1. Introduction and Background
Price and exchange rate volatility have been key determinants of macroeconomic stability, hence policy interventions earmarked to achieve sustained growth should be centered on these critical macroeconomic variables. In some instances, they can all be used as indicators of macroeconomic stability (
African Development Bank, 2024). Together with Gross Domestic Product, inflation is often used to determine macroeconomic stability (
Felipa, 2023). The domestic price level and exchange rate have since been considered as critical variables for internal and external balance (
African Development Bank, 2024). Full macroeconomic stability is a combination of internal stability and external stability. Internal stability is often directly connected to domestic price stability, while external stability is directly connected to exchange rate stability, in connection with Mundell’s principle of effective market classification concepts (
Mandel, 2000). However, for an economy operating under the multicurrency regime (with its own currency in the basket of currencies, like Zimbabwe for the period under study), the exchange rate has emerged to be one of the most critical determinants or indicators of macroeconomic stability. Given the significance of exchange rates in multicurrency systems, the monetary transmission mechanism is likely to be through the exchange rate (mainly the parallel market exchange rate) and price channels. Given this, exchange rate policies should be designed in such a way that they should translate into macroeconomic stability and promote sustainable and inclusive growth (
Davoodi et al., 2021). Carefully crafted exchange rate policies may have positive implications on trade and domestic price levels (
Felipa, 2023;
Davoodi et al., 2021). The rise in foreign exchange and prices of goods and services are among the key factors that cause fluctuations in economic growth and development (
Jawo et al., 2023).
The relationship between inflation and exchange rates is also dependent on the exchange rate regime a country is using, and the exchange rate system that results in low inflation may not be effective in all countries, due to country-specific (mainly economic and political) characteristics. Likewise, the exchange rate system also differs with time within a country; the exchange rate system that results in stable prices and economic growth may have long-term negative implications, depending on other macroeconomic and political conditions, which tend to vary from time to time. A multicurrency system can be an independent exchange rate regime without the introduction of local currency and exchange rates discussed will be between foreign currencies, while with a local currency component in the basket of currencies, either fixed, managed floating or flexible exchange rate systems in multicurrency regimes will be put into play. This therefore summarizes the multicurrency regime used from 2009 to 2024. As cited in
Davoodi et al. (
2021), exchange rate pegs are often associated with lower inflation (
Levy Yeyati, 2019), and in the long run, they help monetary policy in anchoring inflation expectations and discipline monetary policy. Flexible exchange rate regimes promote credible inflation-targeting frameworks that play a significant role in anchoring inflation at low levels. Despite the global changes because of the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russia–Ukraine war that disrupted the global supply chains, price instability can be a result of domestic aggregates, including exchange rate misalignment and macroeconomic imbalances in Zimbabwe. For a country operating under a multicurrency regime, exchange rate behavior is important, since it may have direct effects on the prices of basic commodities, and monetary policy may be transmitted to economic growth mainly through the exchange rate channel.
Stabilization policy interventions (Fiscal and Monetary policies) of many developing countries are directed towards inflation, with economies such as Zimbabwe putting more effort into Monetary policy, given that the country operates under a multicurrency regime. The need for monetary policy credibility and discipline rises with the addition of local currency into the basket of foreign currencies traded as legal tender in the local market. The introduction of the local currency component (Bond coins and later Bond notes) sparked a lot of debate in relation to either misalignment or alignment of the exchange rate. With takeaways from the Gresham’s law and as highlighted in
Matsui (
1998) and
Mishkin (
2019), many economists predicted that bad money (Bond coins and later Bond notes) will drive away good money (United States dollar), while in the Zimbabwean case, good money drives away bad money, resulting in the nation dumping the Bond notes and coins to RTGS, which many economists further dubbed as a typical example of bad money that was later and informally driven away by the United States dollar (although this was denied by businesses) and officially phased out through the introduction of the Gold backed currency (Zimbabwe Gold- ZiG) in 2024. Given the multicurrency system and the role of monetary policy in macroeconomic stability, growth and sustainable development become significant. The significance of exchange rates in inflation can be more visible under multicurrency regimes, unlike in mono-currency economies. This study aims to evaluate, during the multicurrency system period, the relationship between inflation and exchange rate dynamics using monthly data to capture the high volatility of both exchange rates and inflation, together with other control variables. Given the dynamics in the two variables (exchange rates and inflation), monthly data were found to be more appropriate than annual data because the money market responds instantly to changes in macroeconomic aggregates, hence acute changes take place in short spaces of time. Monthly data were found to be the most appropriate for developing economies like Zimbabwe, where macroeconomic stability is more difficult to achieve than in developed countries whose economies are stable, hence there are insignificant changes over a long period of time. Under normal circumstances, multicurrency regimes are generally adopted as transitional stabilization programs that normally last for short periods of time, such as five 5 years, before nations return to their local (mono-currency) regimes. However, the Zimbabwean case is peculiar in the sense that the multicurrency regime has overstayed (it has been in existence for more than a decade and appears likely to remain longer), hence the need for both short run and long run evaluations, giving rise to the relevance of an estimation technique that simultaneously estimates both the short run and long run relationships such as the ARDL approach, which is also justified by the data characteristics. There has been a series of attempts to bring back the local currency and even attempts to make the local currency the only legal tender, even though these have been received differently by the business community and general populace, which at times have further weakened the external value of the local currency since 2014. This has triggered the need to evaluate the stabilizing/destabilizing effects of exchange rates on inflation. This study also aims to identify the other predictors of inflation dynamics in Zimbabwe.
Literature is becoming more skewed towards the link between exchange rates and economic growth (
Morina et al., 2020;
Fofanah, 2022;
Istrefi & Vangjel, 2022;
Niyonsaba, 2023) and stock market prices (
Dahir et al., 2018;
Kumar et al., 2019;
Sheikh et al., 2020;
Adeniyi & Kumeka, 2020;
Huang et al., 2021;
Sakarombe & Makoni-Marimbe, 2020;
Luqman & Kouser, 2019). Others have also concentrated on the exchange rate and gold and oil prices relationship (
Akbar et al., 2019;
Sheikh et al., 2020;
Hussain et al., 2017,
2023), while a few have investigated the relationship between exchange rates and trade flows (
Asteriou et al., 2016;
Bahmani-Oskooee & Aftab, 2017). Another area where literature is growing is on the relationship between money supply and inflation (
Sultana et al., 2019;
Sunal, 2018;
Paul et al., 2023;
Dekkiche, 2022). Accordingly, the relationship between price stability and exchange rates is receiving less attention. For some of the studies that specialize in the stock market, their analysis is grounded on the asset models (Portfolio Balance model) of exchange rate determination and therefore emphasizes capital mobility across capital markets (nations) as the main trigger of exchange rate dynamics that result in inflation movements. Such studies are more skewed towards the capital account of the balance of payments account. However, concentrating on the capital account of the balance of payments seems more informative and brings somewhat realistic findings for developed and stable macro-economies, unlike in fragile and developing unstable economies like Zimbabwe. Likewise, using only stock prices to capture macroeconomic and price stability may give a false picture for commodity-driven small open economies with a thin capital market like Zimbabwe. Compared to other studies that evaluated the impact of exchange rates on gold and oil prices, this might be relevant to natural resource endowed economies like Zimbabwe but given the contribution of natural resources to the Zimbabwean economy, using prices of minerals (gold prices) may also give an incomplete picture about the relationship between exchange rates and inflation in Zimbabwe. Given that, an all-encompassing measure like the general price level will tell a better story about the relationship between exchange rates and inflation in Zimbabwe. As a result, instead of this study being premised on the Capital account (Asset models of exchange rate determination), the study therefore is grounded on the flow models of exchange rate determination (Purchasing Power Parity theory and the Balassa–Samuelson hypothesis), which are anchored on the current account balance.
Further, for a few studies that included the two (exchange rate in general and inflation), the studies are more biased towards stable and mono-currency economies (
Ozcelebi, 2018;
Obradović, 2025) with an insignificant parallel market. For small open economies with thriving parallel markets operating in a multicurrency regime, with the impact of both the official and parallel market exchange rates, a study such as this becomes imperative. In addition, comparing the effects of both official and parallel market exchange rates is strongly justified. Other local studies (
Mahonye & Zengeni, 2019) considered data for the historical period where prices were fairly stable. However, as highlighted in
Mahonye and Zengeni (
2019), by observing parallel market movements, the real exchange rate movements can be deduced, thereby revealing the deviations of the local currency from the market forces’ determined exchange rate. This therefore justifies the inclusion of the two prevailing exchange rates independently in the analysis to understand whether they have varied impacts on the dependent variable (price level).
Studies in relation to Zimbabwe include those of
Sakarombe and Makoni-Marimbe (
2020), who investigated the interaction between the stock exchange fungibility market and the parallel exchange rate market in Zimbabwe, and
Mahonye and Zengeni (
2019), who examined the impact of exchange rates on output and inflation in Zimbabwe.
Sakarombe and Makoni-Marimbe (
2020) used the Old Mutual Implied Rate (OMIR) to represent the stock exchange fungibility and the parallel market rate to investigate their short and long run relationships together with their causal relationships, while the present study seeks to evaluate the relationships that exist between the official exchange rate and the parallel market rate and their impact on inflation in Zimbabwe.
In addition,
Mahonye and Zengeni (
2019) used quarterly data for the period 1990 to 2006 and found that real exchange rate fluctuations had significant effects on real output growth in both the short run and long run; also, exchange rate fluctuations were neither inflationary nor deflationary in Zimbabwe in the short run but inflationary in the long run. However, the study by
Mahonye and Zengeni (
2019) utilized historical quarterly data, hence may not provide specific relationships in the current multicurrency and highly dynamic macroeconomic environment often characterized by embarking on supply-side interventions to boost domestic production until industrial capacity utilization rises significantly, so that even a new local currency will be backed by production. Supply-side interventions may include respecting and issuing property rights to boost both domestic and foreign direct investment, privatization and commercialization, infrastructure development and export promotion and import substitution industrialization. With the significance of the parallel market exchange rate on prices in Zimbabwe, policies should be directed towards making the market less profitable. A lasting stabilization policy mix (Fiscal and Monetary policies) could have been effective if the government shelved the introduction of the local currency until production and capacity utilization significantly increased. The study also utilized data for a fairly stable macroeconomic period where the parallel market implications were not very evident due to stringent foreign exchange controls in Zimbabwe. The current study will therefore provide specific policy implications to the subject area, given various exchange rate policy episodes followed during the multicurrency regime. This study is of greater importance since it utilizes monthly data from 2014 to 2024, which helps in accommodating the macroeconomic dynamics, especially in the highly volatile parallel exchange rate market and inflation together with the official exchange market. The transition from the purely multicurrency regime, dubbed by many as dollarization, the introduction of Bond coins in 2014, according to the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (
RBZ, 2014), the introduction of Bond notes in 2016 (
RBZ, 2016) and the RTGS currency (
RBZ, 2019), Gold coins in 2022 (
RBZ, 2022) to March 2024, before the introduction of the new Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG) currency, (
RBZ, 2024), resulted in various implications for the official exchange rate, the parallel market exchange rate and inflation in Zimbabwe. The study aims to establish the relationship between exchange rates and inflation in Zimbabwe in a multicurrency regime, together with other determinants of price stability.
The study therefore contributes to literature in that it evaluates the impact of exchange rates changes on inflation, taking account of the parallel market rate, which is proving to be a critical macroeconomic phenomenon in many developing countries. Secondly, the study compares the impact of the official versus that of the parallel market on price stability through estimating separate models for the official exchange rate and the parallel market exchange rate. Thirdly, though not least, it provides policy recommendations to the monetary authorities of Zimbabwe and beyond on recommendations for operating multicurrency regimes. Additionally, findings from this study may be of significance to other developing countries that are going through or may go through macroeconomic instability, especially hyperinflation and are considering adopting the Zimbabwean route (a multicurrency system, whether with or without local currency) to decide how and when to reintroduce their own currency, basing on the findings from this study. If other countries are considering the multicurrency system, they may also be informed through this study on how to hedge against the potential implications of the parallel foreign exchange rate market on prices and other macroeconomic variables.
The study is motivated by the fact that there is no consensus on the findings on the nexus between exchange rates and inflation, and most importantly, the relationship between inflation, official exchange rate and parallel market exchange rate in multicurrency regimes with a local currency component. Given, the peculiarity of the Zimbabwean exchange rate regimes, this study will therefore provide country specific evidence on the relationship between exchange rate(s) and inflation. In the Zimbabwean context, no study has attempted to compare the impacts of official versus parallel market exchange rates in the multicurrency regime, with this study concentrating on the period when local currency components (Bond notes and coins to the RTGS) were added to basket of currencies considered as legal tender. The results will go a long way in informing policy as to how and when to introduce local currency in previously dollarized economies or countries that operated in multicurrency regimes with no local currency and move away from a multicurrency regime (or de-dollarize and or re-dollarize) in line with country specific characteristics. Beyond Zimbabwe, findings from this study will help to inform monetary and exchange rate policies that fit well into the macroeconomic characteristics of the economies and suggest what should be prioritized during various exchange rate regimes, depending on the results of various additional and control variables in the model. The next section presents the background and the literature review, followed by the methodology, results and discussion, and lastly, conclusions and policy recommendations.
The null hypothesis of the study is that exchange rates do not influence inflation in Zimbabwe’s multicurrency system punctuated with local currency; the alternative hypothesis is that that exchange rate fluctuations influence the general price level in Zimbabwe. Explicitly, the first hypothesis is that the official exchange rate does not affect price stability in Zimbabwe, while the alternative hypothesis is that the official exchange rate affects price stability in Zimbabwe. The second hypothesis is that the parallel market exchange rate does not affect price stability in Zimbabwe; the alternative hypothesis is that the parallel market exchange rate affects price stability in Zimbabwe. The last hypothesis is that the official market exchange rate exerts more influence on price levels in Zimbabwe than the parallel market exchange rate, while the null alternative hypothesis is that the parallel market exchange rate exerts more influence on price fluctuations in Zimbabwe than the official market exchange rate.
Background to Exchange Rates in Zimbabwe
Following the economic collapse and currency crash/crises of 2007/8, Zimbabwe adopted a system where multiple foreign currencies, mainly the US dollar and the Rand, were used as legal tender (with the ultimate dominance of the US dollar resulting in a scenario as if the economy had self-dollarized). This provided macroeconomic stability and tamed hyperinflation until 2014, when Bond coins were introduced as a way of easing trading (change) and later Bond notes, in 2016, were pegged at par with the US dollar (
RBZ, 2016). Bond coins and notes, however acted as local currency, where the value started to depreciate against the US dollar, because they acted as a pseudo local currency. The collapse of the Bond coins and notes in 2019 was punctuated with an introduction of the Real Time Gross Settlement (RTGS). Bigger denominations of the Bond notes were later introduced in 2019 (
RBZ, 2019) during the RTGS currency period. With the demand for foreign currency being greater than its supply due to low production levels and balance of payments disequilibrium (deficits), the demand for imports rose, leading to the central bank failing to satisfy local forex demand at the fixed exchange rate, thereby leading to the thriving black/parallel foreign exchange market.
After the officialization of the local currency in 2019 (i.e., the declaration of the RTGS currency (
RBZ, 2019)), despite having local currency components from 2014 (Bond coins (
RBZ, 2014) and later Bond notes (
RBZ, 2016), the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) introduced the auction system (
RBZ, 2019). This was mainly aimed at managing the exchange rate through a controlled or managed floating exchange rate mechanism. The Bond notes and coins have been fixed at par with the US dollar since their introduction, but on the parallel market, they have been trading through the market mechanism, which is when dual exchange rate system has been validated. The introduction of the RTGS also marked the partial liberalization of the foreign exchange market from an official perspective, with full liberalization being witnessed in the parallel market. Further attempts to stabilize the exchange rate were witnessed through the introduction of Gold coins (in 2022), although nothing significant in relation to currency stability and exchange rate certainty was realized and the gap between the parallel and official exchange rates continued to widen. Given that the gap between the official (auction rate) and the parallel market exchange rate continued diverge, this led to the collapse of the RTGS in 2024 and the introduction of the Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG) currency (
RBZ, 2024).
Despite this study ending in the period of the RTGS currency, the recent attempts by the Zimbabwean monetary authorities to stabilize the economy through currency stabilization resulted in the dumping (collapse/crash) of the RTGS currency, resulting in the introduction of the Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG) digital currency. This was introduced with attempts to bring the much-needed foreign currency market and macroeconomic stability, hence further studies may consider the ZiG period, when enough data on the exchange rates and inflation are made available. With these currency developments, the currency continues to operate in the doldrums of currency crises. There are two main exchange rates used in the country (the official mainly for the public individuals and entities while the parallel is used by the majority private individuals). This study therefore sought to examine the relationship between inflation and official exchange rate and inflation and parallel exchange rates in Zimbabwe’s multicurrency regime with a local currency.
5. Conclusions
As summarized in
Table 8, the parallel market exchange rate was found to exert more, positive and statistically significant influence on inflation in Zimbabwe, both in the short and long run. However, the official exchange rate was found to positively influence inflation in Zimbabwe, despite having a lesser impact than the parallel market exchange rate in both the short and long run. Domestic productivity emerged to be one of the most critical and influential determinants of inflation dynamics in both the short and long run in Zimbabwe, where a negative relationship was revealed through both the official and parallel market exchange rate models. Given this, stabilization policies should aim to stabilize the exchange rates so that domestic productivity will thereby guarantee the acceptability and stability of local currency in the local market. Other variables that were found to affect inflation in Zimbabwe included stock market prices, real interest rates, trade balance, and foreign currency reserves through the official exchange model in the short run and varied impacts in the long run. However, through the parallel market exchange rate model, money supply, foreign currency reserves, foreign prices, foreign productivity and domestic productivity were found to statistically and significantly influence inflation in the short run in Zimbabwe. In the long run, through the official exchange rate model, money supply, real interest rate, foreign currency reserves, foreign price level, and domestic production were the statistically significant determinants of inflation, while parallel market exchange rate, foreign currency reserves, foreign prices, domestic and foreign productivity were found to be statistically significant determinants of inflation through the parallel market exchange rate model.
In Zimbabwe, this phenomenon can be attributed to unstable macroeconomic conditions, mainly low and declining levels of domestic productivity. Failure to meet domestic demand for foreign currency (and excessive exchange rate controls) in Zimbabwe resulted in a thriving parallel or black market for foreign currency, which tends to be distortionary (as a large gap between official and parallel rates lead to inefficient allocation of resources). The parallel market exchange rate in Zimbabwe is a result of strict foreign exchange rate and capital controls that limit access to the official market, essentially creating a “black market” where currencies are traded at a significantly different rates, leading to substantial flows of money (both the local and foreign currency) through unofficial channels. The Zimbabwean government, through the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, fixes the official exchange rate at an artificially high level (overvaluing the local currency) compared to the market demand, thereby creating an incentive for individuals to seek for more favorable exchange rates in the parallel/black market, often through informal channels. Fluctuations in the parallel market rate can create significant uncertainty for businesses, hindering investment decisions. The fluctuations in the parallel market exchange rate in Zimbabwe tends to affect the official exchange rate, together with inflation, thereby worsening the macroeconomic situation through capital flight and low investment because the environment will be unconducive for business. The results from this study can be used in other developing countries that are going through macroeconomic challenges such as inflation and considering the adoption of multicurrency systems, providing information that can help them understand what to prioritize during the use of multicurrency (for instance, from this study’s findings, domestic productivity growth); they may gain information about the timing of reintroducing their own currencies and the strategies used (gradually re-introducing or using the shock therapy approach—instant and instantly/completely abolishing the multicurrency system). Some countries may also design mechanisms to hedge against the destabilizing effects of the parallel exchange rate market if considering multicurrency systems by learning from the Zimbabwean experiences described in this study.
5.1. Policy Recommendations
In a multicurrency system like that in Zimbabwe, the exchange rate is a critical variable to be closely monitored. For a multicurrency system with no local currency, the official exchange rate is the most critical, while in multicurrency systems with local currency in the basket of currencies in circulation, both the parallel and official exchange rates become important macroeconomic variables that need to be closely monitored. From the findings of this study, the parallel market exchange rate in Zimbabwe exerts more influence on inflation and hence should be given more attention. Clear and realistic signals for monetary policy direction depend more on the parallel market exchange rate, despite the need to also consider the official exchange rate. Given the significant effects of exchange rate changes on inflation, especially the parallel market exchange rate, the government should find lasting solutions to protect the economy from the destabilizing parallel market activities, in which the government is always on the verge of crafting defensive and reactionary policies in response to the parallel market speculative activities; instead, the parallel market should thrive on government policies (e.g., the monetary exchange rate), created to enable business survival and sustain their rent-seeking activities. Given the destabilizing effects of the parallel foreign exchange market, the government, through the Central Bank, could remove the local currency component of the multicurrency regime (thereby strengthening the multicurrency system). Therefore, it appears that the local currency components (Bond coins, Bond notes and the RTGS) were prematurely introduced, hence their imminent collapse without productivity backing. The main policy recommendation based on the findings from this study includes maintaining the multicurrency regime without the local currency component while targeting domestic productivity growth first, then reintroducing the local currency after realigning the macroeconomic fundamentals. On the re-introduction of the local currency, the government should adopt a mono-currency regime, which can be sustained if productivity grows first. Streamlining both Fiscal and Monetary policies towards boosting domestic production may help in sustaining the currency at re-introduction. An expansionary Fiscal policy (cutting taxes and increasing government expenditure) and contractionary Monetary policy (reasonably increasing interest rates, bank rate and reserve requirement ratios) mix in this regard would help simultaneously increase domestic production and reduce inflation.
In a multicurrency system, it is very important to keep the parallel market premiums very low by valuing the local currency realistically, depending on the currency back-up strategies (domestic productivity growth, import substitution, export promotion, foreign currency reserves accumulation to exchange rate stability), and avoid exchange rate misalignment (in this case, exchange rate (local currency) overvaluation). In addition, to ensure that the parallel market exchange rate activities are less destabilizing, the monetary authorities should target policies that try to achieve exchange rate convergence (of official and parallel exchange rates) so that arbitraging in the foreign currency market under a multicurrency regime becomes less profitable. This can be achieved though ensuring policies that boost domestic productivity faster than foreign productivity through tax incentives and subsidies to companies that produce substitutes for imports and export commodities. Such organizations should be considered as strategic companies to embrace the import substitution and export promotion strategies that will result in growth in trade balance, foreign currency reserves and local currency appreciation to exchange rate stability and certainty. Supply-side interventions will boost domestic production until industrial capacity utilization rises significantly, so that even a new local currency will be backed by production. Supply-side interventions may include respecting and issuing property rights to boost both domestic and foreign direct investment, privatization and commercialization, infrastructure development, and export promotion and import substitution industrialization. With the significance of the parallel market exchange rate on prices in Zimbabwe, policies should be directed towards making the market less profitable. A lasting stabilization policy mix (Fiscal and Monetary policies) could have been effective if the government had delayed the introduction of the local currency until production and capacity utilization significantly increased.
For a small open economy operating under a multicurrency exchange rate regime, there is need to increase domestic productivity before introducing its own currency. This enables domestic demand to be met by domestic supply, hence there will be no need for imports. As indicated in the results, where domestic productivity was found to have a negative influence on inflation under all the models, both in the short and long run, increasing domestic production will go a long way towards reducing the appetite for imports (including for basic commodities). This can therefore be achieved through subsidizing local producers and giving tax holidays that may reduce the production costs and allow competitive prices to be charged in the global market. Despite the “Zimbabwe is open for business” mantra, Zimbabwe is expensive for business, making the business environment unconducive for productivity growth. For the mantra to realize the investment promises/commitments made by investors, costs of production should be significantly reduced through subsidies and tax incentives (i.e., an expansionary fiscal policy). The actual realization of investment promises will therefore result in increased domestic production that may result in exchange rate appreciation and price stability. Increasing domestic production causes domestic supply to exceed domestic demand. Excess domestic supply results in competitive prices, both in the domestic and global markets, thereby reducing imports and increasing exports. Growth in exports and the reduction in imports result in an increase in foreign currency reserves that causes appreciation of and stability of the local currency component of the multicurrency regime.
As evidenced by the results from this study, exchange rate stability results in price stability under multicurrency systems, and policy recommendations may also include central bank independence, so that exchange rate fluctuations and their possible implications on price and overall macroeconomic stability can be kept under strict surveillance. Experience suggests that, once inflation reaches a high level, control becomes very difficult and time-consuming in the absence of strong, independent central banks that put emphasis on price stability (
Koch & Noureldin, 2023). Closely monitoring the exchange rates results in acknowledging and reacting to the macroeconomic and monetary signals (especially the parallel market exchange rate signals) in time, thereby reducing policy lags (both inside and outside lags) and simultaneously improving stabilization policy effectiveness. Delays and denials (such as unjustifiably maintaining the Bond notes and coins in parity with the United States dollar) in recognizing the thriving parallel market signals resulted in the monetary authorities being late react to dis-equilibriums, leading to inadequate/half-baked/ineffective policy responses that often result in the imminent collapse/crash of the local currencies. However, if the government wishes to retain its monetary sovereignty, it could fully liberalize the exchange rate. Fully liberalizing the foreign exchange market will help to arrest the destabilizing activities in the parallel market. This will also gradually bring the official and parallel rates closer to each other, resulting in official and parallel/black market exchange rate convergence.
During the multicurrency period from 2009 to 2014 (before the introduction of the local currency component into the basket of currencies), price stability was enjoyed, but since 2014, price instability has resurfaced. Gradual reintroduction of the local currency has resulted in failure of the local currency (Bond notes and coins to the RTGS) and triggered macroeconomic instability. With pressure to have a local currency for monetary policy sovereignty, the best strategy to reintroduce the local currency into the basket of foreign currencies is to do this in phases. First, domestic productivity growth should be promoted, waiting until industrial capacity utilization rises above 50%, and then waiting for industrial capacity utilization to exceed 75%, before de-dollarizing (returning to a mono-local currency). Maintaining the multicurrency regime without the local currency component for a period is the best policy option until domestic productivity substantially grows and the realignment of other macroeconomic fundamentals is achieved. With either multicurrency without local currency or full dollarization, the country’s macroeconomic environment becomes more credible as the possibility of speculative attacks on the local currency and capital market virtually disappears (
Bonga & Dhoro, 2015). Maintaining the multicurrency system without local currency will help in the revival of industries that result in domestic productivity growth (as experienced in the period 2009 to 2014), restoration of confidence, and credibility in the economy. Increases in domestic output will result in domestic supply exceeding domestic demand, translating into growth in exports over imports. This will result in growth in foreign currency reserves that can be used to manage the exchange rate and help in bringing the exchange rate certainty through the reduction of exchange risk. However, if the authorities continue to push for the use of local currency in the basket of currencies, there are already signals that the economy is in the process of informally or self-dollarizing, as indicated by the rate at which the local currency is failing to purchase certain critical commodities and the insurgence of many retail outlets that currently not accepting the local currency, from the period of the RTGS currency to the now ZiG currency.
5.2. Recommendations for Further Studies
Future studies could consider other variables such as fiscal deficits and wage rates, as they are characteristic features of many developing countries, if data are available (as lack of these data limits the inclusion of such variables in this study). Likewise, future studies could compare the impact of exchange rates changes on inflation for the most recent period, after the collapse of the RTGS currency that is the Zimbabwe Gold (ZiG) currency. Further studies could also examine the impact of exchange rate convergence or divergence on inflation and other macroeconomic variables, thereby using the difference between the official and the parallel market exchange rates as the main dependent variable.