or paper cash freely traded on the streets of Harare, reflected above as Parallel Rates.

Devaluation of the third dollar

On 1 August 2008, ten zeroes were removed from the currency, reducing 10 billion Zimbabwean dollars to one dollar.[207] On 3 October 2008, the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe suspended temporarily the Real Time Gross Settlement (RTGS) system, halting electronic parallel market transfers,[208] but it was reinstated on 13 November 2008.[209]

After being introduced on 1 August 2008, the third dollar continued to devalue.

An overview of the exchange rate data can be found in the table below :

Exchange rates of the third dollar (ZWR)
Date Official Rate
(Source:[194] )
Parallel Rate
(Sources: †[199] /
[202])
Old Mutual Implied Rate
(OMIR Source:[204])
Notes
2008 August

7.58 (1st)
8.11 (4th)
8.94 (5th)
9.92 (6th)
10.93 (7th)
11.90 (8th)
13.19 (13th)
14.52 (14th)
15.80 (15th)
17.49 (18th)
18.84 (19th)
20.08 (20th)
21.55 (21st)
23.29 (22nd)
25.34 (25th)
27.66 (26th)
29.91 (27th)
32.05 (28th)
34.83 (29th)

40.53 †; 51 ‡ (1st);
61 ‡ (2nd)
40.96 †; 66 ‡ (5th)
74 ‡ (8th)
41.79 † (11th)
110 ‡ (13th)
190 ‡; 64.12 † (14th)
230 ‡ (15th)
223.51 †; 375 ‡ (18th)
420 ‡ (19th)
430 ‡ (21st)
460 †; 440 ‡ (26th)
650 ‡; 700 † (27th)
1,400 †; 1,700 ‡ (29th)

49.23 (1st)
38.35 (4th)
34.05 (5th)
39.41 (6th)
64.19 (7th)
48.13 (8th)
74.86 (13th)
138.46 (14th)
121.43 (15th)
168.84 (18th)
161.24 (19th)
185.33 (20th)
297.21 (21st)
393.30 (22nd)
992.02 (25th)
749.47 (26th)
868.71 (27th)
1,330.10 (28th)
1,780.04 (29th)

1 August: The Reserve Bank revalued the dollar again: 10 billion ZWN (or 10 trillion ZWD) becomes 1 ZWR.

See also:
[ "Zimbabwe's re-valued currency after one month"] includes a daily list of the ZWD parallel exchange rates in August 2008.

September

37.15 (1st)
39.59 (2nd)
42.72 (3rd)
45.53 (4th)
48.79 (5th)
52.71 (8th)
58.10 (9th)
62.47 (10th)
67.52 (11th)
71.40 (12th)
77.69 (15th)
83.57 (16th)
88.70 (17th)
92.97 (18th)
96.43 (19th)
101.57 (22nd)
105.43 (23rd)
109.48 (24th)
114.61 (25th)
118.76 (26th)
125.75 (29th)
132.25 (30th)

2,000 †; 2,498 ‡ (1st);
2,800 †; 3,650 ‡ (2nd)
4,300 † (3rd)
4,500 † (4th)
4,800 † 5,700 ‡; 7,500[210] (5th)
8,500 ‡ (8th)
14,000 † (9th)
20,000 †; 29,000 ‡ (11th)
30,000 (12th)[210]
34,000 † (15th)
22,000 †; 34,000 ‡ (16th)
33,000 † (18th)
65,059 †; 59,652 ‡ (22nd)
80,754 ‡ (23rd)
140,251 †; 135,368 ‡ (24th)
271,915 ‡ (25th)
271,593 † (26th)
554,915 †; 360,707 ‡ (29th)
Cash: 1,000 (25th)[211]

3,362 (1st)
3,949 (2nd)
4,311 (3rd)
5,085 (4th)
11,815 (5th)
13,583 (8th)
11,608 (9th)
14,936 (10th)
25,384 (11th)
19,788 (12th)
18,888 (15th)
11,633 (16th)
22,837 (17th)
34,606 (18th)
37,997 (19th)
79,816 (22nd)
131,237 (23rd)
270,794 (24th)
247,618 (25th)
266,075 (26th)
557,362 (29th)
592,416 (30th)

October

138.14 (1st)
145.62 (2nd)
153.10 (3rd)
160.46 (6th)
167.68 (7th)
176.33 (8th)
183.19 (9th)
198.93 (13th)
208.65 (14th)
217.72 (15th)
229.90 (16th)
244.05 (17th)
266.40 (20th)
290.92 (21st)
316.56 (22nd)
345.18 (23rd)
507.24 (28th)
558.53 (29th)
619.52 (30th)

790,510 ‡; 1,000,000[212] (1st)
4,000 (cash) (3rd)[213]
11,000 (cash) (11th)[214]
50,000,000 (16th)[215]
100,000,000 (20th)[216]
20,000 (cash) (20th)[217]
Cash: 50,000 (24th)[218]
11,939,980,000 ‡;
25,137 (cash) ‡ (25th)
69,127 (cash) ‡ (27th)
90,000 (cash) (29th)[219]

1,418,021 (1st)
841,881 (2nd)
660,732 (3rd)
1,715,118 (6th)
2,305,440 (7th)
2,045,021 (8th)
3,161,381 (9th)
4,183,564 (10th)
7,667,426 (13th)
10,706,802 (14th)
20,129,927 (15th)
66,418,944 (16th)
121,013,052 (17th)
333,500,825 (20th)
1,220,071,643 (21st)
3,178,696,865 (22nd)
26,867,910,902 (23rd)
98,339,944,470 (24th)
101,338,478,626 (27th am)
70,547,871,952 (27th pm)
233,621,089,202 (28th am)
250,783,986,568 (28th pm)
509,148,077,013 (29th am)
916,918,295,246 (29th pm)
2,443,676,912,678 (30th am)
3,949,870,500,674 (30th pm)
6,674,757,281,553 (31st am)
11,851,630,480,952 (31st pm)

Electronic bank transfers (RTGS) were suspended by the Reserve Bank on the 3rd.
No funds can be transferred between banks, effectively aborting the parallel rates.

November

769.68 (3rd)
851.74 (4th)
922.96 (5th)
1,024.63 (6th)
2,850.37 (7th)
4,651.33 (10th)
6,626.39 (11th)
8,399.31 (12th)
10,788.70 (13th)
13,469.56 (14th)
17,398.16 (17th)
25,593.66 (18th)
30,320.43 (19th)
34,912.83 (20th)
38,128.72 (21st)
44,182.50 (24th)
49,237.71 (25th)
56,197.60 (26th)
62,761.43 (27th)
70,197.01 (28th)

100,000 (cash) (5th)[220]
30,000,000,000,000 ‡; 200,000 (cash) ‡ (7th)
28,400,000,000,000,000 ‡ (12th)
400,000 (cash) (12th)[221]
650,000 (cash) ‡ (14th)
1,200,000 (cash) ‡ (24th)

12,405,270,255,015 (3rd am)
35,179,473,949,600 (3rd pm)
118,066,516,958,323 (4th am)
216,162,327,532,185 (4th pm)
267,539,344,335,978 (5th am)
225,497,447,368,896 (5th pm)
193,012,615,772,476 (6th am)
134,838,399,549,100 (6th pm)
182,325,758,081,729 (7th am)
663,325,716,143,026 (7th pm)
1,680,757,577,947,650 (10th am)
22,410,101,039,302,100 (10th pm)
44,754,638,846,288,100 (11th am)
27,157,406,063,618,700 (11th pm)
18,237,844,841,170,300 (12th am)
12,981,054,269,303,500 (12th pm)
19,148,534,621,367,600 (13th am)
41,974,524,821,395,400 (13th pm)
62,136,238,923,283,400 (14th am)
183,025,618,461,867,000 (14th pm)
251,649,721,203,565,000 (17th am)
642,371,437,695,221,000 (17th pm)
661,229,327,046,568,000 (18th am)
447,591,739,042,251,000 (18th pm)
439,481,070,796,885,000 (19th)
12,617,983,349,233,500 (20th)

The Reserve Bank lifted the suspension on the Real Time Gross Settlement System (RTGS) on 13 November[222]

As of 26 November newspaper reports stated the RTGS was still not operational, and part of the reason was that the Zimbabwean Government had not paid the company responsible for fitting the system.[223]
The Zimbabwe Stock Market, and consequently the OMIR, crashed on 20 November when allegations of market manipulation became public. ZSE chief executive Emmanuel Munyukwi revealed that a large number of multi-quad-, quin-, and sextillion cheques had bounced.[224]
Old Mutual has not traded since 20 November, so no meaningful OMIR figures are available. It is estimated that the OMIR on 25 November would have been 649,374,262,960,211.[204]

December

76,620.00 (1st)
83,613.46 (2nd)
89,826.13 (3rd)
100,330.21 (4th)
111,126.89 (5th)
128,734.67 (8th)
140,085.70 (9th)
154,661.25 (10th)
226,954.13 (11th)
404,294.50 (12th)
925,825.00 (17th)
1,151,656.00 (18th)
1,423,462.00 (19th)
1,748,530.00 (23rd)
2,133,117.00 (24th)
2,772,250.00 (29th)
3,641,246.00 (30th)
4,894,167.00 (31st)

2,000,000 (cash)‡ (2nd)
5,300,000 (cash)‡ (4th)
10,000,000 (cash) (5th)[225]
25,000,000 (cash) (9th)[226]
30,000,000 (cash)‡ (10th); 60,000,000 (cash) (12th) [227]
150,000,000 (cash)‡ (16th)
200,000,000 (cash)‡ (17th)
600,000,000 (cash)‡ (19th)
9,000,000,000 (cash) (22nd)[228]
2,000,000,000 (cash)‡ (24th)

2009 January

5,601,509 (2nd)
6,386,667 (5th)
8,042,778 (7th)
8,676,674 (8th)
9,326,444 (9th)
10,148,113 (12th)
11,171,474 (13th)
13,856,763 (14th)
15,273,676 (15th)
16,744,890 (16th)
18,683,139 (19th)
20,215,883 (20th)
25,599,608 (21st)
30,577,532 (22nd)
36,844,444 (23rd)
44,796,944 (26th)
415,888,889 (27th)
1,407,917,306 (28th)
3,429,836,806 (29th)
7,039,188,034 (30th)

40,000,000,000 (12th)[229]
3,000,000,000,000 (15th)[230]
1,000,000,000,000 ‡(16th)
5,000,000,000,000 ‡(21st)
10,000,000,000,000 (22nd)[231]
13,000,000,000,000 (23rd)[232]
30,000,000,000,000 (27th)[233]
40,000,000,000,000 (28th)[234]
100,000,000,000,000 (29th)[235]

35,000,000,000,000,000 (1st) – UN Rate[236]
150,000,000,000,000,000 (29th) – UN Rate

February

12,336,416,667 (2nd)

250,000,000,000,000 (1st)[237]
300,000,000,000,000 (2nd)[26]

Devaluation of the fourth dollar

On 2 February 2009 the RBZ removed 12 zeros from the currency, with 1,000,000,000,000 (third) Zimbabwe dollars being exchanged for 1 new (fourth) dollar.[26] Although the dollar was abandoned on 12 April 2009, exchange rates were maintained at intervals for some months. So, the fourth dollar would be worth 200,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000, or 2×1035 first dollars if never revalued.

On 4 June 2015 it was announced that the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe would exchange some of the old banknotes for US dollars.[238]

Exchange rates of the fourth dollar (ZWL)
Date Official rate[239] Parallel rate
United Nations rate
(Source:[236] )
Notes
2009 February

22.00 (3rd); 24.51 (4th)
28.54 (5th); 32.19 (6th)
35.34 (9th); 38.80 (10th)
42.32 (11th); 46.07 (12th)
49.87 (13th); 53.00 (16th)
58.04 (17th); 62.70 (18th)
66.49 (19th); 71.21 (20th)
76.22 (23rd); 81.58 (24th)
86.15 (25th); 91.39 (26th)
95.42 (27th)

300 (2nd)[26]

150,000 (3rd)

March

99.67 (2nd); 103.29 (3rd)
108.01 (4th); 113.12 (5th)
117.26 (6th); 121.85 (9th)
126.11 (10th); 131.00 (11th)
134.92 (12th); 138.58 (13th)
143.42 (16th); 150.52 (17th)
156.69 (18th); 163.34 (19th)
170.39 (20th); 177.25 (23rd)
186.61 (24th); 193.52 (25th)
199.76 (26th); 206.74 (27th)
209.62 (30th); 213.07 (31st)

April

221.29 (1st); 225.83 (2nd)
230.68 (3rd); 238.94 (6th)
244.81 (7th); 245.21 (8th)
249.40 (9th); 255.19 (14th)
259.10 (15th); 263.94 (16th)
266.64 (17th); 271.04 (20th)
294.18 (24th); 306.68 (29th)
309.31 (30th)

12 April: Zimbabwe Dollar suspended.
May

315.23 (4th); 319.13 (5th)
328.36 (6th); 320.02 (7th)
326.26 (8th); 329.65 (11th)
332.26 (12th); 336.46 (13th)
345.12 (14th); 350.30 (15th)
354.58 (19th); 357.48 (20th)
360.64 (21st); 363.14 (22nd)

June

363.48 (16th)

July

371.39 (16th)

August

361.62 (28th)

See also

Notes

  1. After the Zimbabwean dollar was suspended indefinitely from 12 April 2009, Euro, United States dollar, Pound sterling, South African rand, Botswana pula, Australian dollar, Chinese yuan, and Japanese yen are used as legal tender. The United States dollar has been adopted as the official currency for all government transactions.

References

  1. "Current currency & funds code list (Table A.1)". Swiss Association for Standardization. 1 January 2015. Retrieved 15 January 2015.
  2. Hanke, Steve H. (17 November 2008). "New Hyperinflation Index (HHIZ) Puts Zimbabwe Inflation at 89.7 sextillion percent". The Cato Institute. Retrieved 17 November 2008.
  3. "Zimbabwe rolls out Z$100tr note". BBC News Online. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  4. 1 2 McGee, Patrick (12 June 2015). "Zimbabwe ditches its all but worthless currency". Financial Times.
  5. Mandizha, Tarisai (9 February 2016). "Demonetisation: DPC settles closed banks Zim dollar accounts". NewsDay. Retrieved 8 March 2016.
  6. Hungwe, Brian (6 February 2014). "Zimbabwe's multi-currency confusion". BBC News Online. Retrieved 5 September 2016.
  7. "Zimbabwe to make Chinese yuan legal currency after Beijing cancels debts". The Guardian. Agence France-Presse. 22 December 2015.
  8. Lopes, Carlos (February 1996). Balancing rocks: environment and development in Zimbabwe. Nordic Africa Institute. ISBN 978-9-17106-3-946. Retrieved 11 February 2011.
  9. Gumbo, Joseph (27 July 2006). "Bills Put Zimbabwe Under "Martial Law"". Institute for War and Peace Reporting via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  10. "Currency reform Zimbabwe" (PDF). Telekurs Financial. 9 August 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 22 October 2007.
  11. Ndlela, Dumisani (15 September 2006). "78% old currency returned: RBZ". Zimbabwe Independent via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  12. "Harare expected to unveil new currency next month". Zimbabwe Online. 14 December 2006 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  13. Rusere, Patience (14 December 2006). "Some Expect New Currency From Zimbabwe Central Bank in 2007". Voice of America.
  14. Wines, Michael (7 February 2007). "As Inflation Soars, Zimbabwe Economy Plunges". The New York Times.
  15. "Zimbabwe jail over bread prices". BBC News. 1 December 2006.
  16. 1 2 Cross, Eddie (15 June 2007). "Ground Zero". The Zimbabwe Situation.
  17. Wilson, David (7 September 2007). "S&P's Sub-$10 Club, Lexmark's Buy, Zimbabwe's Dollar: Timshel". Bloomberg. Archived from the original on 25 October 2012. Retrieved 16 September 2008.
  18. Raath, Jan (7 September 2007). "Devaluation is 'too little, too late' to save Zimbabwe". Times Online.
  19. Hanke, Steve H.; Kwok, Alex K. F. (Spring–Summer 2009). "On the Measurement of Zimbabwe's Hyperinflation" (PDF). The Cato Journal.
  20. 1 2 Shaw, Angus (30 July 2008). "Zimbabwe devalues currency; 10B becomes 1 dollar". USA Today. Associated Press.
  21. Mafaro, Wayne (30 July 2008). "Mugabe says might declare state of emergency over prices". Zimbabwe Online. Archived from the original on 8 September 2008. Retrieved 30 July 2008.
  22. Berger, Sebastien; Thornycroft, Peta (30 July 2008). "Zimbabwe to cut ten zeros from banknotes in fight against inflation". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 30 July 2008.
  23. Berger, Sebastien (10 September 2008). "Final humiliation for Zimbabwe dollar as foreign currency legalised". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 13 September 2008.
  24. Thornycroft, Peta; Berger, Sebastien (26 October 2008). "Zimbabwe shops stop accepting local currency". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 27 October 2008.
  25. Brulliard, Karin (4 December 2008). "Zimbabweans Turn to U.S. Dollar as Hyperinflation Erodes Value of Local Currency". The Washington Post.
  26. 1 2 3 4 "Zimbabwe removes 12 zeros from currency". CNN. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  27. 1 2 "Zimbabwe dollar sheds 12 zeros". BBC News. 2 February 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  28. "Zimbabwe removes 13 zeroes from currency". CNN. Harare, Zimbabwe. 2 February 2009. Retrieved 2 February 2009.
  29. "WM Company". WM Company. 28 September 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  30. "Banks redeem treasury bills woo depositors". The Zimbabwe Independent. 17 December 2009. Archived from the original on 18 March 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  31. "Revised budget dashes infrastructure repair hopes". The Zimbabwe Independent. 17 December 2009. Archived from the original on 11 September 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  32. "Zimbabwe abandons its currency". BBC News. 7 January 2009. Retrieved 24 August 2010.
  33. "Zimbabwe Suspends Use of Own Currency". Voice of America. 12 April 2009. Archived from the original on 7 May 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  34. Chinaka, Cris. "Zimbabwe dollar shelved 'for at least a year'". New Zimbabwe. Archived from the original on 7 June 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  35. "Inflation hits a record high in Zimbabwe". Mail & Guardian Online. 10 March 2006. Retrieved 27 August 2008. Inflation in Zimbabwe reached its previous peak in January 2004, hitting 624%.
  36. "Zimbabwean inflation hits 1,281%". BBC News. 10 January 2007. Retrieved 27 August 2008.
  37. Shaw, Angus (17 May 2007). "Inflation in Zimbabwe surges to record 3,714%, the highest in the world". Associated Press. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  38. Zulu, Blessing (12 June 2007). "Zimbabwe Inflation Data Delayed Again; Estimate Points To 4,530%". Voice of America. Archived from the original on 15 June 2007 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  39. Meldrum, Andrew (22 June 2007). "US predicts regime change in Zimbabwe as hyperinflation destroys the economy". The Guardian.
  40. Chizhanje, Hendricks (14 July 2007). "Harare suspends release of inflation data". Zimbabwe Online via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  41. Nyakazeya, Paul (27 July 2007). "June inflation 13 000%: CCZ". The Zimbabwe Independent via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  42. Banya, Nelson; Dzirutwe, MacDonald (18 September 2007). "Zimbabwe inflation slows amid warning of collapse". Reuters via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  43. McGreal, Chris (16 July 2007). "Mugabe's price cuts bring cheap TVs today, new crisis tomorrow". The Guardian.
  44. "Zimbabwe inflation surges to 7,892%". Yahoo! News. 17 October 2007. Archived from the original on 20 October 2007 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  45. Nyakazeya, Paul (16 October 2007). "$1m note on the way as cash crisis worsens". Zimbabwe Independent via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  46. "Zimbabwe inflation 'incalculable'". BBC News. 27 November 2007.
  47. "Zimbabwe inflation spirals again". BBC News. 14 February 2008.
  48. "Zimbabwe annual inflation over 100,000 per cent". The Sydney Morning Herald. 21 February 2008. Archived from the original on 12 May 2008 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  49. Makoshori, Shame (4 April 2008). "Inflation surges to 165 000%". The Financial Gazette. Archived from the original on 7 April 2008 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  50. "Hits 355 000%". Zimbabwe Independent. 15 May 2008 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  51. Sibanda, Tichaona (21 May 2008). "Inflation hits one million percent as prices continue to skyrocket". SW Radio Africa. Archived from the original on 26 May 2008 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  52. "Inflation gallops ahead: 9000 000%". Zimbabwe Independent. 26 June 2008. Archived from the original on 30 June 2008 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  53. Kadzere, Martin (9 October 2008). "Inflation soars to 231 million percent". The Herald. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  54. 1 2 "Zimbabwe abandons its currency". BBC News. 29 January 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  55. Brulliard, Karin (21 February 2009). "As Zimbabwean Dollar Dies, So Does a Lucrative Career". Washington Post. pp. A08. Retrieved 21 February 2009.
  56. Meldurm, Andrew (21 February 2006). "Africa needs more courage, says Mugabe". The Guardian.
  57. "Zimbabwe Inflation Over 900 Percent". ParaPundit. 4 May 2006.
  58. "Zimbabwe: Gono ordered to print Z$1 Trillion for Civil servants and Army". Zimbabwe Daily News. 28 June 2007. Archived from the original on 6 July 2007 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  59. "Mugabe says will print more money if there isn't enough". International Herald Tribune. Associated Press. 28 July 2007. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  60. "RBZ provides $3 trillion for vote buying". The Zimbabwean. 30 August 2007. Archived from the original on 5 September 2007 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  61. Dixon, Robyn (3 September 2007). "He can get it for you fast". The Los Angeles Times.
  62. "Of cash and dealers". IRIN. 24 November 2007 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  63. "Cash crisis: No end in sight". The Financial Gazette. 4 January 2008 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  64. Ndlela, Dumisani (4 January 2008). "ZANU-PF split looms". The Financial Gazette. Archived from the original on 8 January 2008 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  65. "Zimbabwe central bank blames banks for banknote shortage". Reuters. 22 January 2008. Archived from the original on 27 January 2008 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  66. Lamb, Christina (2 March 2008). "Planeloads of cash prop up Mugabe". The Sunday Times. Archived from the original on 2 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  67. "Giesecke & Devrient halts deliveries to the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe". Giesecke & Devrient GmbH, Prinzregentenstr. 1 July 2008.
  68. McGreal, Chris (18 July 2008). "What comes after a trillion?". The Guardian.
  69. 1 2 Howden, Daniel; Armitage, Tom (24 July 2008). "Firm with licence to print Mugabe's money". The Independent.
  70. 1 2 "Austrian company helps Zimbabwe bank produce near-worthless money". Deutsche Presse-Agentur. 24 July 2008. Archived from the original on 27 July 2008.
  71. 1 2 Banya, Nelson (24 July 2008). "Zimbabwe central bank promises currency reforms". Reuters. Archived from the original on 13 October 2008.
  72. "$100 billion for three eggs". The Herald Sun. 25 July 2008.
  73. Woods, Susanna (24 July 2008). "1.2 trillion Zimbabwe dollars for £1". Institute of Commercial Management. Archived from the original on 26 January 2009.
  74. "When a lot of money is bad". The Financial Gazette. 6 February 2009. Retrieved 9 July 2016.
  75. "Zimbabwe dollar sheds 12 zeros". BBC News. 2 February 2009. Retrieved 2 February 2009.
  76. "Zimbabwe dollar 'not back soon'". BBC News. 12 April 2009. Retrieved 2 October 2009.
  77. Mpofu, Bernard. "Zimbabwe to use Chinese currency". NewsDay. Retrieved 30 January 2014.
  78. "Press Statement: Demonetisation of the Zimbabwe Dollar" (PDF). Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 July 2015. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  79. Reuters. "That'll be 175 quadrillion Zimbabwean dollars, please". The Daily Telegraph. Telegraph Media Group Limited. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  80. Marawanyika, Godfrey; Wallace, Paul. "175 Quadrillion Zimbabwean Dollars Are Now Worth $5". Bloomberg Business. Bloomberg L.P. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  81. "Banks pay out $7m in Zim dollar compensation". The Herald. 11 December 2015. Retrieved 9 July 2016 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  82. "Zimbabwe note launch stokes currency fears". BBC News. 2016-11-28. Retrieved 2016-11-28.
  83. Lawa, N. (3 June 2005). "Coins to replace notes". The Zimbabwean. Archived from the original on 10 June 2005.
  84. Rivera Alonso, David (20 August 2008). "World Coin News: Zimbabwe 2003/08 – 10 & 25 dollars". World Coin News. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  85. Dzirutwe, MacDonald (20 December 2007). "Zimbabwe introduces higher denomination banknotes". Reuters. Archived from the original on 23 December 2007 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  86. Mugari, Shakeman (2 February 2007). "New notes out". Zimbabwe Independent via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  87. Sibanda, Tichaona (1 October 2007). "Reserve Bank to Launch New Currency". SW Radio Africa. Archived from the original on 15 October 2007 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  88. Chimhashu, Torby (18 November 2006). "New Zimbabwe currency imminent". New Zimbabwe. Archived from the original on 18 January 2008.
  89. Makoshori, Shame (30 November 2007). "Sunrise 2: Rollout begins". The Financial Gazette. Archived from the original on 8 January 2008 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  90. Gono, G. (21 November 2007). "The Imminent Launch of Sunrise 2". Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 March 2010.
  91. Sibanda, Tichaona (18 December 2007). "Confusion as RBZ orders banks to briefly stop operations". SW Radio Africa Zimbabwe News via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  92. "Zim to introduce $10m note". Fin24.com. 16 January 2008.
  93. "Photo of a fifty-million-dollar note (JPG)". Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. 4 April 2008.
  94. "RBZ introduces new notes". Zimbabwe Independent. 4 April 2008 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  95. Mafaro, Wayne (4 April 2008). "Harare introduces Z$50 million note". Zimbabwe Online via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  96. "Zimbabwe releases $250m bank note". The Australian. 6 May 2008.
  97. 1 2 "Lack of bank note paper threatens Zimbabwe economy". The Los Angeles Times. 14 July 2008. Retrieved 22 July 2008.
  98. "Zimbabwe introduces Z$100bn note". BBC News. 19 July 2008.
  99. Agence France-Presse (19 July 2008). "Zimbabwe introduces 100-billion-dollar note". Zim2Day.
  100. "Zimbabwe introduces new currency". BBC News. 30 July 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  101. "Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe's Monetary Policy statement" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 August 2008.
  102. "Zimbabwe unveils $20,000 banknote". AFP. 29 September 2008. Archived from the original on 8 October 2008.
  103. "Zimbabwe issues $1 million bills as inflation soars". CNN. 3 November 2008.
  104. "RBZ rolls out new banknotes, raises withdrawal limits". New Zimbabwe. 5 November 2008. Archived from the original on 7 November 2008.
  105. "Zimbabwe introduces new banknotes as inflation soars". Reuters. 3 December 2008. Archived from the original on 7 December 2008.
  106. "Bank cash withdrawals increased again as protests gather momentum". SW Radio Africa. 2 December 2008. Archived from the original on 31 December 2008.
  107. "Zimbabwe to introduce 200-mln-dollar note next week". Xinhua. 6 December 2008.
  108. "Zimbabwe introduces $500 million note". CNN. 12 December 2008.
  109. "Zimbabwe unveils 10 billion dollar note". Reuters Africa. 19 December 2008. Archived from the original on 24 December 2008.
  110. "Zimbabwe introduces new $50 billion note". CNN. 10 January 2009.
  111. "RBZ unveils $100 trillion note". The Herald. 16 January 2009. Archived from the original on 18 January 2009.
  112. "Zimbabwe Campaign Posters Printed On Bank Notes". The Zimbabwean. 2 April 2009. Archived from the original on 7 January 2011. Retrieved 2 April 2009.
  113. "Zimbabwe dollar sheds 12 zeros". BBC News. 2 February 2009. Retrieved 2 February 2009.
  114. "Daily Interbank Exchange Rates Z$ per US$". Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe. 31 July 2006. Archived from the original on 1 February 2014.
  115. Thornycroft, Peta (11 July 2006). "Bring on the wheelbarrows". The Daily Telegraph.
  116. Gumbo, Joseph (26 July 2006). "Bills Put Zimbabwe Under "Martial Law"". Institute for War and Peace. Archived from the original on 26 June 2007 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  117. Ndlela, Dumisani (8 September 2006). "Forex still scarce". Zimbabwe Independent. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  118. "ZRP steals forex from tourists". The Zimbabwean. 14 September 2006 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  119. Ndlela, Dumisani (29 September 2006). "Zim dollar plumbs fresh depths". Zimbabwe Independent via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  120. "Black market rate continues to gallop". African News Dimension. 11 October 2006 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  121. "Wave of price hikes dampen hopes for recovery". Zimbabwe Online. 6 November 2006. Archived from the original on 26 September 2007 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  122. "AirZim fee fuels currency black market". Zimbabwe Standard. 19 November 2006. Archived from the original on 10 March 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  123. "Zimdollar takes heavy knock on black market". Zimbabwe Online. 29 November 2006. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  124. Mugabe, Makusha (24 December 2006). "No Rice and Chicken This Christmas". African News Dimension. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  125. "Dollar drops as demand soars". The Zimbabwean. 11 January 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  126. Rukuni, Charles (18 January 2007). "Zim dollar plumbs new depths". Financial Gazette. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  127. "Foreign currency parallel market rates shoot up". Zimbabwe Online. 20 January 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  128. Zulu, Blessing (22 January 2007). "Devaluation Talk Pushes Zimbabwe Dollar Down To Z$4,200 To USD". Voice of America. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  129. "Costs of ARVs spiral". IRIN. 25 January 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  130. Nyakazeya, Paul (2 February 2007). "Zim dollar firms marginally". Zimbabwe Independent. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  131. Dzirutwe, MacDonald (11 February 2007). "Analysis: Mugabe pressure rises as Zimbabwe economic woes spread". Reuters. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  132. Nyakazeya, Paul (23 February 2007). "AirZim hikes fares 100%". Zimbabwe Independent. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  133. Murandu, Tsungai (27 February 2007). "Zimbabwe central bank to devalue dollar". Zimbabwe Online. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  134. Cross, Eddie (28 February 2007). "The crisis intensifies!". The Zimbabwe Situation. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  135. Shaw, Angus (1 March 2007). "Little cheer from new Z$50 000 banknote in Zim". Mail & Guardian. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  136. Raath, Jan (7 March 2007). "Mugabe under threat from within his collapsing state". The Times. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  137. Thornycroft, Peta (11 March 2007). "Inflation forces citizens into mafia economy". Independent Online. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  138. Ndlela, Dumisani (16 March 2007). "Dollar touches $17 500 to greenback". Zimbabwe Independent. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  139. Muponda, Justin (19 March 2007). "Inflation to hit 5,000 percent mark this year: IMF". Zimbabwe Online. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  140. "Opposition in Zimbabwe Mounts, Says U.S. Diplomat". The New York Times. 21 March 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  141. "Mugabe fighting for political life in behind-the-scenes ruling party power struggle". International Herald Tribune. 21 March 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  142. Zulu, Blessing (26 March 2007). "Zimbabwe Dollar In New Downward Spike Against Major Currencies". Voice of America. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  143. Howden, Daniel (29 March 2007). "Mugabe faces the music in Tanzania as police launch mass arrest of opponents". The Independent. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  144. Bloch, Eric (1 April 2007). "Zimbabwe business committing hara-kiri". Zimbabwe Independent. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  145. "Fuel Prices Tumble". The Herald. 6 April 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  146. Shaw, Angus (7 April 2007). "Black Market Economy Thrives in Zimbabwe". Associated Press. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  147. "Across the border for sugar". IRIN. 10 April 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  148. "Zimdollar drop: speculators blamed". Zimbabwe Standard. 15 April 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  149. Seria, Nasreen; Mutizwa, Godfrey (26 April 2007). "Zimbabwe Devalues Currency by 98% to Boost Exports". Bloomberg News. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  150. "Golden leaf fails to boost forex earnings". The Zimbabwean. 10 May 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  151. Schrank, Peter (17 May 2007). "Back to the dark ages". The Economist. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  152. Dube, Pindai; Ndlovu, Nqobani (20 May 2007). "Zimbabwe dollar in for a hard time". Zimbabwe Standard. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  153. Games, Dianna (21 May 2007). "How life goes on for the super rich of Zimbabwe". Business Day. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  154. "Police ban march". Financial Gazette. 24 May 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  155. "As services collapse, corruption flourishes". IRIN. 28 May 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  156. "Zimbabwe targets 25 pct mth/mth inflation by year-end". Reuters. 2 June 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  157. "Children left at home pay the price of migration". IRIN. 11 June 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  158. "Mugabe should resign". The Zimbabwean. 12 June 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  159. Gonda, Violet (19 June 2007). "Will the economic collapse be the end of Mugabe?". SW Radio Africa. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  160. "Zimbabwe currency crashes; inflation as high as 9,000%". CNN. 21 June 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  161. Karimakwenda, Tererai (22 June 2007). "Zimbabwe dollars rejected as currency crashes". SW Radio Africa. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  162. Wines, Michael (4 July 2007). "Zimbabwe in disarray over inflation fight". International Herald Tribune. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  163. Reynolds, Neil (13 July 2007). "A letter of despair from Zimbabwe". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  164. "Water shortages spur sharp rise in diarrhea, dysentery in Zimbabwe". International Herald Tribune. 20 August 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  165. 1 2 "Zimbabwe devalues currency to 30,000/dlr". Reuters. 6 September 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  166. Nyakazeya, Paul (14 September 2007). "Zim dollar weakens". Zimbabwe Independent. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  167. "Not Enough Money to Feed the Hungry". UN Integrated Regional Information Networks. 17 September 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  168. Zulu, Blessing (25 September 2007). "Zimbabwe Food, Transport Prices Soar While Local Currency Tumbles". Voice of America. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  169. Johnson, Scott (28 September 2007). "Decaying Nation". Newsweek. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  170. Mpofu, Patricia (17 October 2007). "Zim opposition wants police prosecuted for torture". Zimbabwe Online. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  171. "1 U.S. dollar buys 1 million Zimbabwe dollars on black market". International Herald Tribune. 18 October 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  172. Cross, Eddie (31 October 2007). "Mugabenomics". Mens News Daily. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  173. "Zim: War heroes & plenty zeros". Fin24. 13 November 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  174. "Of cash and dealers". IRIN. 23 November 2007. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  175. Makamure, Lucia (30 November 2007). "Asylum-seekers face deportation from UK". Zimbabwe Independent. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  176. Muronzi, Chris (30 November 2007). "Cash for sale in Zim". Fin24. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  177. Zulu, Blessing (3 December 2007). "Zimbabwe Dollar Crashes On Central Bank Plan To Issue New Notes". Voice of America. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  178. Rusere, Patience (3 January 2008). "Cash-Poor Zimbabweans Turn To Parallel Market To Procure Bank Notes". Voice of America. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  179. "Money for nothing". IRIN. 4 January 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  180. "Zim dollar takes another dive". The Zimbabwean. 8 January 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  181. 1 2 Mulozo, Calvin (28 February 2008). "Zimbabwe Dollar Takes Heavy Knock". The Zimbabwe Gazette Daily News Online. Archived from the original on 29 February 2008. Retrieved 9 July 2016.
  182. Kandemiiri, Jonga (24 January 2008). "Zimbabwe Cash Crisis Eases But Local Currency Value Heads South". Voice of America. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  183. "Old Mutual Implied Rates (OMIR) as at 25 January 2008" (PDF). Bulls & Bears. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 September 2008. Retrieved 22 August 2008.
  184. "Zimbabwe's inflation woes continue". Independent Online. 12 February 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  185. 1 2 Kaseke, Edith (21 February 2008). "Dollar tumbles again, as one US unit trades at Z$20 million". Zimbabwe Online. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  186. Lamb, Christina (2 March 2008). "Planeloads of cash prop up Mugabe". The Sunday Times. Archived from the original on 2 January 2010. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  187. "Zimbabwe currency tumbles to record 25 million Zimbabwe dollars for one American dollar". International Herald Tribune. 5 March 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  188. Sokwanele (10 March 2008). "Zimbabwe Business Watch : Week 11". The Zimbabwe Situation. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  189. "More cash makes food expensive". IRIN. 18 March 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  190. "Cash shortage to ease, for now". The Zimbabwe Gazette Daily News Online. Archived from the original on 8 December 2008. Retrieved 25 June 2008.
  191. Mafaro, Wayne; Khumalo, Nqobizitha (17 April 2008). "No let up in Zim crackdown on reporters". Zimbabwe Online. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  192. Rukuni, Charles (24 April 2008). "ZITF shows stark contrast in Zim". Financial Gazette. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  193. Thornycroft, Peta (25 April 2008). "Cry, Another Beloved Country". Newsweek. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  194. 1 2 3 4 "Foreign Currency Auction System". Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe. Archived from the original on 25 March 2008.
  195. Dzirutwe, MacDonald (30 April 2008). "Zimbabwe commercial bank eases foreign exchange rules". Reuters. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  196. "Zimbabwe's currency gets more threadbare". Business Report. 6 May 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  197. Tinona, Peter (13 May 2008). "The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe caves in to black market pressure". The Zimbabwean. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  198. Sokwanele (15 May 2008). "Zimbabwe Business Watch : Week 20". The Zimbabwe Situation. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  199. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 "Send money to friends and family in Zimbabwe". Siyabonga-tatenda.com. Archived from the original on 5 July 2008. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  200. "Zim Dollar Crashes". Zimbabwe Independent. 5 June 2008. Retrieved 9 July 2016 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  201. "OMIR (US$)". Zimbabwean Equities.com. Archived from the original on 20 August 2008. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  202. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Redirect to swradioafrica podcasts (1)". SW Radio Africa. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  203. 1 2 "Redirect to swradioafrica podcasts (2)". SW Radio Africa. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  204. 1 2 3 "OMIR (US$)". Zimbabwean Equities. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  205. "World Currencies: Europe/Africa/Middle East". Bloomberg L.P.
  206. "FXConverter – Currency Converter for 164 Currencies". Oanda Corporation. Archived from the original on 2 May 2009.
  207. Dzirutwe, MacDonald (30 July 2008). "Zimbabwe redenominates currency to ease crisis". Reuters. Archived from the original on 25 December 2008.
  208. "Zimbabwe: RBZ Suspends RTGS Payment System". Zimbabwe Independent. 2 October 2008.
  209. Gonda, Violet (13 November 2008). "Reserve bank reinstates electronic transfers". SW Radio Africa. Archived from the original on 30 December 2008.
  210. 1 2 "Is this the end of Zimbabwe's $1000 loaf of bread?". Financial Times. 12 September 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  211. "Zimbabwe licenses shops to accept foreign currency". Reuters. 25 September 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  212. Latham, Brian (30 September 2008). "Zimbabwe Tobacco Season Officially Ends; Deliveries Down 40%". Bloomberg. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  213. Sebata, Lizwe; Kaseke, Edith (3 October 2008). "Political impasse sends Zimbabwe dollar tumbling". Zimbabwe Online. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  214. "50,000-dollar banknote for inflation-wracked Zimbabwe". AFP. 11 October 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  215. "Zimbabwe power-sharing talks collapse". Monsters and Critics. 17 October 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  216. "Zimbabwe stock market up 257 percent in a day". CNN. 22 October 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  217. Okon-Ekong, Nseobong (20 October 2008). "Zimbabwe's Economic Crisis Worsens". Thisday. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  218. Sibanda, Sibangani (24 October 2008). "Why was Zimbabwe invited to Kampala?". Zimbabwe Times. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  219. Rusere, Patience (29 October 2008). "Zimbabwe Central Banker Reports 'Concerted Efforts' For Turnaround". Voice of America. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  220. "The grey economy is the real one". IRIN. 4 November 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  221. Kandemiiri, Jonga (12 November 2008). "Zimbabwe Prices In Stratosphere As Political Power-Sharing Falters". Voice of America. Archived from the original on 13 November 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  222. Gonda, Violet (13 November 2008). "Reserve bank reinstates electronic transfers". SW Radio Africa. Archived from the original on 30 December 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  223. "RTGS Not Functional". Radiovop. 26 November 2008. Archived from the original on 23 December 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  224. Site notice, Zimbabwean Equities, 19 November 2008.
  225. "New Zimbabwe bank limits trigger surge in prices". Agence de Presse Africaine. 4 December 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  226. "news". Google News. Retrieved 9 December 2008.
  227. "Zimbabwe introduces $500 million note". CNN. 12 December 2008. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  228. "Online". The Chronicle. Archived from the original on 25 January 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  229. "Cost of 3 papers in Zimbabwe: 1 $50 billion note". Fox News. 12 January 2009.
  230. "Zimbabwe to launch 100 trillion dollar note: report". Reuters. 16 January 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  231. Raath, Jan (23 January 2009). "Unintended effect of Zimbabwe dollarization - no change!". Monsters and Critics. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  232. Maingire, Raymond (22 January 2009). "Teachers demand US$2200 minimum". Zimbabwe Times. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  233. "Harare teacher: 'I can't afford to work'". BBC News. 26 January 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2010 via The Zimbabwe Situation.
  234. "Budget likely to show Mugabe's desperation". Reuters. 28 January 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  235. "Zimbabwe Teachers Can't Afford to Report for Work". Bloomberg. 29 January 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  236. 1 2 "The United Nations Operational Rates of Exchange". United Nations. Archived from the original on 13 September 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  237. "Zim trims 12 zeroes from trillion dollar note". Commodity Online.com. 2 February 2009. Retrieved 7 January 2010.
  238. "Cash for Zimdollar notes, says RBZ". The Herald. Zimbabwe Newspapers (1980) Ltd. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  239. "Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe". rbz.co.zw.

Further reading

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Money of Zimbabwe.
Zimbabwean dollar
Preceded by:
Rhodesian dollar
Reason: independence recognised
Ratio: at par
Currency of Zimbabwe
18 April 1980 12 April 2009
Note: 1st dollar (ZWD): 18 April 1980 to 21 August 2006
2nd dollar (ZWN or 1 000 ZWD): 1 August 2006 to 31 December 2008
3rd dollar (ZWR or 1010 ZWN): 1 August 2008 to 12 April 2009
4th dollar (ZWL or 1012 ZWR): 2 February 2009 to 12 April 2009
Succeeded by:
Hard currencies and Zimbabwean Bond Coins (from 18 December 2014)
Reason: hyperinflation, resulting in the suspension of local currency
Ratio: 250 ZWL = 1 USD
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.