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Zimbabwe's New Currency Struggles Impact Traditional Shops As Unregulated Night Markets Thrive

The once-prosperous southern African nation of 15 million people in April introduced a new gold-backed currency called ZiG.

Photo: Digital Journal

Batsirai Pabwe selected detergents, toothpaste, snacks, and pasta from a variety of grocery items spread across the tarmac of a car parking lot바카라an unconventional night market illuminated by cellphone flashlights and fluorescent lamps in Harare, Zimbabwe's capital.

With the instability of Zimbabwe's new currency driving prices higher, traditional stores are finding it increasingly difficult to stay afloat. As a result, many consumers like Pabwe are turning to these more affordable informal markets, which emerge at night to evade the attention of authorities.

From dusk, sidewalks, store or office verandahs and car parking spaces burst into unorthodox open air bazaars, offering anything from groceries to fresh meat, electronics, clothes, medicines, fashion accessories and stationery.

Unfettered by expenses such as rising energy costs, taxes and laws that force formal retailers to accept the local currency at artificially low official exchange rates, informal traders, including children, offer better bargains. A box of juice that sells for $3 in a supermarket costs half of that on the street.

바카라It's my first time shopping here. My friend told me that it's much cheaper than the supermarkets,바카라 30-year-old Pabwe said, visibly relieved as he filled up a plastic bag with items for just USD 20. 바카라I decided to give it a try and I really enjoyed it.바카라

For the same amount in a supermarket a week ago, Pabwe said he only managed to get 바카라meat and spices and they were not even that much바카라.

The once-prosperous southern African nation of 15 million people in April introduced a new gold-backed currency called ZiG, short for Zimbabwe Gold, to replace one that had been battered by depreciation and often outright rejection by the people.

It is the country's sixth attempt at a new currency since the spectacular 2009 collapse of the Zimbabwe dollar and adoption of the US dollar as legal tender amid hyperinflation of 5 billion percent, one of the world's worst currency crashes to date.

The US dollar has since remained legal tender alongside successive local currencies.

The latest currency, the world's newest, came with pomp and fanfare 바카라 promotional catchy jingles and songs played repeatedly on public radio, television and online.

Seven months on, the ZiG seems to be tanking, like its predecessors. The gap between official and black market exchange rates continues to widen, with many people and informal traders who dominate the economy again preferring the more stable dollar.

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Traditional stores, forced by authorities to charge using the local currency, are increasing prices to make ends meet. But they have also become uncompetitive against unregulated informal markets, the Retailers Association of Zimbabwe, an industry representative group, said in September.

It warned of store closures, saying the situation is 바카라clearly untenable바카라.

In October, Pick n Pay, one of Africa's biggest grocery chains that operates more than 70 stores jointly with a local partner in Zimbabwe, said that it had impaired바카라 its investment in Zimbabwe 바카라to a book value of zero바카라 because of the 바카라deteriorating economic conditions바카라.

바카라In every transaction business is doing in the formal setup, it's making an exchange rate loss that cannot be compensated. The major issue here is a currency crisis,바카라 said Gift Mugano, an economics professor. Huge overheads worsen the retailers' situation.

바카라Everything is against their survival. The informal sector works at night, (if there is) no electricity they use their phones, they don't care. They are there for survival,바카라 Mugano said.

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The contrast is palpable in Harare's Central Business District, where only a few shoppers solemnly scanned prices in a supermarket on a recent day.

Soothing music played from speakers inside but was drowned out by the buzz created outside by hordes of street vendors shouting out bargains to a sea of shoppers.

바카라Business is booming,바카라 said Oswald Gari, a vendor, adding that he only works at night when the police leave.

Gari, 51, said he's fending for his six children and four nephews under his care from the night trade. He harbors no hope of finding formal employment in a country where once roaring industrial sites are being turned into giant warehouses for imported goods, many which end up on the streets, and rail tracks are now overgrown with weeds.

More than 80 per cent of Zimbabwe's employable population ekes out a living in the informal sector, according to official figures and the International Labour Organisation.

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For Pabwe, shopping from the informal night markets means less headaches.

바카라It's quite confusing, especially for people like me who really don't understand the value of the ZiG. I always get confused when I get into supermarkets,바카라 he said.

He was satisfied with his shopping at night bazaar.

바카라I got everything I was looking for and the pricing is really affordable. I actually managed to buy a handful for just USD 20. I even got my washing powder and dishwashing liquid,바카라 he said. 바카라I think I will do this more often.바카라

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