Tag Archives: Zimbabwe dollar

Hook Them On. Then Cut Them Off

In exploiting the economic pinch-point off its coast, the strait of Hormuz, Iran is following a trail blazed by the U.S. and China, which for years have used their dominance in key areas of global commerce to pursue their foreign-policy goals…Officials and analysts say the goal is “strategic indispensability”—building deterrence by mutually assured economic destruction. “In order to have that deterrence, in order to say ‘don’t cut off what we need,’ you need to be able to say ‘I can cut off what you need,’ ” said Andrew Capistrano, a visiting research fellow at the Institute of Geoeconomics, a Tokyo-based think tank…

Larger economies can exploit pressure points that flow from their heft in the global economy. The U.S. has long used the dollar-based financial system to sanction individuals, businesses and governments. It has also used America’s grip on semiconductor technology to stymie China’s military and put the brake on Beijing’s ambitions to leapfrog the U.S. as the world’s biggest and most advanced economy.

China exercises its economic might through its near-total control of rare earths. Beijing used the supply chain of these minerals, which are critical in the manufacture of everything from jet fighters to smartphones, as leverage to pressure U.S. industries and win relief on trade and tariffs from Trump…To build deterrence, “you need to get other people hooked on your supply. You need to be part of this interconnected web of the global economy in order to have a seat at the table of power,” said Emily Benson, head of strategy at the advisory firm Minerva Technology Futures.

Excerpt from Jason Douglas, Iran Shows You Don’t Have to Be a Superpower to Wage Economic Warfare, WSJ, Apr. 9, 2026

The Best Way to Ruin a Country is to Corrupt its Currency

The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, which gained global notoriety in 2008 for printing one-hundred-trillion-dollar notes, said in April 2024 that it was launching a new national currency, promising, once again, to end years of monetary turbulence. John Mushayavanhu, who took over as the central bank’s new governor in April 2024 said the new unit, Zimbabwe Gold, or ZiG, will replace the current Zimbabwe dollar, which has lost around three-fourths of its value this year.

The currency most recently traded at more than 30,674 Zimbabwean dollars to the U.S. dollar, according to the central bank. When the bank relaunched the local unit in 2019, $1 bought 2.50 Zimbabwean dollars. Mushayavanhu said the new currency would initially be valued at 13.56 ZiGs for $1 and later at a rate determined by the market.

To shore up confidence in the currency, Mushayavanhu said it would be fully backed by Zimbabwe’s reserves of U.S. dollars and precious metals, particularly gold. He also pledged to end a long-running practice of the bank issuing more money to finance government spending…

Zimbabwe abolished the Zimbabwe dollar in 2009, after a bout of hyperinflation that, by some estimates, saw prices rise by 500 billion percent. For nearly a decade, the country then operated on U.S. dollars and other foreign currencies. When the central bank was no longer able to pay out savings in cash dollars, it reintroduced the Zimbabwe dollar in 2019.

Excerpt from Gabriele Steinhauser, Zimbabwe Launches a New Currency…Again, WSJ, April 5, 2024