Berliner Boersenzeitung - Night-time shopping booms as Zimbabwe inflation soars

EUR -
AED 4.050659
AFN 75.845549
ALL 98.7921
AMD 427.13611
ANG 1.989034
AOA 1021.196545
ARS 1071.644582
AUD 1.611058
AWG 1.985047
AZN 1.866559
BAM 1.954619
BBD 2.228374
BDT 131.880316
BGN 1.955606
BHD 0.415741
BIF 3201.752563
BMD 1.102804
BND 1.431374
BOB 7.626288
BRL 6.041493
BSD 1.103643
BTN 92.65006
BWP 14.598444
BYN 3.61175
BYR 21614.952002
BZD 2.224576
CAD 1.494807
CDF 3165.046422
CHF 0.938094
CLF 0.036481
CLP 1006.629167
CNY 7.774658
CNH 7.784333
COP 4617.284589
CRC 572.159483
CUC 1.102804
CUP 29.224297
CVE 110.196919
CZK 25.320596
DJF 196.533035
DKK 7.459701
DOP 66.360506
DZD 146.600125
EGP 53.318245
ERN 16.542055
ETB 133.373923
FJD 2.427546
FKP 0.83985
GBP 0.839868
GEL 3.010945
GGP 0.83985
GHS 17.4812
GIP 0.83985
GMD 76.093627
GNF 9528.329277
GTQ 8.536726
GYD 230.887355
HKD 8.564682
HNL 27.535612
HRK 7.497974
HTG 145.624653
HUF 401.431856
IDR 17072.558811
ILS 4.197205
IMP 0.83985
INR 92.596798
IQD 1445.726476
IRR 46414.247302
ISK 149.29707
JEP 0.83985
JMD 174.216316
JOD 0.781557
JPY 161.095901
KES 142.36146
KGS 93.142583
KHR 4479.334153
KMF 492.410261
KPW 992.522681
KRW 1470.467723
KWD 0.337346
KYD 0.919744
KZT 532.708132
LAK 24369.275808
LBP 98830.081919
LKR 324.354022
LRD 220.723634
LSL 19.29744
LTL 3.256292
LVL 0.667075
LYD 5.247877
MAD 10.780839
MDL 19.313506
MGA 5008.064895
MKD 61.577794
MMK 3581.863314
MNT 3747.326833
MOP 8.829165
MRU 43.599052
MUR 51.214415
MVR 16.93944
MWK 1913.67844
MXN 21.335724
MYR 4.6621
MZN 70.441557
NAD 19.29744
NGN 1827.996857
NIO 40.616564
NOK 11.703217
NPR 148.243774
NZD 1.776016
OMR 0.424613
PAB 1.103633
PEN 4.111016
PGK 4.393425
PHP 62.111048
PKR 306.425811
PLN 4.30717
PYG 8604.878862
QAR 4.022615
RON 4.976178
RSD 117.005254
RUB 104.489253
RWF 1495.323627
SAR 4.140551
SBD 9.198248
SCR 14.315512
SDG 663.337058
SEK 11.363846
SGD 1.429327
SHP 0.83985
SLE 25.196089
SLL 23125.235962
SOS 630.724628
SRD 33.972416
STD 22825.809491
SVC 9.657165
SYP 2770.827243
SZL 19.288695
THB 36.336746
TJS 11.742345
TMT 3.859813
TND 3.380412
TOP 2.582878
TRY 37.759882
TTD 7.485477
TWD 35.328865
TZS 3004.17728
UAH 45.453461
UGX 4042.502489
USD 1.102804
UYU 46.231438
UZS 14079.493011
VEF 3994964.242646
VES 40.736551
VND 27294.390921
VUV 130.927068
WST 3.085052
XAF 655.572785
XAG 0.034255
XAU 0.000414
XCD 2.980382
XDR 0.814523
XOF 655.566844
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.08721
ZAR 19.230718
ZMK 9926.557222
ZMW 29.108676
ZWL 355.102333
  • BCC

    -1.2400

    138.29

    -0.9%

  • SCS

    -0.2500

    12.62

    -1.98%

  • RBGPF

    58.9300

    58.93

    +100%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    24.74

    -0.16%

  • AZN

    -1.6500

    77.93

    -2.12%

  • RIO

    -0.9900

    69.83

    -1.42%

  • GSK

    -1.0800

    38.37

    -2.81%

  • BCE

    -0.6000

    33.84

    -1.77%

  • NGG

    -1.8100

    66.97

    -2.7%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    13.3

    -0.6%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    6.98

    +1.15%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    9.69

    -0.52%

  • RELX

    -0.6800

    46.61

    -1.46%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.89

    -0.16%

  • BTI

    -0.8600

    35.11

    -2.45%

  • BP

    0.0900

    32.46

    +0.28%

Night-time shopping booms as Zimbabwe inflation soars
Night-time shopping booms as Zimbabwe inflation soars / Photo: Jekesai NJIKIZANA - AFP

Night-time shopping booms as Zimbabwe inflation soars

After the sun sets in Harare, the streets of Zimbabwe's capital suddenly burst to life.

Text size:

Carts, cars and trucks turned into makeshift, unauthorised, shops sell anything from potatoes to babies' nappies on the pavements of the city centre.

Shopping is best done at night in times of hyperinflation and economic hardship.

Cash-crunched Zimbabweans are increasingly turning to informal vendors for their groceries shopping as, with little or no overheads, street hawkers can afford to undercut big supermarkets.

"Everything is always cheaper outside," Blessing Steven, 23, a taxi driver, says, buying a bottle of juice for $0.50 at a roadside stall rather than in a supermarket where it costs $1. "I save money."

The juice vendor, Shingirirai Goriondo, 23, claims that he gets more customers than the retail outlet he operates in front of.

"All beverages I sell here are being charged double there," he said, pointing to a branch of supermarket chain Foodworld.

Inflation has shot through the roof in recent weeks as Zimbabwe prepares for presidential and parliamentary elections expected in August.

Officially standing at more than 280 percent in April, analysts estimate the inflation rate is in fact somewhere over 700 percent.

- No light, no police -

Economists blame the crisis on a steep depreciation of the local currency on the black market -- where most trading takes place.

Only last month, the Zimbabwean dollar was trading at around 1,000 against its more coveted US counterpart.

Today, one greenback costs between 3,800 and 4,000 Zimbabwean dollars on the street -- although the official rate is 1,888.

The situation has created price madness in supermarkets.

AFP reporters have in recent days observed staff changing price tags on goods every morning to try to keep pace with the exchange rate.

This has brought back memories of 2008, when hyperinflation was so out of control that restaurant-goers would see the price of their dinner change before they could finish eating it.

Back then, the central bank even issued a 100-trillion-dollar note -- now a collectors' item.

The government was eventually forced to ditch the local currency and adopt the US dollar as legal tender.

The Zimbabwean dollar was revived in 2019, but it seems to be suffering from much the same ailments as its previous incarnation.

Most Zimbabweans prefer to do business, get paid and hold their savings in US dollars.

Many who earn a salary in local money, rush to currency exchange shops on pay day.

"It is now expensive to purchase groceries from the supermarket with our own currency," said Tarisai Bera, 36, buying a range of toiletries from a hawker.

Kerbside shops take only greenbacks and prices there "rarely change", said Bera.

Street trade gets busier after dark because there is less police to go around. Most hawkers are not allowed to operate.

"If we come earlier...we might end up having our goods confiscated and fined," said Julius Munyanyi, 46, a vendor.

- Election largesse -

The government has resorted to various expedients to stabilise the economy, including issuing gold coins and launching a gold-backed digital currency -- but so far to no avail.

The central bank's main interest rate is currently at 140 percent.

Ex-finance minister, Tendai Biti, now an opposition politician, has blamed his former office's current holder, Mthuli Ncube for much of the chaos.

"Treasury, the natural gate keeper has become the gate crasher," Biti tweeted last week.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa has instead pointed the finger at US dollar-loving businesses.

"Zimbabwe dollar-earning workers are now being forced to buy basics priced exclusively in foreign currency," Mnangagwa wrote in a weekly newspaper column earlier this month.

Others, like economist Prosper Chitambara, believe Mnangagwa's pre-election largesse might have something to do with the crisis.

Public workers received a 100 percent pay rise in March.

Whatever the reason, business is thriving for street traders like Munyanyi.

"Customers find it viable to buy from us. We literally don't have competition," he said.

Buying from a supermarket is "throwing away your money," quipped Mike Mashuro, 51, after purchasing a bottle of cooking oil from Munyanyi's stall.

(H.Schneide--BBZ)