Zimbabwe's Total Cash On Hand: $217.00
29
January, 2013
Several
years after revealing the first one hundred trillion modern-day
banknote and seeing its economy implode in a cloud of
hyperinflationary smoke, Zimbabwe's problems are back with a
vengeance. And this time not even more currency destruction, as
Zimbabwe does not actually have its own currency any more having
largely shifted to foreign currencies primarily the USD and the ZAR -
can help. The problem? The country is officially out of cash.
"After
paying public workers’ salaries last week, the balance in
cash-strapped Zimbabwe’s government public account stood at just
$217, Finance
Minister Tendai Biti said Tuesday. “Last
week when we paid civil servants there was $217 (left) in government
coffers,”
Biti told journalists in the capital Harare, claiming some of them
had healthier bank balances than the state. “The government
finances are in paralysis state at the present moment. We are failing
to meet our targets.”"
Sadly not even the projected and
quite hilarious
5% GDP growth of
the now completely broke country, which can't even create money out
of thin air as there is nobody who will lend it even one penny, will
do much if anything. (Here
we will briefly ignore the fact that Zimbabwe's net cash position is
about $120,000,000,000,217.00 greater than that of the US)
The move demolished investor confidence in the country, paralysed production, prompted international sanctions and scared off tourists.
Zimbabwe’s government has warned it does not have enough money to fund a constitutional referendum and elections expected this year.
Biti said that left no choice but to ask the donors for cash. “We will be approaching the international community,” he said.
The country’s elections agency said it requires $104 million to organise the vote.
Government’s national budget for this year stands at $3.8 billion and the economy is projected to grow 5.0 percent.
At
least Zimbabwe can sell its gold. Well, it could, if it had any.
And
when even the government apartchicks, which
also includes the army,
received no more cash, they turn violent, and quite hostile, to the
very same government that provided for them for years. Which is to be
expected: because as history has shown that without fail what follows
hyperinflation, is war. Which incidentally is all the US government
will need to position its southern drone base in order to quell the
imminent appearance of "Al Qaeda" rebels and militants in
the South African country. This, in turn would fall perfectly with
the WSJ's headline article totay: "U.S. to Expand Role in
Africa."
Because
while the US is about to have western Africa covered with its drone
presence, it needed a lucky break in order to get involved in the
just as valuable south.
Why,
again, does the US need to be in every nook and corner Africa? Same
explanation we gave yesterday: to prevent the rapid Chinese
colonization of the last continent, a development the US has been
well behind the curve on. And since it has no cash to spend to
compete with China, it will do the next best thing -
send in the
drones.
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